Bravo les British!
Chris Radburn/PA Wire
Getting rid of Britain could help reinvigorate the EU, and France’s place within it.
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.
Lost in the fog? How the fraudsters got their morals.
Shreyans Bhansali/Flickr
Corporate wrongdoing is underpinned by a morality that many of us have voted for.
Johnson has left the building.
Ben Birchall / PA
He claims to not have what it takes to be leader, but only the justice secretary stands a chance of giving the Thatcherites what they crave.
And the day after?
Anthony Richardson/www.shutterstock.com
How the different scenarios could play out.
A political football?
Karen Katriyan
How will the football influence the vote? Here are the possibilities …
Just before they burst.
Andrea Obzerova
The swing in betting sentiment the month before the Scottish indyref tells us Boris has his work cut out.
Enough scaremongering.
nito
There is good reason to fear Brexit, but voting to stay in the EU is also a chance to restore the vision of the founding fathers.
Waving the Austrian flag: the leaders of the Freedom Party.
Leonhard Foeger/Reuters
Austria and the almost victory of the far right is a canary in a coal mine. A new political divide is emerging on both sides of the Atlantic.
Boris Johnson is the most quoted personality in the referendum debate.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire/Press Association Images
Media coverage of the debate has so far been dominated by Conservative men
Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock.com
The Alzheimer’s Society is concerned that people with dementia aren’t getting diagnosed soon enough. But there are pros and cons to an early diagnosis.
Celebrity chef going large.
Mr Pics/Shutterstock.com
Celebrity chef needs to persuade those in power to change our obesity-causing environment.
Second from left: Transparency International chair Jose Ugaz.
EPA
Follow the money behind the likes of Transparency International and a picture starts to emerge.
Cameron getting tough on graft as Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari looks on.
Dan Kitwood / PA Wire/Press Association Images
Corruption has dogged both countries for generations – what can their leaders to do bring change?
Is the ‘golden relationship’ already on the rocks?
Dominic Lipinski / PA Wire/Press Association Images
Is being rude to overseas visitors an attempt to hold on to the pride that comes with power?
I’m clean, promise: the UK’s David Cameron and Nigeria’s Muhammadu Buhari.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
Ask the British public about routine government and business practices, and they’ll tell you they’re deeply corrupt.
And one more thing.
PA/Leon Neal
The prime minister’s security speech has been labelled fear mongering.
Nigel Farage – wielding the fear stick.
Andy Rain/EPA
When it comes to Brexit, both the Leave and Remain camps are using psychological trickery to convince voters.
The hard sell to come.
Lolostock
England and Scotland see Europe differently and the EU question could hasten the end of the Union.
Foot voting.
Ververidis Vasilis/shutterstock
May 2016 sees contests for the position of elected mayor in four major cities across England.