Remain voters overwhelmingly prioritise a deal with the EU.
Amani A / Shutterstock.com
How the public ranks different post-Brexit trade partners and which sections of the economy they prioritise.
As the U.K. leaves the European Union, what awaits Prime Minister Boris Johnson?
Isabel Infantes/AFP via Getty Images
People who support Brexit want different results from the UK’s departure from the EU – and they can’t all get what they want.
Kellogg
Italian authorities who seized the special Christmas edition crisps seem to be unfamiliar with EU guidelines on food labelling and protected ingredients.
Shutterstock/easy camera
The EU needs to reconsider its approach if digital platforms are to thrive.
Who’s manipulating what you know before you vote?
AntonSokolov/Shutterstock.com
Information warfare has gone global. Here are some recent campaigns, and a couple of ideas about how to fight back.
On the mend?
Shutterstock
While Johnson brings a modicum of certainty about the UK’s direction of travel – out of the EU – its future beyond 2020 remains uncertain.
totojang1977 / shutterstock
The European Commission will propose a wide-ranging ‘climate law’ in the next few months.
Boris Johnson: heading back to Downing Street.
Will Oliver/EPA
Our panel of experts analyse the results of the British election.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Whatever it’s merits, one thing is clear: Boris Johnson’s deal does not mean anyone will stop talking about Brexit.
Digital traders will not escape taxation.
Create Jobs 51/Shutterstock
Digital transactions generate massive amounts of revenue and the Kenyan government wants to ensure that online traders pay their fair share of taxes.
Who would Putin prefer as prime minister?
Alexander Zemlianichenko/ Pool/ EPA -EFE
Boris Johnson or Jeremy Corbyn? Who would Vladimir Putin want to see in Downing Street and why?
Valeria, Shahadat and Leonardo – an EU family living in London.
Francesca Moore
London’s superdiversity offers a safe and welcoming space for European citizens – but Brexit poses a real challenge to it.
shutterstock/1000 Words
What the main parties propose to do about immigration.
The EU and NATO: aligned but not always together.
Nedelcu Paul Petru/Shutterstock
Why the EU and NATO have struggled to cooperate fully.
SOS Mediterranee team members from the humanitarian ship Ocean Viking approach a boat in distress with 30 people on board in the waters off Libya on Nov. 20, 2019.
(Hannah Wallace Bowman/MSF via AP)
The EU’s proposals for relocating migrants is inefficient in measuring whether member states actually have the economic capacity to welcome asylum-seekers.
British troops on deployment for NATO in Poland.
Georgina Stubbs/ PA Images
With Brexit on the horizon, Britain’s role in NATO won’t change, but its defence priorities might.
From left, the United Kingdom’s decision to leave the European Union affects Ireland, too.
alexfan32/Shutterstock.com
Politicians who want to unite Ireland under a Dublin-based government are stuck choosing whether to participate in the UK in an effort to stay in the EU.
Kirsty O'Connor/PA Wire/PA Images
The UK has benefited from EU labour protections, which will be vulnerable to the Conservative party’s deregulation agenda.
A migrant hugs an SOS Mediterranee rescuer aboard the Ocean Viking ship before stepping into the port of Messina, Italy, Sept. 24, 2019. He was among 182 people aboard the Ocean Viking rescued in the Mediterranean Sea north of Libya.
(AP Photo/Renata Brito)
In Libya, a lack of authority has allowed the ongoing kidnapping and extortion of migrants. What can European countries do to prevent the murder and torture of migrants?
The Gambia’s relationship with the European Union could be shaken by the immigration question.
Kerr Fatou Network
The Gambia’s agreement with the European Union to return immigrants to the country is causing the government problems at home.