PA/
The debate about what role the Lords play in Brexit is potentially based on a misunderstanding about what the upper house actually does.
The government’s Article 50 bill has passed without amendment.
PA/Dominic Lipinski
Despite pages and pages of proposed amendments, not a single one was passed.
PA/Gareth Fuller
Brexit has exposed the weaknesses of the British political system – not its strengths.
The government’s plan for Brexit revealed?
PA/Daniel Leal-Olivas
The government has set out its thinking on Brexit. So what have we learned?
Did Diane Abbott get lost in the fog on the way to Westminster?
PA/Yui Mok
After all the build up, you’d have been forgiven for expecting something a bit more impressive from parliament’s debate on triggering Article 50.
PA/Nick Ansell
It’s only two lines long, but this piece of parliamentary business could cause a lot of trouble.
Nicola Sturgeon: Scotland not being listened to.
PA/Jamie Simpson
Holyrood won’t get a veto, but the Supreme Court has done the union no favours.
Gina Miller, who brought the case against the government.
PA/Jonathan Brady
It’s not the end of Brexit but parliament could give the government a rough ride.
Gina Miller, whose challenge against the government has gone to the Supreme Court.
Victoria Jones/ PA Wire
Great expectations or much ado about nothing?
The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei via Wikimedia Commons
Under the Tudors, parliamentary sovereignty became paramount.
Constitutional conundrums.
Stefan Rousseau PA Archive/PA Images
The court has a big constitutional decision to make in the appeal over who can trigger Article 50. But it may not be properly equipped to make it for the whole of the UK.
Which way forward?
safriibrahim
Nearly six months on from the UK’s shock vote, there looks very little room for manoeuvre in negotiations.
UK Parliament
We know there has to be an act of parliament but there’s all to play for when it comes to what’s actually in it.
How the Daily Mail reported the story.
Daily Mail
How the Article 50 judgment kicked a hornets’ nest.
Will MPs get a vote on triggering Article 50?
UK Parliament/flickr
The legal challenge over parliament’s role in trigging the Article 50 process is misplaced.
shutterstock.com
The new battle lines on how to leave the EU have been drawn.
Michel Barnier: Juncker’s main negotiator.
Olivier Hoslet/EPA
Two Germans, a Frenchman and a Belgian: who to watch as negotiations with the UK begin.
James Edwards
How to shift those stubborn opinion polls?
Keeping schtum.
Carl Court/PA Wire
Theresa May is wise to play the long game when it comes to negotiating the UK’s exit from the EU.
Uh-oh.
Phoenixman
If Brexiters thought that making new international tariff deals and joining the WTO would be a cakewalk, they’re in for a shock.