PA/Stefan Rousseau
Some possible outcomes as we head into the unknown.
No Brexit: could it happen?
Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock
The legal and practical steps that would be required for no Brexit to happen.
Don’t forget parliament.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
An EU law expert on what the attorney general’s legal advice on Brexit means and its wider significance for the future.
Parliament’s Brexit clock is ticking.
bryan.../flickr
Ministers were found in contempt of parliament on December 4 for not publishing the full legal advice on the Brexit withdrawal agreement.
You got a better idea?
PA
It might seem counterintuitive, but what if giving MPs more freedom could stop the rebellion?
Michael Tubi/Shutterstock
Why a No Deal option shouldn’t be on the ballot in any second referendum.
Women MPs take to the terrace of the House of Commons in 1931.
PA Archive
It’s 100 years since women won the right to be MPs, but what was Parliament like for women back then?
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.
Donald Trump’s attitude to Justin Trudeau has raised eyebrows around the world.
EPA/Neil Hall
The world is up in arms about many politicians’ increasing rudeness. Are we right to be so perturbed?
UK Parliament
With MPs on a summer break, Brexit takes a rest too, right? Wrong.
Introducing your national unity co-PMs.
PA/Kirsty Wigglesworth
Enough MPs oppose a no-deal Brexit to form a government together, but party rivalries are difficult to overcome.
Flickr/UK Parliament
Everything you need to know about Conservative leadership contests.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
It has been a confusing few weeks on the Tory benches. Here’s how to understand the dispute between Brexit rebels and the PM.
The first defeat in the Lords for the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill on April 18, 2018.
PA Wire/PA Images
The history of Lords defeats – and why the fate of the EU (Withdrawal) Bill is not a constitutional anomaly.
PA/Daniel Leal-Olivas
She lurches from crisis to crisis but the prime minister remains in post. How does she do it?
Charlemagne, the decider.
British Library
Monarchs and prime ministers have spent centuries working out which decisions need to be made in public.
Tick tock.
EPA/Neil Hall
Two toothless motions on repairing a decrepit parliament speak volumes about the state of British politics.
Dan Kitwood/PA Wire/PA Images
It’s quite possible that neither the US nor the UK will ever return to normal when it comes to political and constitutional balance.
Claims that peers could ‘block Brexit’ have been exaggerated.
Dan Kitwood/PA Wire
The Lords won’t block Brexit, but here’s what could happen when they debate the EU Withdrawal Bill.
Once more into the breach.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire/PA Images
Prime Minister Theresa May proved a bit of a push over instead of wielding the axe in her cabinet reshuffle.