PA/Aaron Chown
Northern Ireland and Scotland don’t seem to have heard the rallying cry, despite being more Remain than England.
The clock is ticking on Brexit.
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There are more than 300 contingency plans across government departments.
PA/Yui Mok
E-petitions are an important democratic tool but they need to be part of something bigger to really change things.
Theresa May has been granted an extension, but not the one she wanted.
EPA/Stephanie Lecocq
Decades of consensus building have enabled the EU27 to show remarkable resilience and flexibility, despite chaos on the UK side
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What do Polish women who live in the UK think about Brexit?
EPA/Chris J Ratcliffe.
The prime minister was wrong to absolve herself of blame for this crisis, but a solution can only be found if parliamentarians work together.
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Just a week after her government said seeking a short extension would be a wrong move, the prime minister has folded.
‘Games without frontiers, war without tears …’
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Five years after Crimea returned to Russia, the east-west stalemate over Ukraine is far from stable.
The UK will leave the EU on 29 March unless the UK government requests an extension to Article 50.
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UK parliamentary rules state that an amendment ‘which is the same, in substance’ as an issue that has already been voted on, cannot be proposed again in parliament.
Views on the border: Arlene Foster from Northern Ireland’s DUP meets Irish premier Leo Varadkar at a reception in Washington.
Brian Lawless/PA Wire
The UK’s no-deal tariff plan was viewed in Dublin as a way to scare Brexiteers into supporting Theresa May’s deal.
He does love the sound of his own voice but that’s not why Bercow spoke out.
PA
The speaker has been accused of overreach by blocking a third meaningful vote, but why did Theresa May presume she could bend parliamentary rules?
EPA/Jessica Taylor
It looks like the prime minister will try for a third vote on her deal before asking the EU for a Brexit delay.
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Even if the UK decides it can withdraw from the Irish backstop unilaterally under international law, there will be consequences.
Outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 14, 2019.
REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
Three scholars react to the spectacle, finger-pointing and long-term harms of the stalemate in British Parliament.
Theresa May heads to parliament for her third crunch vote in a week.
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A series of amendments failed, but the prime minister must now appeal for more time.
Theresa May’s sore throat nearly gave out on a second night of Brexit voting.
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MPs can’t actually prevent no deal with this vote, but that doesn’t make it meaningless.
A frictionless border.
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How to make sense of the UK government’s no-deal Brexit contingency plans to avoid a hard border in Ireland.
Other European cities have been quick to sense opportunities from Brexit.
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Always delicate balancing act, ensuring London maintains its appeal to tech start-ups will prove more difficult after Brexit.
It’ll be a while until what’s happened becomes clear. Enterprises and other governments can’t afford to wait.
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It’s not at all certain what’ll happen, so business is taking no chances.
Hands up if you’ve had enough of all this.
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A last minute meeting with the EU couldn’t save her universally detested deal. Now there’s less than three weeks to Brexit – and no one knows what to do.