British Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned Friday there was "no better outcome" to the tortuous Brexit process than his divorce deal, as he scrambled to get MPs behind the agreement ahead of a knife-edge vote in parliament.
The day before the House of Commons meets to consider the agreement, Mr Johnson urged politicians to back the "fantastic" terms he struck with European Union leaders and let Britain leave the bloc on 31 October.
"There's no better outcome than the one I'm advocating tomorrow," Mr Johnson told BBC television.
"I want colleagues on all sides of the House to think about a world tomorrow night in which we've got this thing done," he added in a separate interview with ITV.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrives for the European Union Summit in Brussels. Source: AFP
"I think the nation will heave a great sigh of relief."
Mr Johnson pulled off a major coup in agreeing a new divorce deal at a Brussels summit on Thursday, only a fortnight before Britain is scheduled to leave the EU.
But the deal's fortunes - and Britain's immediate fate - rest in the hands of a few undecided MPs, who will vote in the first Saturday session of the Commons since the 1982 Falklands War.
Political pundits suggest the vote could be exceptionally tight.
Mr Johnson has no majority among MPs, every opposition party has come out against the deal and even his parliamentary ally, Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), says it cannot support the terms.
Mr Johnson requires the support of 319 other MPs to guarantee victory - and claims he is confident of getting the numbers, as he spent the day meeting and calling MPs.
He must convince diehard eurosceptics in his own Conservative ranks, former colleagues he expelled from the party for seeking to block a "no deal" departure, and main opposition Labour MPs from Brexit-backing constituencies to have any chance.
Labour is ordering its MPs to vote against the deal but threatening no punishment if they vote in favour.
Several MPs spent Friday wrestling with their consciences as the more than three years of turmoil since the June 2016 EU membership referendum came to a head.
Macron turns the screw
If the Commons rejects the deal, Mr Johnson will be forced by law to ask the EU to delay Brexit, for what would be the third time. He has said he would rather be "dead in a ditch".
French President Emmanuel Macron piled the pressure on MPs, saying he did not want a new delay now a deal was struck.
"The October 31 date should be respected. I don't think that new deadlines should be given," he said at the EU summit in Brussels.
"We need to end these negotiations and get on negotiating the future relationship."
Luxembourg's Prime Minister Xavier Bettel added: "There is no choice between Brexit or no Brexit: it's a choice between deal or no deal."

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson (L) poses with French President Emmanuel Macron during a bi-lateral meeting on the sidelines of a European Union Summit. Source: AFP
Mr Johnson took office in July vowing to keep to the 31 October Brexit deadline, deal or no deal.
He pledged to renegotiate the most contentious elements of a divorce text agreed by his predecessor Theresa May with Brussels last year, which MPs rejected three times.
The compromise deal that was finally struck on Thursday has a new arrangement for keeping open the border between British Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland.