Working the land.
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Working the land is a vital – and fruitful – career option.
How will aid spending change after Brexit?
Defence Images © Crown Copyright
Options are open for how to spend £1.4 billion of British aid channelled through EU.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Theresa May desperately needs room to manoeuvre after letting Brexit bravado get the best of her.
… and cue trapdoor.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
This psychologist has studied equivocation for years, but had to invent a new category for the prime minister’s unique style.
PA/Elizabeth Leffman
The Conservatives held on to the former prime ministers local seat but have lost votes to their former coalition partners.
Nelson had a complicated view of Europe.
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Over 200 years ago, Britain found itself isolated from Europe and looking elsewhere for trade. Remind you of anything?
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It could even lead to a loss of low-skilled manufacturing jobs.
Justin Tallis PA Archive/Press Association Images
Britain and India may be linked by colonial ties, but India is intent on forging a new relationship based on in its own interests.
Could British border controls stretch to Dublin?
Niall Carson PA Wire
Proposals for the UK government to move its border to Irish ports of entry show how many options are now on the table.
Patients in a hospice in Myanmar.
REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun
Increasing isolation threatens global health. International cooperation is critical to fighting diseases that will not respect borders.
Keep waving that baguette.
PA/Jonathan Brady
It’s not disrespecting the result of the referendum to criticise the government –or even to call for a second vote.
Sturgeon addressing conference.
John Linton/PA
The independence bill is a short-term win but no game-changer.
Will Marmite shortages drive consumers towards inferior brands?
chriswaits
Tesco tries to fend off Unilever’s price hikes – and Marmite lovers aren’t happy.
The end of an era?
David Martyn Hunt via flickr
Here’s what the law says.
The real action happens upstairs.
Christian Kortum
MPs have finally got their debate on Brexit negotiations, but it’s the select committee that we should really be keeping an eye on.
Nobody feels bad for you David.
PA/Hannah McKay
We know what the politicians think about the experts – but what do the experts think of them?
I’ve got the mandate right here and it’s very, very clear.
cogito ergo imago
Just like ‘the deficit’ before it, this potent term can be used to justify all kinds of changes no one voted for.
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.
Colombians filled Bogota’s Plaza Bolivar on October 6 in support of the peace process with the FARC, derailed by an October 2 plebiscite.
John Vizcaino/Reuters
Of many ways to make fundamental decisions in a constitutional democracy, Colombia and Great Britain chose the riskiest of all options: the plebiscite.
Seems rather extravagant, no?
PA Archive
The Tories aren’t always in the mood to do business’s bidding.