They did what? Juncker reacts to Brexit.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Leaders must address their critics to avoid losing more members.
Boris Johnson led the Leave campaign. Now Brexit might have positive implications for UK trade.
Nigel Roddis/AAP
Australia could stand to benefit from trade with a newly liberated UK.
Markets plunged after the UK voted to exit the EU. Africa’s trade relations with both the EU and UK will be affected by the decision.
Reuters/Kevin Coombs
Emerging market countries that rely heavily on commodity exports will be hit hardest by Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.
A voting station in London where the remain vote was strong. Only the London region, Scotland and Northern Island voted to remain.
Neil Hall/Reuters
The London area has been the U.K.’s political and economic power center, causing the social inequality with other parts of England and Wales that fueled the leave campaign.
An EU-wide network of funding and researchers delivers around £1bn a year of support to UK science.
Xiquinho Silva
Spain is already calling for joint sovereignty but Gibraltarians are unlikely to stand for that.
Now what are you going to do with it?
Neil Hall/Reuters
UKIP’s Nigel Farage and others blamed immigration for the desire to “leave.” But the real subject of the referendum was a dismal economy that stopped working for most Brits.
Danny Lawson / PA Wire
How the Brexiters won it on the night.
People at The Churchill Tavern in New York City react to the Brexit vote.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
The Brexit is on, shifting the political landscape in Europe. Scholars from Cornell, Pennsylvania State and Colorado State universities comment on what it means for U.S. foreign policy and investors.
Time for Australia to make new friends in Europe.
Reuters/Toby Melville
Given Australia’s strong and enduring ties with both the UK and the EU, the shockwaves from Brexit will be felt in Australia soon enough.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
24 junio 2016
Andrew S. Roe-Crines , University of Liverpool ; Andre Spicer , City, University of London ; Bill Durodie , University of Bath ; David Spencer , University of Leeds ; Paul Cairney , University of Stirling ; Peter Taylor-Gooby , University of Kent ; Richard Murphy , City, University of London ; Roger Awan-Scully , Cardiff University ; Simon Usherwood , University of Surrey y Swati Dhingra , London School of Economics and Political Science
The UK has delivered a shock to the world’s largest economic and political group.
The winners.
Nick Ansell / PA Wire
The stakes would be even higher for other member states, but populists are bound to make a play for their own referendums.
Leave ahead.
Anthony Devlin / PA Wire
Brexit begins. Here’s a primer on the laws at play in the UK’s withdrawal process from the EU.
from www.shutterstock.com
Sure, it’s got a flag and some bank notes – but the EU will need to do better if it’s to compete with its members’ strong, national design heritage.
Fighting it out.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire
Britain will continue negotiating the terms of its relationship with Europe, whatever the outcome of its referendum.
Stay or go - Britons will vote this week.
Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke
A British exit from the European Union will mean short term volatility on global markets, but the longer term outcomes are more uncertain.
An uncertain future…
Union Jack via www.shutterstock.com
The UK’s regions – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – hold very different views about whether to remain in the EU, which means the country might not survive a Brexit in its current form.
What are you having?
Andy Rain/EPA
The wane and wax of Euroscepticism in Britain.
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A behavioural psychologists explains how facts fall to the wayside when it comes to how we vote.
UKIP on tour.
Owen Humphreys / PA Wire
A cultural war is necessary to protect the progressive and compassionate heart of this country.