It was your idea.
Sascha Steinbach/EPA
The EU doesn’t want a temporary solution to become permanent.
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It’s the fairest way to settle this debate – though in the absence of a clear majority supporting either “remain” or a “no deal” it would probably mean accepting Theresa May’s deal.
A better tomorrow?
John-Kelly/Shutterstock
Brexit may be an unexpected boon for the UK’s climate leadership. Here’s how the UK can seize the initiative.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Some possible outcomes as we head into the unknown.
No Brexit: could it happen?
Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock
The legal and practical steps that would be required for no Brexit to happen.
Don’t forget parliament.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
An EU law expert on what the attorney general’s legal advice on Brexit means and its wider significance for the future.
Parliament’s Brexit clock is ticking.
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Ministers were found in contempt of parliament on December 4 for not publishing the full legal advice on the Brexit withdrawal agreement.
Paul Grover/Daily Telegraph/PA Wire
A video aimed at presenting the facts about Brexit repeats some of the same mistakes Remain supporters made before the 2016 referendum.
You got a better idea?
PA
It might seem counterintuitive, but what if giving MPs more freedom could stop the rebellion?
Gibraltar has its own kind of Britishness.
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Gibraltarians are famously proud to be British. But amid the uncertainty of Brexit, some are having an existential identity crisis.
Who keeps the drones in the divorce?
EPA/Andy Rain
Supporters and opponents to the withdrawal deal both say national security is under threat – but the truth is that neither side can guarantee anything at this stage.
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Independent research estimates that Theresa May’s deal could reduce UK GDP per capita by between 1.9% and 5.5% over ten years.
Alan Smillie / Shutterstock.com
The ongoing Brexit negotiations have provided no certainty or clarity to the industry.
Transition time.
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An explainer on what will happen during the Brexit transition period set out in the withdrawal agreement.
History repeats itself.
Lewis Whyld/PA Images.
When people don’t trust the government, the media or police, they are less inclined to play by the rules and more likely to lash out violently.
The two countries have been collaborating in a single electricity market for more than a decade.
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The two countries have successfully collaborated on electricity supply for 11 years, but could Brexit pull this unique UK-Ireland innovation apart?
And what do you two young whippersnappers think about my deal?
EPA/Will Oliver
This group only recently reached voting age, and they’d like to have a say.
High road, low road.
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Brexit has shown the constitutional arrangements around devolution for what they are.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
The PM has shown time and again that her political judgement is way off base, yet she claims to know that her deal is the best option.
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Why a No Deal option shouldn’t be on the ballot in any second referendum.