TORY MP James Duddridge has revealed he will not be supporting Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

The Rochford and Southend MP claims the document, which runs at more than 500 pages, and the proposed deal is “not delivering Brexit”.

He told the Echo he will stay loyal to his south Essex constituents and what they voted for adding this deal “does not deliver the Brexit either my constituents or I voted for” and he could not support it.

He, and many of his Conservative colleagues, have expressed dismay at the concessions which are being proposed.

He said: “This deal keeps us bound to the European Union, acting as a supplicant puppy to a federal block.

“In short, this deal does not deliver Brexit, and as such i will not be voting for this when it comes to Parliament.”

Mr Duddridge made the claim during a day of turmoil for the Prime Minister yesterday.

Despite a series of resignations she insisted the deal was the best one available during an evening press conference.

Straight after the press conference East of England Euro MP for Labour, Alex Mayer, said: “Chaos and confusion reigns at the heart of government.

“A marathon cabinet meeting followed by a pronouncement of a “collective decision” on the steps of Downing Street which unravelled in an instant.

“Even by May’s standards this is extraordinary disarray.

“If she can’t persuade her own Brexit Secretary this is a good deal, what earthly chance has she got with other MPs and more importantly the British people?

“As for her desperate deal, we’ve got 585 pages of which only three are about the economic agreement for the future.

“This woolly, fudge of a deal glosses over security, research and rights at work.

“Jeremy Corbyn is right, this isn’t a deal Labour can or should sign up to.

“Theresa May has failed to provide real detail and now wants us to take a blindfold leap into the unknown.

“In a bizarre press conference she then said she still believes she is on the ‘right course’.

“She may, but no one else does.

“She cannot continuing burying her head in the sand.

“Britain deserves better than this.”

Earlier in the day Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey resigned from the cabinet saying the Brexit deal “does not honour the result of the referendum”.

Her move came just two hours after Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab sensationally quit his post in a massive blow to the plans.

Mr Raab, who only took over in the summer after David Davis resigned in protest over the Prime Minister’s withdrawal strategy, said he “cannot in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU”.

His surprise departure came amid a furious backlash from Brexit-backing Tories, including several from south Essex, to the deal agreed by UK and EU negotiators.

The document comes four months ahead of the UK’s scheduled withdrawal on March 29.