The European Union says it hopes to see a "yes" vote on Brexit soon in the British parliament and especially this week if the U.K. wants to leave the EU based on the deal both sides have agreed.
British lawmakers voted late Wednesday on eight possible Brexit options but none received the majority support that would clarify the U.K.'s future course.
European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said Thursday that "we counted 8 'no's last night. Now we need a yes on the way forward."
Schinas was referring to the parliament's unprecedented step on Tuesday of voting a choice of alternate solutions to the near-dead divorce deal May reached with Brussels after 17 months of talks.
But none of the eight options secured a majority and another vote has been set for Monday on some of the proposals.
He recalled that EU leaders insist that the new Brexit date is April 12, unless Prime Minister Theresa May can convince British lawmakers to endorse her deal this week.
Schinas said: "It is now for the U.K. government to inform us about how it sees the next steps."
A proposal to hold a second referendum -- a popular idea with EU supporters -- came second while those promoting a cleaner break finished near the bottom.
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel told journalists in Brussels that without a solution from Britain, EU leaders would meet again on April 10 or 11 to discuss next steps.
EU leaders last week offered Britain a Brexit extension until May 22, but only on condition that parliament votes through the deal by Friday, the day Britain was originally scheduled to leave the European Union.
The May government said Wednesday it wanted a third vote on the EU deal on Friday, but the outcome remained uncertain.
If the vote fails a third time, May will have to spell out to EU leaders what steps Britain will take by a deadline of April 12, or risk crashing out of the bloc without any arrangements in place.