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From Brexit and Labour’s future to Britain’s new political battlegrounds, here’s the expert lowdown on what Boris Johnson’s predicted landslide win means.
The old border was a source of anger, resentment and violence.
henrikjohn/flickr
After Brexit, politicians hope that technology can help us avoid a hard border in Ireland.
UK, EU, Wales.
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Scotland said no, so why would Wales say yes to letting the UK take over devolved powers?
Nicola Sturgeon and Theresa May.
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Scotland’s decision to reject the Brexit Bill may herald a national constitutional crisis.
A heavyweight no more.
Ben Stansall/PA Wire/PA Images
A new position paper on co-operating with the EU on defence assumes a lot and suggests very little.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
When it comes to difficult negotiations, weakness is strength and strength weakness.
Nicola Sturgeon: Scotland not being listened to.
PA/Jamie Simpson
Holyrood won’t get a veto, but the Supreme Court has done the union no favours.
Which way forward?
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Nearly six months on from the UK’s shock vote, there looks very little room for manoeuvre in negotiations.
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.
Polish workers appeal for warmer relations in 2015.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
When immigrants, rather than immigration, are seen as the problem.
PA/Isabel Infantes
A significant number of people were always going to be disappointed by the result. This is for anyone who wanted to stay.
Go back inside and think about what you’ve done.
Matt Dunham/PA
With an arrogant, ill-starred gamble for partisan advantage, the Conservatives have destroyed the very thing they supposedly stand for.
EPA/Andy Rain
Most of Fleet Street had worked hard for a Leave vote, but it still took even eurosceptic papers by surprise.
Is Britain downsizing?
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The United Kingdom is looking pretty divided right now.
Splitting up.
PA/Danny Lawson
The EU referendum came down to deep divisions over immigration, borders and cultural identity that cannot be safely ignored.
Worth less.
EPA/Andy Rain
The Brexit process will take two years but it is having an immediate effect on your finances.
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How will the votes be counted? When will we know the result? Stuart Wilks-Heeg has all the answers.
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.
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Voting out is not a return ticket, unless you’re ready to eat some serious humble pie – and join the euro.
Sun nails UK’s colours to its mast.
When you take into account the weight of circulation, most readers are getting the Brexit message.
Valeri Potapova/shutterstock.com
Uncertainty over the outcome of the EU referendum has sent currency markets into overdrive.
Ready for my close up.
Irina Braga
The Remain campaign cites this survey as proof of the economic benefits of staying in the EU. Here’s the story behind the numbers.
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Some scenarios put the UK population at just under 80m by 2039. Here are the facts.
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Energy isolation would be more expensive and less secure.
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.