Morning-after triumphalism has given way to caution as the ramifications of Brexit sink in.
Tim Ireland / AP/Press Association Images
As the news sinks in, a lot of people who voted to Leave are having second thoughts. Many of them journalists.
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Big promises have been made but no plan seems to be in place.
Today’s split decision is a result of inaction by Congress.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Inaction on President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court blocks a decision on his immigration plan.
The Supreme Court issued a tied decision.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
A brief decision from the highest court will impact millions of lives in the U.S. GSU legal expert explains what will change, and what won’t.
Is it though?
PA/Matt Dunham
The Labour party should have listened to its voters’ deep concerns about immigration. Instead, it’s failed to convince them it cares.
Splitting up.
PA/Danny Lawson
The EU referendum came down to deep divisions over immigration, borders and cultural identity that cannot be safely ignored.
Brexit campaigners argue an Australian-style skilled migration system would limit migration and benefit the UK economy.
Reuters/Stefan Rousseau
If it wins, Leave would strip European Union citizens of the automatic right to live and work in the UK in favour of an Australian-style “points-test” system for skilled workers.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
The debate about immigration is becoming a debate about immigrants – which is dangerous territory.
UKIP on tour.
Owen Humphreys / PA Wire
A cultural war is necessary to protect the progressive and compassionate heart of this country.
James Cridland/Flickr
Research shows that Roma and other EU migrants don’t come to the UK for state benefits.
A Turkish festival in London’s Clissold Park.
Ozan Huseyin/www.flickr.com
Followers of the Gulen movement are trying to foster community cohesion.
Time to look closer to home.
Immigration has been wrongly blamed for the growing pressure on Britain’s public services.
EU referendum campaign has been suspended while a shocked nation mourns Jo Cox.
Yui Mok / PA Wire/Press Association Images
The EU referendum debate has become increasingly shrill and unpleasant. Britain will need to find a way to heal the divide.
Poster girl – for all the wrong reasons.
Ian West/PA Archive/Press Association Images
Tone of talk about immigrants and political clashes has been changing.
Campaign strategist Lynton Crosby has become something of a folk-devil for sections of the British and Australian media.
Reuters/Stefan Wermuth
Lynton Crosby is the manipulator with the Midas touch, who has a reputation for tapping into those ideas and prejudices that coarsen public life but are seemingly widely held and a ballot-box boon.
Speller Jairam Hathwar from Painted Post, New York in the championship round of the 2016 National Spelling Bee.
Shalini Shankar
What do recent National Spelling Bee successes reveal about the role of Indian-Americans in brain sports? And is this a moment to expand the definition of what it means to be American?
Border control.
EPA/Andrew Cowie
The latest figures show a slight rise in migration to the UK, but there is nothing new to get excited about.
Migrant children often adapt to their host country much quicker than their parents.
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Migrant children often become interpreters for their parents in settings like the doctor’s office, legal situations and even in parent-teacher interviews. This can be a burden and affect their health.
There is little evidence that support for multiculturalism is directly tied to support for particular levels of immigration.
AAP/Dean Lewins
Senior politicians slurring the reputation of immigrants does more to erode support for multiculturalism than do uncontrolled borders.
Stampede imminent?
Lukasz Stefanski
Boris Johnson says so. But the reality about EU minimum wages and the effect on migration is more subtle.