And what do you two young whippersnappers think about my deal?
EPA/Will Oliver
This group only recently reached voting age, and they’d like to have a say.
High road, low road.
mwreck
Brexit has shown the constitutional arrangements around devolution for what they are.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
The PM has shown time and again that her political judgement is way off base, yet she claims to know that her deal is the best option.
Michael Tubi/Shutterstock
Why a No Deal option shouldn’t be on the ballot in any second referendum.
Deal agreed.
EPA-EFE
Theresa May could game Conservative MPs by placing them into a ‘prisoner’s dilemma’.
EPA/Julien Warnand
Expect more member states to ‘do a Spain’ once future relationship talks commence.
Preparing chipatis at the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara, in Walsall.
Joe Giddens/PA Archive
Theresa May is courting ethnic minority support for her Brexit deal with her rhetoric on EU nationals ‘jumping the queue’.
A long way yet to go.
Stephanie Lecocq/EPA
A leaked version of the political declaration shows that Brexit is by no means ‘sorted’ yet.
Let the real negotiations begin.
Olivier Hoslet/EPA
As the divorce part of the Brexit negotiations approach their endgame, attention is turning to the future relationship between the UK and EU. The view from EU capitals.
Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock
How a child reacted to Theresa May’s comments that Brexit would stop EU citizens from ‘jumping the queue’ to come to the UK.
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Ukraine shows how it’s possible to have single market access, while maintaining control of your borders and staying out of the European Court of Justice.
Tick tock.
Ivan Marc/Shutterstock
What role do EU institutions and the parliaments of 27 member states have in agreeing the next steps of the Brexit process.
Hadrian via Shutterstock
The tone remains the same, but the anger is directed against a different group of ‘elites’.
Does a greener future lie ahead?
Joe Herbert
Brexit is a looming crisis but the ensuing chaos is an opportunity to create a radical alternative vision for the UK. Degrowth is the future we need.
The crisis enveloping the British government started when Britons voted “yes” to leaving the European Union in 2016.
Neil Hall/EPA
As England agonises over Brexit, divisions have emerged in other parts of the UK, especially in Northern Ireland and independent-minded Scotland.
Gove: staying for now.
Victoria Jones/PA Wire
And why it’s not enough to be against the Withdrawal Agreement.
pixelrain/Shutterstock
The prime minister’s office has promoted tweets in favour of the Brexit deal – why that’s a problem.
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While one of the most contentious Brexit issues, politicians forget the essential human aspect of the border as a place that is lived in and loved.
Doing her best.
Matt Dunham/PA Wire/PA Images
Controlling immigration was the most important concern for Brexit voters and May’s deal does that.
The Snark – the beastly figment of imagination created by Lewis Carroll.
Lewis Carroll
Like Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem, the Brexit target was a figment of everyone’s imagination.