Corbyn and Johnson: who will blink first?
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The UK prime minister says parliament is holding up the Brexit process. But is that really the case?
Boris Johnson recording a television interview before a leadership hustings event in July 2019.
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Research suggests that people still depend on the mainstream media for their news. It’s more important than ever that journalists earn that trust.
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Some argue that a written document would settle difficult questions at times of crisis, but recent evidence suggests otherwise.
As the public face of globalism, the WTO mobilised protesters. It’ll be replaced by the law of the jungle.
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We are about to go from having rules that overreached to having few rules. The US, China and the EU will be able to act with impunity.
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MPs were supposed to vote either for or against the prime minister’s deal in a special weekend session. But things didn’t quite work out like that.
EPA/Yoan Valat
New technologies and user-level data mean that wealthy companies can influence our politics in ways not open to ordinary people.
Warner Bros
Todd Phillips’ film reflects a society that is distrustful of traditional power structures and voicing that disillusionment at the ballot box.
EU-reka?
EPA/Neil Hall
The prime minister has come to a new agreement with Brussels. But the question is whether he can get it through the UK parliament.
Food supply changes.
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The shock of Brexit could have repercussions for the design of the UK economy.
Yeomen of the Guard conduct a ceremonial search of parliament before the state opening.
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A vague list of ideas for a government that doesn’t really want to see this parliament run its course.
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Interviews show Brexit divisions can cause tension but that people are thinking carefully about how to avoid breakdown.
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The deal put forward might win the prime minister support at home but Brussels also has to get on board.
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Just a few years ago, very few people cared about the European question in the UK. What made it all change so suddenly?
Can you tell one from the other?
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The world faces a collision between facts and alternative facts – so how do experts get their message heard over the din of fake news?
Boris Johnson calls on Jeremy Corbyn to take him on in an election.
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If he can sell this plan to Brussels, it’s game changing – but that’s a big ‘if’.
Fighting talk: Johnson warms up for his Conservative Party speech.
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A look at his published writing shows the prime minister has ramped up the rhetoric as Brexit has approached.
Johnson, now angling hard for the feline vote.
PA/Henry Nicholls
The Conservative Party has long positioned itself as the voice of law and order – now that’s been shot to bits.
President of the Supreme Court, Justice Lady Brenda Hale, during the recent judgement on the prorogation of British parliament.
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As the recent Brexit litigation has shown, the UK’s Supreme Court has had to consider political as well as legal issues in its first ten years.
What’s going on in there?
PA/Toby Melville
The humiliation of asking for a Brexit extension could be a price worth paying to get an election.
The Prime Minister’s inflammatory language in Parliament provoked outrage.
PA
Use of the words ‘traitor’, ‘surrender’ and ‘betrayal’ have increased inside parliament but everyone outside needs to watch their language too.