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/Stephanie LeCocq
One wrong turn after another has left the British prime minister cornered.
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.
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.
PA/Mark Duffy
MPs have seized control of the House of Commons agenda and will vote on a series of options for Brexit.
PA/Yui Mok
E-petitions are an important democratic tool but they need to be part of something bigger to really change things.
The UK will leave the EU on 29 March unless the UK government requests an extension to Article 50.
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UK parliamentary rules state that an amendment ‘which is the same, in substance’ as an issue that has already been voted on, cannot be proposed again in parliament.
He does love the sound of his own voice but that’s not why Bercow spoke out.
PA
The speaker has been accused of overreach by blocking a third meaningful vote, but why did Theresa May presume she could bend parliamentary rules?
EPA/Jessica Taylor
It looks like the prime minister will try for a third vote on her deal before asking the EU for a Brexit delay.
Andy Rain/EPA
Even if the UK decides it can withdraw from the Irish backstop unilaterally under international law, there will be consequences.
Theresa May heads to parliament for her third crunch vote in a week.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
A series of amendments failed, but the prime minister must now appeal for more time.
Theresa May’s sore throat nearly gave out on a second night of Brexit voting.
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MPs can’t actually prevent no deal with this vote, but that doesn’t make it meaningless.
Hands up if you’ve had enough of all this.
EPA
A last minute meeting with the EU couldn’t save her universally detested deal. Now there’s less than three weeks to Brexit – and no one knows what to do.
Ready to get to work.
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Two bills currently before the British parliament seek to reduce the 12 month ban on asylum seekers from working.
A big statement but the parliamentary maths is sobering.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Quitting Labour and Conservative MPs need to decide where to position themselves if they want to keep their seats. Even then, it’s going to be a slog.
Anna Soubry announces her decision to join the Independent Group. But will it become a party?
EPA/Andy Rain
Here’s what needs to happen if the UK’s newest political formation wants to stand in elections as a party.
UK Parliament/Stephen Pike
Parliaments might argue more but they make democracy more stable and produce stronger economies.
May is charting a clear course – back to Brussels to re-open negotiations.
PA
MPs want the prime minister to get back to the negotiating table, but will anyone from the EU be willing to meet her?