This is just the beginning of the story.
PA/Gareth Fuller
It’s rapidly becoming a truism to say that Brexit isn’t done. But what does that actually mean?
Gareth Fuller/PA
Buying the biggest and best technology is always going to be high risk and expensive.
Long-Bailey and Starmer: the two favourite candidates.
EPA/Andy Rain
She’s meant to be the clear favourite for Corbyn supporters, but Long-Bailey hasn’t won over everyone in Momentum.
Thornberry and Starmer: both hoping to succeed Corbyn.
PA/Gareth Fuller
What do the MPs running to replace Jeremy Corbyn believe in?
Shutterstock
The hand that taps ‘remove from this group’ is the hand that rules the world.
Johnson: a new voter base demands a new approach.
EPA/Valda Kalnina
There is speculation over what the PM actually needs to do to hold on to his new voters.
Shutterstock
Public opinion is likely to pose an additional constraint to Boris Johnson’s attempts to strike post-Brexit trade deals.
PA/Kirsty O'Connor
Boris Johnson’s adviser is asking job applicants to give him their all. And in return? He’ll fire them on the spot if they don’t fit in.
Violence during the 2011 London riots.
Shutterstock
Politicians who refuse to listen to popular demands have a reason to be concerned.
Boris Johnson poses with his new MPs.
PA/Leon Neal
The good news is that one party has more women than men now. The bad news is it’s not the party of government.
Starmer and Corbyn: not so different after all.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Centrists are at loggerheads with the left. They’re both right about what went wrong and that’s a problem.
It’s not just Brexit that he’s eyeing up.
PA
A large majority gives the prime minister freedom to dramatically alter the machinary of the nation.
How much of what they are telling you is true and how much is spin?
ITV/PA Wire/PA Images
Factchecking became politicised during UK election campaign. But what does it really add to public awareness?
Boris Johnson: heading back to Downing Street.
Will Oliver/EPA
December 13, 2019
Paul James Cardwell , University of Strathclyde ; Costas Milas , University of Liverpool ; Hanna Szymborska , The Open University ; Helen Parr , Keele University ; Katy Hayward , Queen's University Belfast ; Ken Rotenberg , Keele University ; Kevin Albertson , Manchester Metropolitan University ; Sean Kippin , University of Stirling , and Victoria Honeyman , University of Leeds
Our panel of experts analyse the results of the British election.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
From Brexit and Labour’s future to Britain’s new political battlegrounds, here’s the expert lowdown on what Boris Johnson’s predicted landslide win means.
It’s fair to say the British public is not thrilled to be back at the polls.
Shutterstock
Citizens are voting in 650 constituencies – but technically not for who they want to be prime minister.
Doctors protest against what they see as the Conservative Party’s push to privatise the health service.
Isabel Infantes/PA
One side wants to ‘get Brexit done’ while the other shouts the ‘NHS is not for sale!’. What does it all really mean?
What exactly is Boris Johnson’s plan?
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
Boris Johnson wants to leave by the end of January 2020 and hopes to have a trade deal agreed within a year.
Shutterstock
Young people have registered to vote in record numbers. Here are three things every young person can do to change the election.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Whatever it’s merits, one thing is clear: Boris Johnson’s deal does not mean anyone will stop talking about Brexit.