Can May turn this ship around?
EPA/Neil Hall
The PM has pledged to hold cross-party talks after failing to get her deal through parliament. But time is running out.
Theresa May likely wants to escape this room.
Reuters TV
The UK’s agonizing efforts to find a path out of the European Union is beginning to look a lot like a game or riddle with no solution – and certainly no winners.
Some really mixed messages out there.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
While many staunch Conservatives would see Norway-plus as a ‘betrayal’, everyone else could probably live with it – unless and until they realise it won’t put a stop to free movement.
Protesters gather outside parliament while MPs vote inside.
EPA/Neil Hall
After her historic loss in parliament, the PM will hold cross-party talks to find a way out of the impasse. But will she really be listening?
Crunch time.
Ben Birchall/PA Wire
The UK government has lost a key vote on Brexit – here are the options facing the prime minister.
Michael Cooper/PA
The Northern Ireland Assembly will be consulted on the backstop, but there will no veto.
May’s cabinet are pushing back against a no-deal scenario.
PA/Adam Dennis
A series of amendments make a no deal less likely – but does that doesn’t make the path ahead any clearer.
Labour MP Yvette Cooper is leading on an amendment that could help stop a no-deal Brexit.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
A cross-parliamentary group hopes to prevent the UK from crashing out of the EU by blocking the government’s taxation powers.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets British Prime Minister Theresa May at the G20 Summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Dec. 1, 2018. Post-Brexit, Canada and the U.K. have a chance to transform their economies by working together.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
As 2019 dawns, a worldwide circular economy could be created through international trade and trade agreements like the one that could be forged between Canada and the U.K., post-Brexit.
New 12-month visas will be available for lower-skilled workers under new proposals.
Dan Law/PA Wire
The UK government has done little to prove how it will continue to attract highly skilled migrants after Brexit.
An anti-Brexit protester speaks during a demonstration.
Reuters/Henry Nicholls
Back in 2016, the Brexit vote and US presidential election seemed like a nationalist one-two punch that could knock out the European Union. Instead, EU support actually rose, new research shows.
Is this what anyone voted for?
PA/Anthony Devlin
The former Chancellor was no economist, but he was better at politics than Theresa May.
Corbyn tabled a vote, but not the vote people had wanted.
PA
For anyone wondering, not for the first time, what on earth just happened in parliament?
As the year come to an end, all the polls are giving a significant two-party preferred lead to the federal Labor Party.
AAP/Lukas Coch
The latest Fairfax-Ipsos and Essential polls give a strong lead to Labor, with some interesting – and variable - detail on the attributes voters see in the leaders of the two major parties.
Is this my usual spot?
Julien Warnand/EPA
The EU realises the red lines it needs to meet are now the British parliament’s, not Theresa May’s.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Looking back, it’s a wonder the party is still together after years of arguing about this issue.
EPA
The prime minister is running down the clock to pressure MPs into accepting her deal. But she’s close to losing control.
Will Oliver and Ludovic Marin/EPA
The winter woes facing the French president and British prime minister are surprisingly similar.
It’s suddenly all smiles in Brussels.
EPA
Some see it as tantamount to a no-deal Brexit but it might at least get through parliament.
Back we go.
Olivier Hoslet/EPA
The prime minister may have won a vote of no confidence in her leadership, but Theresa May will struggle to get what she needs from Brussels.