"Cabinet will meet at 2 p.m. tomorrow to consider the draft agreement the negotiating teams have reached in Brussels, and to decide on next steps. Cabinet Ministers have been invited to read documentation ahead of that meeting," British Prime Minister Theresa May's office said in a statement.
Negotiators in Brussels reached a compromise on a "technical level" regarding the terms of the draft of a Brexit withdrawal agreement.
The withdrawal agreement draft is already slated to be comprised of more than 400 pages of legal text.
Earlier, former foreign secretary Boris Jonson said he would vote against the deal. Conservative lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg also said that the Brexit plan should be blocked, as it "does not deliver on the vote of the British people."
In June 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union in a referendum and is expected to do so by late March 2019, while there are still certain stumbling blocks that impede talks, namely, the Irish border and the post-Brexit UK-EU economic relations, which make a no-deal Brexit scenario a possibility.