Keir Starmer, Jeremy Corbyn and Rebecca Long-Bailey prepare for Brexit talks.
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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.
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Northern Ireland and Scotland don’t seem to have heard the rallying cry, despite being more Remain than England.
The clock is ticking on Brexit.
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There are more than 300 contingency plans across government departments.
PA/Yui Mok
E-petitions are an important democratic tool but they need to be part of something bigger to really change things.
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Just a week after her government said seeking a short extension would be a wrong move, the prime minister has folded.
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.
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Even if the UK decides it can withdraw from the Irish backstop unilaterally under international law, there will be consequences.
How much longer were you thinking?
Stephanie Lecocq/EPA
Even if parliament votes to delay Brexit beyond March 29, the EU27 would have to unanimously agree. Would they?
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.
European Council President Donald Tusk receives the UK’s letter triggering article 50 in March 2017.
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After a huge defeat for the government’s Brexit deal, could it ask for more time to negotiate?
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.
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The UK government has lost a key vote on Brexit – here are the options facing the prime minister.
Is this my usual spot?
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The EU realises the red lines it needs to meet are now the British parliament’s, not Theresa May’s.
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The ruling offers some relief for Remainers – but don’t go thinking this is the end of Brexit.
No Brexit: could it happen?
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The legal and practical steps that would be required for no Brexit to happen.
Tick tock.
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What role do EU institutions and the parliaments of 27 member states have in agreeing the next steps of the Brexit process.
Time is ticking to get a Brexit deal through parliament.
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If the UK does secure a deal with the EU, it’s not clear that parliament would back it. Here are some scenarios for what could happen next.
Tusk and Juncker: nearly there.
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Despite the problems that lie ahead with the Brexit plan Theresa May hammered out at Chequers, the EU prefers a Brexit deal rather than a ‘no deal’.
The first defeat in the Lords for the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill on April 18, 2018.
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The history of Lords defeats – and why the fate of the EU (Withdrawal) Bill is not a constitutional anomaly.
EPA/Geert Vanden Wijngaert
Tensions with Russia and the US have made both partners in the Brexit negotiations more aware of their shared interests than they seemed to be a year ago.