No place for young people.
Gareth Fuller/PA Images.
Parish council elections are a vital part of democracy – so why are people put off getting involved?
Andrew Matthews/PA
History is replete with examples of what happens when the idea of a nation being humiliated is allowed to fester.
How much longer in Number 10?
Jonathan Brady/PA
The Conservatives need to think beyond Theresa May, and consider once again what it is to be a conservative.
Farage launches his Brexit Party, ahead of the European parliament elections.
Joe Giddens/PA
The EU saw this coming and is ready for Farage’s ‘Trojan horse’.
EPA/Neil Hall
Years after voting to leave the EU, the UK still has no clear plan of how to make Brexit work. These five articles chart the history of an intractable problem.
Theresa May has been granted a Brexit ‘flextension’ until the end of October.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
The UK has until October 31 to get its house in order.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Members of the European Research Group are right to compare themselves to ancient Spartan warriors. Behind their combative stance, they seem to have no plan for when the Brexit war is over.
Divided.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
What sort of democracy is now required to break the Brexit deadlock?
EPA/Neil Hall
The Labour leader doesn’t really want another referendum, he wants an election – and striking a deal with the prime minister makes one less likely.
EPA
No one is saying she has done a stellar job, but other prime ministers have made mistakes like May.
Keir Starmer, Jeremy Corbyn and Rebecca Long-Bailey prepare for Brexit talks.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
After the initial relief that the party leaders were working together comes the realisation that they both risk splitting their parties if they strike a deal.
EPA/Will Oliver
It’s easy, now, to think of this as Theresa May’s story – but Thatcher, Blair and Cameron all played their part.
EPA/Neil Hall
The party is in deep trouble among several key demographic groups. A Brexit enthusiast at the helm could make that worse.
EPA/Stephanie LeCocq
One wrong turn after another has left the British prime minister cornered.
Anxious, but agitated.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
As mental health experts warn that Brexit anxieties are cause for concern, why this is deeply suspect for the country’s political future.
Jack Taylor/PA
After a full day with her top team, the prime minister says she wants to thrash out a deal that both she and the opposition can live with.
EPA/Mark Duffy
The prime minister will be the key protagonist in Brexit the movie, but there are parts for everyone.
MPs accused Theresa May of leading them towards a ‘blind Brexit’.
EPA-EFE
The prime minister asked MPs to support her withdrawal agreement, leaving the future relationship for later. Her plan backfired.
MPs voted on a series of Brexit options.
PA/UK Parliament
MPs were never expected to produce a concrete decision in their first round of indicative votes. There is some material to work with now.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
The prime minister has told her MPs that if they back her deal, she will leave office before the next stage of the Brexit process begins.