Labour members stand up to be counted at the 2015 conference.
PA/Gareth Fuller
The Labour leadership contest is discussed as though people inside and outside the party were a different species.
Momentum’s facebook page.
Facebook
Founded to support Jeremy Corbyn when he became Labour leader, the campaign group has ruffled a few feathers since.
Shutterstock
Changing boundaries is tough on Labour but fairer for voters.
Jeremy Corbyn and Richard Barbrook, the ‘cybercommunist’ advising on many of the manifesto’s ideas.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
If there are forward-thinking minds within Labour that could bring fresh thinking to internet issues, they didn’t get the call.
‘Here’s why you’re f****d.’
Edinburgh International Television Festival
The digital conqueror took to the stage in Edinburgh with some harsh words for the TV industry.
PA/Anna Gowthorpe
After 12 years, the anti-war party is shutting down, raising questions about what the future holds for its firebrand leader.
Jeremy Corbyn and his deputy, Tom Watson, are at loggerheads.
PA/Gareth Fuller
The party’s centre ground won’t be able to shut out the far left like it did in the 1980s.
Liverpool, just one of the regions to be electing a metro mayor next year.
SilvanBachmann/Shutterstock
In May 2017 metro mayors will be elected in a number of cities and counties across England, but what are they and what will they do?
The leadership hopefuls.
Ben Birchall / PA Wire
Despite attempts to curb union power, they still exert a huge amount of influence over the Labour Party.
At least it’s not a bacon sandwich.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire/Press Association Images
The Labour Party leader faces a hostile press, but needs a better media strategy.
e d o.
The Weekly Bull
Morale may be low among parliamentarians, but newly released accounts offer reasons to be cheerful.
Owen Smith: in the marginally-less-red corner.
PA/Andrew Matthews
Owen Smith, a relative newcomer to parliament, is taking on Jeremy Corbyn. But which one can fix their broken party?
Anguskirk
The party has quarelled before – but this is surely its darkest hour.
Michael Foot faced similar problems as Jeremy Corbyn during his tenure.
PA
Similar issues divide the party today as in the 1980s – the question is whether it can survive them this time.
Worth scratching together an extra few quid?
PA/Owen Humphreys
They signed up in their droves to vote in the last leadership election, but will they back Corbyn again?
PA/Anthony Devlin
Clive Lewis and Lisa Nandy could appeal to both parliamentarians and party members.
Not enough air time given to concerns of Labour voters.
Gareth Fuller/PA Wire
BBC editorial decisions cast Labour voters as onlookers in the referendum campaign.
Dominic Lipinski/PA
Whoever the next Labour leader is, they’ll need to crack on with doing something if the party is to shed its increasingly toxic label.
A win for feminism?
EPA/Andy Rain
Are women only selected for leadership when (and only when) there is a high risk of failure?
PA.
PA
After voting no confidence in leader Jeremy Corbyn, angry MPs should think about forming an SDP-style alliance on the centre left.