Theresa May goes global.
Kirsty Wigglesworth PA Wire/PA Images
The UK’s decision to leave the single market and customs union will have huge consequences.
No love lost: Arlene Foster and Martin McGuinness.
Brian Lawless/PA
What was already an uneasy alliance first turned sour, and then utterly disintegrated. Where did it all go wrong?
Is the new PM unravelling?
PA
As pressure mounts, the prime minister needs to prove that her thinking is not ‘muddled’ on some key issues.
Sussan Ley maintains that her entitlement claims were within the rules.
AAP/Mick Tsikas
Malcolm Turnbull has announced major changes to the parliamentary entitlements system, modelled on the UK’s system of vetting MPs’ expenses.
Corbyn’s first big speech of the year was full of contradictions.
PA
It’s not going to be easy to square this circle, but the Labour leader isn’t presenting a meaningful post-Brexit vision.
Ready for change?
PA
Downsizing a whole chamber of parliament is a tricky move.
Peer Lawther
Copeland has been Labour for more than 30 years, but these are not normal times and this is no ordinary by-election.
Rogers was a key figure in Brexit negotiations.
EPA/Thierry Roge
The lack of respect shown to a senior civil servant working hard to make Brexit work is troubling.
Thatcher meets Mandela after his release in 1990.
Mike Stephens/PA
To get Nelson Mandela released and save Namibia’s independence elections, Thatcher proposed a massive aid programme.
Members of the band MP4 present Jeremy Corbyn and Tracy Brabin MP with copies of the Jo Cox charity single. Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire/PA Images
MPs and rock songs may seem like odd bedfellows, but the charity single marks a longstanding shift in how music mobilises the masses.
A supporter of the Pirate Party in Reykjavik, Iceland.
AP Photo/Frank Augstein
While the US is reeling from rampant fake online news, political movements in Europe are using the internet as a powerful democratic symbol to win elections. Will cyber-optimism or pessimism win?
The biggest case in supreme court history.
PA/Paul Rogers
Explaining the key arguments in this landmark case.
The end of the line for Goldsmith.
PA/Yui Mok
A tory political career ends, a Lib Dem’s begins – and Labour loses its deposit.
Red shoes, blue soul?
Marion Roper
The backlash against the singer’s warm words for Theresa May are a reminder of a certain kind of intolerance.
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Football is becoming an increasingly important weapon in Britain’s soft power arsenal.
Khakimullin Aleksandr
Is the news media using data journalism properly?
Could I just squeeze in the middle?
PA/Brian Lawless
The rules have changed but the former PM still knows how to play the game.
PA/Jonathan Brady
A linguistic battle between Brexiteers and Remainers shows how far we’ve come from a clear definition.
Reading straight from Ed Balls’ playbook.
Stefan Rousseau PA Wire/PA Images
Hammond has taken an oddly similar stance to former shadow chancellor Ed Balls: running a deficit and boosting infrastructure spending.
On the march.
Stefan Rousseau PA Wire/PA Images
November 24, 2016
Geraint Johnes , Lancaster University ; Anna Vignoles , University of Cambridge ; David Bailey , Aston University ; David Metz , UCL ; James Wilsdon , University of Sheffield ; Jonquil Lowe , The Open University ; Karen Bloor , University of York ; Michael Kitson , Cambridge Judge Business School ; Michael White , Nottingham Trent University ; Peter Taylor-Gooby , University of Kent , and Stephen Roper , Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
Philip Hammond has delivered Britain’s first major economic statement since its Brexit vote. Our panellists give their take on what it means.