James Vaughan
Internet polls are offering up quite different results to phone polls. Here are a few suggestions as to why.
Women have borne the brunt of global inequality.
Reuters/Mariana Bazo
The corporate world must embrace human rights as a fundamental business priority.
Osborne, managing expectations?
Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA
Part two of British chancellor George Osborne’s case for staying put is realistic but flawed.
First flight out please.
Shutterstock/train station
So what if the Brexit camp is led by ‘loons’ – Bill Durodie smells freedom.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Explaining how the European Parliament and Commission combine to represent the interests of 28 member states.
EPA/Patrick Seeger
Assessing the argument that the British people would be better represented by their national parliament.
All falling down.
ell brown/flickr.com
Membership of the EU guarantees Britain’s political power in Europe and beyond.
A conservative estimate.
EPA/Will Oliver/Pool
Voters see claim and counter claim about the economic effects of leaving the EU but the overwhelming consensus among economists is that Brexit will make Britons worse off.
Images Money
Brexit would throw up all manner of problems for the UK economy, including a rise in borrowing costs for homeowners.
DNA: the EU in us all.
Shutterstock
Our bodies are teeming with petty bureaucrats and red tape – it’s the very fabric for life on Earth.
Channel Tunnel: breaking through to France in 1990.
PA
Those campaigning to leave are clinging onto the past for all the wrong reasons.
Joerg Cartstensen/EPA
Leave had a 20 point lead over Remain in a recent YouGov poll – but this Brexit referendum concerned Britain’s membership of the Eurovision Song Contest, not Europe.
Brown goes big picture.
PA/Jonathan Brady
Staying in would enable the UK to play an active role in tackling the most pressing issues of the day, from tax evasion to terrorism, the former PM argued.
Boston Tea Party: aversion to tax goes way back.
WD Cooper/Library of Congress
The war of words: why a report on the EU referendum labelled costs a ‘Brexit tax’.
Goal! But who would benefit from Brexit?
Val Thoermer/shutterstock.com
If there was a Brexit smaller clubs lower down the league structure would likely struggle to get the best talent.
Esin
If the current pace of negotiations continues, Brexit backers needn’t worry about a new partner for decades.
And one more thing.
PA/Leon Neal
The prime minister’s security speech has been labelled fear mongering.
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The bilateral deals struck over the years between Switzerland and the EU have been suggested as alternatives for the UK if it votes to leave in the referendum.
Africa Studio
Recent cases have upheld the EU’s regulation and the rights of national governments to enforce it.
quinnanya
Without European laws and courts to strike down overreaching UK legislation, post-Brexit Britons may see more invasions of their privacy.