At least it’s not a bacon sandwich.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire/Press Association Images
The Labour Party leader faces a hostile press, but needs a better media strategy.
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The Weekly Bull
Morale may be low among parliamentarians, but newly released accounts offer reasons to be cheerful.
Owen Smith: in the marginally-less-red corner.
PA/Andrew Matthews
Owen Smith, a relative newcomer to parliament, is taking on Jeremy Corbyn. But which one can fix their broken party?
How to keep them active?
Jonathan Brady / PA Wire
How can British politics win back the trust of young voters?
Anguskirk
The party has quarelled before – but this is surely its darkest hour.
Michael Foot faced similar problems as Jeremy Corbyn during his tenure.
PA
Similar issues divide the party today as in the 1980s – the question is whether it can survive them this time.
Worth scratching together an extra few quid?
PA/Owen Humphreys
They signed up in their droves to vote in the last leadership election, but will they back Corbyn again?
PA/Anthony Devlin
Clive Lewis and Lisa Nandy could appeal to both parliamentarians and party members.
Not enough air time given to concerns of Labour voters.
Gareth Fuller/PA Wire
BBC editorial decisions cast Labour voters as onlookers in the referendum campaign.
A win for feminism?
EPA/Andy Rain
Are women only selected for leadership when (and only when) there is a high risk of failure?
Without democratic reform, the time ahead for both Britain and the EU looks bleak indeed.
Gary Knight/flickr
The Brexit vote was the outcome of the disillusionment and disengagement that have permeated the UK. Many Europeans share that mood, which is why both the UK and EU need radical democratic surgery.
PA.
PA
After voting no confidence in leader Jeremy Corbyn, angry MPs should think about forming an SDP-style alliance on the centre left.
Divided they fall.
PA
Labour and the Conservatives have faced crises in the past… Just not at the same time.
Angus Roberston is making a play for new rights.
PA
Party leader Angus Robertson thinks his party should trump Labour, since Jeremy Corbyn no longer commands the confidence of his MPs.
Corbyn could be saved by the vagueness of Labour’s rules.
PA/Dominic Lipinski
How can Jeremy Corbyn insist that he isn’t budging, despite a no confidence vote?
Am I?
PA/Anthony Devlin
If the angry voters of Britain remain divided, perhaps a split is the best option for the warring opposition.
Run ragged. UK faces Brexit headwinds.
davidgsteadman/Flickr
George Osborne has sought to reassure markets, but the referendum result has sparked a chain of painful events at a time when Britain has no means to protect itself.
He’s right to look over his shoulder.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
The end of a sorry chapter for Labour is nigh – but the next is being written on the hoof.
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.
Jo Cox, who died after a shooting in her constituency on June 16.
Yui Mok/PA
The popular Labour MP died serving her local constituents at her surgery – a vital part of any MP’s job.