Number 10/Flickr
Sunak recently attacked ‘30 years of the status quo’ and promptly appointed a man who governed for six of those years to his top team.
Shutterstock/NicoElNino
The plight of those who felt compelled to leave when that reality ended is often overlooked.
Danes will vote in the referendum to end the EU defence opt-out on June 1.
Bo Amstrup / EPA-EFE
EU member states are increasingly turning towards single-issue referendums to decide major constitutional issues.
The “Vote Leave” bus got plenty of attention for its bad misuse of statistics. We know a lot more about Brexit now.
Stefan Rousseau / PA images / Alamy stock photo
After the Brexit referendum, the most-Googled question in the UK was ‘What does it mean to leave the European Union?’ Five years later, we still don’t have the full answer.
Nicola Sturgeon, first minister of Scotland and Douglas Ross, the Scottish Conservative Party leader, in a pre-election debate.
PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
A transcript of episode 13 of The Conversation Weekly podcast, including new research on neuroplasticity in the brain.
Dmitry Nikolaev/Shutterstock
Second-generation migrants in Britain report more discrimination.
Cummings giving evidence to a committee.
House of Commons/PA Wire/PA Images
The man who led Vote Leave now has the ear of the UK’s prime minister.
viksof/Shutterstock
The referendum was an exercise in ends, not means. But the way Britain deals with the result is crucial.
David Cameron did not expect to lose the Brexit referendum.
Diana Vucane / Shutterstock.com
They can be summed up, thus: ignore your people at your peril.
EPA/Neil Hall
Years after voting to leave the EU, the UK still has no clear plan of how to make Brexit work. These five articles chart the history of an intractable problem.
Divided.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
What sort of democracy is now required to break the Brexit deadlock?
EPA/Will Oliver
It’s easy, now, to think of this as Theresa May’s story – but Thatcher, Blair and Cameron all played their part.
EPA/Stephanie LeCocq
One wrong turn after another has left the British prime minister cornered.
EPA/Mark Duffy
The prime minister will be the key protagonist in Brexit the movie, but there are parts for everyone.
PA
Just a week after her government said seeking a short extension would be a wrong move, the prime minister has folded.
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.
The family that votes together remains together?
PA/Jane Barlow
Westminster has consistently disregarded the concerns of the devolved administrations over Brexit.
Britain’s future relationship with the EU remains unclear.
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The ongoing policy uncertainty affects both ends of the economy: consumers and producers.
Aaron Chown/PA
The Labour leader has cautiously backed a fresh vote – and that’s all parliament needs to get the debate going.
Pro-Brexit supporters take to the streets.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
The social polarisation over Brexit is pronounced and shows no sign of diminishing.