Clergymen have said it is inappropriate to give an assurance without a comparable arrangement for Britons abroad, which they say they will look for in Brexit transactions.
Be that as it may, the Lodge supported a Work movement encouraging a reexamine by 245 votes to two, as government MPs generally went without.
Driving Leave campaigner Boris Johnson was among a few Tory agitators to vote against the administration.
'With criticalness'
The legislature had attempted to keep away from a House vote since annihilation appeared to be likely - however Work constrained a division taking after its resistance day talk about.
The movement is not authoritative on the administration but rather it goes about as a sign of MPs' perspectives on the subject.
Mr Johnson upheld Work's call for clergymen to "submit with direness" to giving the assessed three million EU nationals in the UK the privilege to stay after the nation has left the EU.
He told MPs: "I might want to set on record that innumerable times the Vote Leave crusade gave precisely this consolation to individuals from other EU nations that live and work here and it is extremely frustrating this is being raised doubt about.
"It believe it's totally right to issue the most grounded conceivable consolation to EU nationals in this nation for good or compassionate reasons, as well as, extremely stable financial reasons as well.
"They are welcome, they are important, they are a key some portion of our general public and I will be energetically voting in favor of this movement today evening time."
'Negotiating advantages'
Home Secretary Theresa May, who upheld staying in the EU, has been condemned - including by numerous Preservationist MPs - for neglecting to ensure EU nationals as of now in the UK the privilege to remain.
She has said the issue will have influence in transactions with the EU, as the UK maps out its withdrawal.
Shadow home secretary Andy Burnham blamed Mrs May for utilizing EU natives as "negotiating concessions".
He asserted Mrs May was attempting to "charm" Traditionalist Gathering individuals in her offer to wind up the following pioneer and PM.
Scrutinizing her nonappearance from the level headed discussion, Mr Burnham blamed Mrs May for an "abandonment of administration".
However, migration priest James Brokenshire - who confronted feedback from MPs over the political range over the administration's position - rejected the case it was regarding EU nationals as "negotiating concessions".
"In the methodology the administration takes and the assentions we make, we will never regard EU natives as pawns in some sort of pessimistic round of arrangement chess."
He said the administration's point was to secure a "reasonable arrangement" for EU nationals in the UK and Britons living abroad in other European nations.
In an announcement on Wednesday evening after the Lodge vote, Mr Burnham said MPs' choice was "a triumph for sound judgment and fairness".
"With this vehement result, it is difficult to perceive how the administration can now turn around what is the reasonable will of the Place of House.
"Theresa May ought to acknowledge the choice of the House and affirm the legitimate status of EU nationals immediately," he included.