EU leaders have FINALLY given the green light to Theresa May's Brexit deal this morning at a historic summit in Brussels.

European Council President Donald Tusk announced the 27 leaders had rallied around to rubber stamp the deal in just 33 minutes today.

He tweeted to say: "EU27 has endorsed the Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaration on the future EU-UK relations."

But he didn't say whether there were any objections to the deal.

After 18 months of wrangling and talks, leaders have arrived from across the continent for a special summit - as Tory MPs continue to oppose it back home.

Meanwhile, one EU leader warned that another Brexit vote or even another election could be on the cards if MPs throw out Theresa May's deal, the Lithuanian President has said.

Dalia Grybauskaitė said another vote, an election or more negotiations were possible if MPs torpedo it in the Commons.

She said this morning: "We are going to agree on the withdrawal agreement. And then of course it will be for Britain to decide what to do next...

"It could be a second vote of the people, it could be new elections, it could be a request for renegotiations, there is at least four scenarios, I calculate."

Mrs May will arrive at 10am and join leaders for a meeting before a press conference around lunchtime.

But Dutch PM Mark Rutte said he was "absolutely confident" that Theresa May's deal would be able to pass.

He said the deal was the "max we can all do" and didn't think there was any hope of reopening talks if the agreement failed to be signed off by MPs.

EU boss Jean Claude Juncker said the same thing, and the EU's position wouldn't change.

Michel Barnier said as he arrived that it was "time for everybody to take responsibility" for passing this deal.

The Frenchman insisted to reporters that "we will remain allies, partners and friends" after spending months getting the 600-page deal ready.

In a letter to the nation today Mrs May said she would campaign with "heart and soul" to get her Brexit deal through Parliament.

She wrote: "It will be a deal that is in our national interest one that works for our whole country and all of our people, whether you voted Leave or Remain."

She has copied Tony Blair’s election-winning pledge cards as she goes flat out to sell her EU divorce plan - dubbed a “sell-out” by critics - to Britain.

But almost one hundred of her own Tory MPs are set to oppose the deal as it stands when they get a vote on it in the coming weeks.

Yesterday Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez threatened to "veto" the agreement over Gibraltar but pulled his opposition to it at the last minute after he said he secured more assurances from Brits.

Mrs May gave way to demands and acknowledged that Gibraltar won't necessarily be covered by a future trade deal with the EU, giving Spain hopes of renegotiating the territory in future.

But Brussels officials said Spain had always been set to have a say in a future trade pact.