Deal or no deal?
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Publishing plans for a no-deal Brexit will not help the UK’s negotiating position.
PA/Joe Giddens
Her party needed a clear vision for the future but again the PM offered nothing but prevarication.
Mark Morton / Flickr
Autumn is the first novel to tackle the UK’s impending departure from the EU.
The lion for real – or a tamed beast?
PA/Peter Byrne
Johnson trailed a speech about ‘letting the lion roar’. But you had to listen quite hard to hear it.
apiguide/Shutterstock
Crunching the numbers on 14 years of trading shows one of the assumptions about global markets is looking fragile.
Turtle Cove on the Turks and Caicos Islands.
Tim Sackton
It’s not all money laundering and snorkels: by ignoring these remnants of empire, UK is shoring up trouble down the line.
PaaOne/Shutterstock
The countries doing innovative deals with trading partners have one key difference with a post-Brexit UK.
EPA/Neil Hall
An alternative vision for British society and a smart move on Brexit made this leader’s speech one for the history books.
PA/Jeff J Mitchell
The British PM finally acknowledged the need for a transition deal, which will play well in Brussels. But her vision for the future continues to amount to vague platitudes.
Some light reading before an important speech.
Tim Cox
Pearls of wisdom for a prince will serve a prime minister, too.
How much longer will Polish migrants be picking English apples?
Joe Giddens/PA Archive
Comparisons with other immigration systems that deny rights to temporary workers raise questions over Britain’s post-Brexit future.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
After three rounds of talks, what has been agreed and what are the big sticking points?
A poster protesting against a hard border in Killeen, Northern Ireland, near the Irish border.
Aidan Crawley/EPA
Since the Good Friday Agreement, political dialogue has opened up along the Irish border.
Shutterstock
Some 53% of British people think it’s acceptable to display these dolls – and the difference between remainers and leavers is particularly surprising.
shutterstock.com
Too many economists have refused to take seriously the idea that Brexit could economically benefit the UK.
Mariano Mantel
With such a colourful political past, the British prime minister will be hoping for a show of substance in choosing the Tuscan city.
Just say you’ll vote for me and I’ll leave.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Labour and the Conservatives need a broader bandwidth to appeal to the modern electorate.
A heavyweight no more.
Ben Stansall/PA Wire/PA Images
A new position paper on co-operating with the EU on defence assumes a lot and suggests very little.
A protestor awaits news of the vote outside parliament.
PA/Victoria Jones
Theresa May didn’t fall victim to a major rebellion but she is about to face much more detailed scrutiny from some very unhappy backbenchers.
Sad to go.
Tolga Akmen/EPA
Britain is likely to become an increasingly hostile environment for European newcomers.