EPA/Neil Hall
The Labour leader doesn’t really want another referendum, he wants an election – and striking a deal with the prime minister makes one less likely.
EPA/Neil Hall
The party is in deep trouble among several key demographic groups. A Brexit enthusiast at the helm could make that worse.
EPA/Stephanie LeCocq
One wrong turn after another has left the British prime minister cornered.
Jack Taylor/PA
After a full day with her top team, the prime minister says she wants to thrash out a deal that both she and the opposition can live with.
A big statement but the parliamentary maths is sobering.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Quitting Labour and Conservative MPs need to decide where to position themselves if they want to keep their seats. Even then, it’s going to be a slog.
Anna Soubry announces her decision to join the Independent Group. But will it become a party?
EPA/Andy Rain
Here’s what needs to happen if the UK’s newest political formation wants to stand in elections as a party.
PA/Jonathan Brady
It doesn’t matter that this new formation doesn’t have a policy. The very act of striking out alone is a powerful message about the broken system that has landed the UK in this mess.
PA/Clodagh Kilcoyne
The Conservative Party might not be able to survive the fallout if May worked with the opposition against her own MPs.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
It suddenly looks like the party of government has reached a compromise on its long-held divisions over Europe. But it’s more an unseasonal warm spell than a complete thaw.
Boxing Day Hunt, 2016.
Aidan Crawley/EPA
Fox hunting has been banned in the UK since 2004 – so why is it still happening?
Some really mixed messages out there.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
While many staunch Conservatives would see Norway-plus as a ‘betrayal’, everyone else could probably live with it – unless and until they realise it won’t put a stop to free movement.
Is this my usual spot?
Julien Warnand/EPA
The EU realises the red lines it needs to meet are now the British parliament’s, not Theresa May’s.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Looking back, it’s a wonder the party is still together after years of arguing about this issue.
Back we go.
Olivier Hoslet/EPA
The prime minister may have won a vote of no confidence in her leadership, but Theresa May will struggle to get what she needs from Brussels.
A worker answers a telephone in the office of pro-Brexit group Leave.EU in London, February 2016.
REUTERS/Neil Hall
The history of Britain’s vote to exit from the European Union, known as Brexit, is not a tale of populist resentment toward globalization. It is a top-down story of leaders and elite ideology.
EPA/Andy Rain
A cross party alliance? A fresh election? None of the options look particularly appealing right now.
EPA/Will Oliver
This was the party admitting that no one else could do a better job of negotating Brexit.
Former Brexit minister Dominic Raab would quite like they keys to Number 10.
PA/Victoria Jones
The PM is in a tight spot, but can anyone else lead the nation into Brexit?
These two have failed to come up with a solution to this problem.
PA
We can’t agree what the ‘will of the people’ was in 2016, but these are the representatives they elected in 2017.
Preparing chipatis at the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara, in Walsall.
Joe Giddens/PA Archive
Theresa May is courting ethnic minority support for her Brexit deal with her rhetoric on EU nationals ‘jumping the queue’.