The Vote Leave bus.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive/PA Images
Economic forecasts are flawed but they should not be blindly dismissed as fake facts.
Cummings giving evidence to a committee.
House of Commons/PA Wire/PA Images
The man who led Vote Leave now has the ear of the UK’s prime minister.
shutterstock
School textbooks from Germany deal with Europe in much greater detail and with more of a positive angle than those published in England.
MAURIZIO GAMBARINI/EPA
Its billionaire boss was a strong supporter of exiting the EU. Now the company is moving its headquarters out of Britain, too.
Tally ho!
Thitisan
The idea that welfare cuts galvanised Vote Leave risks identifying the wrong culprit.
Should I stay or should I go?
Ptystockphoto
The Conservative party is so divided over Brexit that it may never recover. How ironic that it was the policies of the Cameron government that brought it about.
Vote Leave campaigners, including Darren Grimes, gather with Michael Gove.
PA/ Stefan Rousseau
The Electoral Commission has ruled the official campaign to leave the EU broke funding rules.
The Electoral Commission is investigating allegations regarding spending by the Vote Leave campaign in the 2016 referendum.
Andy Rain/EPA
Allegations that Vote Leave breached election spending laws in the 2016 referendum add to calls for electoral spending reform.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive/PA Images
The Electoral Commission has re-opened the case against the official campaign over concerns it colluded with unofficial organisations.
Protestors on a Stop Brexit march in Manchester during the Conservative Party conference.
Peter Byrne/PA Wire
New research shows that not all young people are totally devastated by the referendum result.
Protestors on an anti-Brexit rally on March 25.
Although thousands have taken to the streets, protests against Brexit have been muted.
Mad as hell and tagging you in the comments.
Mike Lowe
Pressure from online comments can cause our democratically elected leaders to act in the strangest ways.
Run ragged. UK faces Brexit headwinds.
davidgsteadman/Flickr
George Osborne has sought to reassure markets, but the referendum result has sparked a chain of painful events at a time when Britain has no means to protect itself.
Danny Lawson / PA Wire
How the Brexiters won it on the night.
londoncyclist/flickr.com
Vote Leave claims the EU is the slowest growing area in the world. Are they right?
Whither Europe after Brexit?
Wiliam Potter
Those who favour Brexit imply it would be followed either by a European superstate or the collapse of the EU. Here’s why neither is in UK’s interests.
Nicola Sturgeon led attacks against Boris Johnson.
MATT FROST/ITV/REX/Shutterstock
But will it have swayed women voters?
Enough scaremongering.
nito
There is good reason to fear Brexit, but voting to stay in the EU is also a chance to restore the vision of the founding fathers.
Eyeing up the future.
shutterstock.com
There are three main types of forecast when it comes to the economic effects of Brexit – here’s how to tell the difference between them.
European Council President, Donald Tusk, meets Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on a visit to Ankara in September 2015.
Turkish President Press Office
Supporters of the campaign for Brexit claim the UK could not veto Turkish accession to the EU. We asked two academics to check the facts.