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Sure, it’s got a flag and some bank notes – but the EU will need to do better if it’s to compete with its members’ strong, national design heritage.
Fighting it out.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire
Britain will continue negotiating the terms of its relationship with Europe, whatever the outcome of its referendum.
Stay or go - Britons will vote this week.
Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke
A British exit from the European Union will mean short term volatility on global markets, but the longer term outcomes are more uncertain.
An uncertain future…
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The UK’s regions – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – hold very different views about whether to remain in the EU, which means the country might not survive a Brexit in its current form.
What are you having?
Andy Rain/EPA
The wane and wax of Euroscepticism in Britain.
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A behavioural psychologists explains how facts fall to the wayside when it comes to how we vote.
UKIP on tour.
Owen Humphreys / PA Wire
A cultural war is necessary to protect the progressive and compassionate heart of this country.
Bravo les British!
Chris Radburn/PA Wire
Getting rid of Britain could help reinvigorate the EU, and France’s place within it.
William Sadler II’s Battle of Waterloo.
British history is deeply connected to Europe and whatever the result of its referendum, this will continue.
Should the British decide to leave the EU, it is unlikely that David Cameron could, or would want to, remain prime minister.
Reuters/Dylan Martinez
Behind the parochial media focus on the political manoeuvring within a divided Conservative Party, national decisions don’t get much more important than the UK’s referendum on its EU membership.
Struggling to decide?
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The UK in a Changing EU app lets you choose which issues you feel are most important to you and use those to weight the outcomes.
Obama weighs in on Brexit.
Stefan Wermuth/Reuters
Polls show voters are beginning to lean toward leaving the EU, so it’s time to brush up on what will happen if there’s a Brexit – and why it matters on this side of the Atlantic.
Code of Federal Regulations, all 175,000 pages.
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Too much regulation from Brussels has been a rallying cry for Britons who want to opt out of the EU. Is ‘overregulation’ a problem in the U.S. too?
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When public opinion is as split as it is on the EU referendum, pollsters struggle to get it right.
Time to look closer to home.
Immigration has been wrongly blamed for the growing pressure on Britain’s public services.
And the day after?
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How the different scenarios could play out.
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The EU drags Britain kicking and screaming to the left. Lexiters need to update their principles before voting on them.
Pick your man.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire
Whichever way the referendum goes, it will take a long time to rebuild trust.
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An ‘emergency budget’ may not be necessary but that doesn’t mean the UK will be awash with cash saved from its EU budget contributions.
From the EU to the UN.
Diliff and UN via Wikimedia Commons
Few would advocate a withdrawal from the United Nations. But international law has a big impact on Britain too.