Theresa May agreed with leaders of the 27 European Union member states to extend the negotiating period of the Brexit process until May 22 if MPs vote for her divorce deal next week. Nigel Farage denounced the decision of the Prime Minister to delay Brexit past the March 29 deadline, claiming Mrs May had turned Brexit into an "international humiliation". Responding to the latest Brexit development, the British MP told BBC R4 Today: "I’m disgusted. Related articles Brexit LIVE: ‘We NEED them’ Merkel FURIOUS at Macron and Tusk Pound to euro exchange rate: Sterling kept 'on its toes' by Brexit What happened last night was a national humiliation that became an international humiliation Nigel Farage "We were told we were leaving on March 29. 500 MPs voted for us to leave on March 29. A 100 times the Prime Minister told us it would happen. "I think there is going to be a strong sense, amongst many millions of people, that this is a total failure of leadership. What happened last night was a national humiliation that became an international humiliation. "People are just laughing at us. Ordinary people – they are angry, and I’m angry too. " EU27 leaders agreed to extend Brexit talks until May 22 if Theresa May secures the support of MPs for her withdrawal deal with a third meaningful vote next week. Should she fail, Brussels told Mrs May she will have until April 12 to clarify the position of the UK. LISTEN HERE: Latest Brexit news from the Express.co.uk Final Countdown podcast Brexit news: Nigel Farage says Theresa May has been (Image: SKY NEWS) Mr Farage continued: "Her treaty doesn’t give us Brexit, it’s Brexit in name only. It doesn’t leave us free, it doesn’t of anything. "It’s a disaster. But that shouldn't matter because Article 50 was clear. The thing that 500 MPs voted for was we leave on March 20 with or without a deal." The Brexit Party MEP later reiterated his anger on Sky News, where he admitted he would be willing to "risk" seeing Theresa May's deal voted down and get a longer extension than agree to her proposal. He said: "It’s a heck of a risk and, of course, if the Treaty was to pass in Westminster I’d face the same choice here because the European Union ultimately has the final choice. "Is it worth the risk for Eurosceptics, for Brexiteers who want an independent country, to vote against Mrs May’s Treaty? The answer is yes. I would rather risk extension, I’d rather risk more elections." Brexit news: May will have until April 12 to devise a new plan if her deal is rejected again (Image: EXPRESS.CO.UK) He added: "People have had enough of this. If Mrs May’s treaty went through this agony would go on for years and years and years which is why it’s not getting through the Commons. The South East England politician also dismissed experts claiming Britain would suffer in a no deal Brexit scenario: "We heard that baloney for years. "If we had listened to them, we would have joined the euro 20 years ago. Thank God we didn’t. We should be leaving next week. "We are bored with all of this. There are fantastic opportunities for this country." Asked to comment on the surge of support for an anti-Brexit petition signed by over 2 million people in less than 48 hours, Mr Farage hit back: "A lot of whom live in Russia so maybe there should be an inquiry about collusion. "I wouldn’t take that too seriously. People all over the world were signing up to that." Following a tense seven-hour meeting with her European counterparts, Theresa May expressed gratitude to MPs who have supported her deal. Mrs May said: "I am very grateful to those MPs who have supported the deal, to those who have come around to support the deal and to all those MPs I have been meeting across the house." The Prime Minister also declined to rank her favoured options if her deal does not pass but did say: "I do not believe that we should be revoking Article 50. "That is not something we should be doing for this reason. We gave the choice as to whether to stay in the European Union or leave the European Union to the British people. "They voted in 2016, they voted to leave. "I think the time is now to deliver for the British people, the time is now to make the decision."All rights reserved for this news site express.co.uk and under his responsibility