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These are the five options for Brexit: Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement, staying in the customs union, staying in the single market, the so-called Common Market 2.0 idea or a no-deal Brexit.
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Ukraine shows how it’s possible to have single market access, while maintaining control of your borders and staying out of the European Court of Justice.
The Irish border: invisible for now.
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Is the UK’s Brexit plan enough to avoid a hard Irish border?
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It sparked a series of government resignations, but what’s actually in Theresa May’s Brexit plan?
Brexit planning at Chequers.
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Two years after the Brexit referendum, Cabinet members apparently agreed on the country’s vision for its future relationship with the EU. But it has already led to a flurry of resignations.
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Why Airbus has warned that a no-deal Brexit could force the plane maker to close its UK operations.
The costs of Brexit – hard or soft – are increasingly apparent.
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A psychological tendency to gamble rather than accept certain losses, may lead to a surge in support for a harder Brexit.
Is Brexit secretary David Davis heading for a U-turn?
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A deal with Europe would offer freedom, but some key sectors wouldn’t be included.
No desire to return to the borders of the past.
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Other EU countries have flexible legal arrangements for their own special territories – something similar for Northern Ireland is not impossible.
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A conciliatory tone from the prime minister but Boris Johnson and Michael Gove continue to cause problems.
Roaming free. The current Irish border.
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Options to avoid a hard border are on the table, but they remain unpalatable to Theresa May’s government.
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The Labour leader’s vision for a customs union after Brexit is even more optimistic than the one being proposed by Theresa May.
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Leaving the EU single market and customs union cannot be compensated for by free trade agreements with other countries.
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The leaked government Brexit report reinforces the academic consensus that the harder the Brexit, the worse it will be for the UK economy.
Free flowing trade across Ireland’s border should not be taken for granted.
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After decades of diplomacy and development the two economies of Ireland are more integrated than they have been in a century.
Possible future Irish border.
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Any Brexit that takes Northern Ireland out of the customs union will have a significant impact.
Corbyn and Barnier: let the negotations commence.
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Unpicking why Labour has shifted its Brexit strategy to push for single market membership during a transitional period.