Feel the Earth move.
Jonathan Brady/PA Wire/PA Images
In bringing out the youth vote, Labour has changed the rules of the game. Where next is anyone’s guess.
Who knows?
Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire/PA Images
June 9, 2017
James Tilley , University of Oxford ; Ben Williams , University of Salford ; Daniel Fitzpatrick , Aston University ; John Garry , Queen's University Belfast ; Kathryn Simpson , Manchester Metropolitan University ; Laura McAllister , Cardiff University ; Matthew Cole , University of Birmingham ; Michael Kitson , Cambridge Judge Business School ; Neil Matthews , University of Bristol ; Parveen Akhtar , Aston University ; Richard Murphy , City, University of London ; Robin Pettitt , Kingston University ; Stuart Wilks-Heeg , University of Liverpool , and William McDougall , Glasgow Caledonian University
Rolling coverage of the general election results from expert academics.
Who will be the UK’s next prime minister: incumbent Theresa May or Labour challenger Jeremy Corbyn?
Various photographers/Reuters
Terrorism, Brexit, Scottish independence: there is a lot going on in the UK election, and the landslide once predicted for the Conservatives is no longer a safe bet.
How each U.K. party leader would drive Brexit is the key issue on voters’ minds.
AP Photo/Matt Dunham
While security concerns have punctuated the campaign’s closing days, Brexit remains the most important issue on voters’ minds. How the EU exit is managed will matter a great deal to US interests.
Justin Lynham/Flickr
Keeping companies in the UK will be a huge task for whoever ends up in Downing Street.
There’s principles, and then there’s policy.
Anthony Devlin/PA Archive/PA Images
The way Corbyn’s Labour has handled Trident and defence is perfectly in line with Labour’s history since the 1960s.
uhh, ummm, golly, ermmm, is it 8th June? 9th? Pass?
PA/Steve Parsons
A specialist rates the two leaders as they navigate journalistic grillings on the campaign trail.
Never the twain…
M-SUR
Is this why we are in an age of intergenerational conflict?
What is Westminster doing to MPs’ wellbeing?
Yui Mok/PA Wire
Workplaces stresses and the weight of great expectations take a toll on well-being.
Floral tributes near an an anti-Islamic State poster near Borough market, London.
AAP/Andy Rain
National security is a more complex issue in the UK these days, after a decade and a half of unpopular wars and years punctuated by regular, deadly terrorist attacks.
Quite a surprising result for this man.
Joe Giddens/PA
With just a week until the vote, the polling agency has thrown a cat among the pigeons. Here’s how to understand the poll everyone is talking about.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
She faced criticism for not taking part in the BBC head-to-head, but the PM would have struggled had she done another late U-turn.
May takes the stage.
PA
May has clearly been extensively trained in hand gestures. Corbyn, not so much.
Ever get that feeling you’re being watched? Corbyn with Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness, 1995.
John Stillwell/PA Wire/PA Images
The security services have had eyes on many Labour MPs over the years.
Sinking into the background?
PA/Chris Radburn
The left wing of the party is starting to see that the leader may need to be sacrificed in order for his legacy to survive.
Theresa May works on her credentials on a trip to India.
EPA/Jagadeesh Nv
Jeremy Corbyn fails to appeal to this key demographic for a number of important reasons.
A closer look insider.
Danny Lawson/PA Wire/PA Images
What the Labour Party manifesto says about tax and spending – and whether or not it is viable.
Go big or go home?
PA/Danny Lawson
The party has produced an unexpectedly detailed plan for government, marking a radical break from the past.
Jeremy Corbyn launches the Labour manifesto.
Owen Humphreys/PA Wire/PA Images
With the Conservatives trying to muscle in on traditional Labour territory by painting themselves as the party of workers, it’s worth taking a closer look at their promises.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Jeremy Corbyn pledges to give the power back to the people, but history suggests they might not actually want it.