Theresa May heads to parliament for her third crunch vote in a week.
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A series of amendments failed, but the prime minister must now appeal for more time.
Theresa May’s sore throat nearly gave out on a second night of Brexit voting.
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MPs can’t actually prevent no deal with this vote, but that doesn’t make it meaningless.
Hands up if you’ve had enough of all this.
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A last minute meeting with the EU couldn’t save her universally detested deal. Now there’s less than three weeks to Brexit – and no one knows what to do.
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It now looks increasingly certain that the deadline for a deal will be extended beyond March 29. But what happens after that?
How much longer were you thinking?
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Even if parliament votes to delay Brexit beyond March 29, the EU27 would have to unanimously agree. Would they?
Britain’s future relationship with the EU remains unclear.
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The ongoing policy uncertainty affects both ends of the economy: consumers and producers.
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The Labour leader has cautiously backed a fresh vote – and that’s all parliament needs to get the debate going.
PA/Clodagh Kilcoyne
The Conservative Party might not be able to survive the fallout if May worked with the opposition against her own MPs.
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Majority thinks Brussels is playing hardball – but a generational divide is apparent, as so often in the Brexit debate.
EPA/Stephanie Lecocq
Brussels is certainly firm on its red lines, but it’s not as intransigent as many in the UK portray it to be.
DUP leader Arlene Foster attends a ‘better deal’ event to protest against the backstop.
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The question of what to do on the Irish border issue has become more about identity than practicality.
Theresa May is a little slow to accept Juncker’s handshake in Brussels.
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Theresa May is back in Brussels, but how can she get a deal without understanding where her negotiating partners are coming from?
Nissan employs 7,000 people in the UK.
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What Brexit means for future UK-Japan business.
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It suddenly looks like the party of government has reached a compromise on its long-held divisions over Europe. But it’s more an unseasonal warm spell than a complete thaw.
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Always just check in with Brussels before you come up with a zany new Brexit plan.
May is charting a clear course – back to Brussels to re-open negotiations.
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MPs want the prime minister to get back to the negotiating table, but will anyone from the EU be willing to meet her?
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Even if there are delays, Britain produces half of the food it consumes and trade with the EU will not stop overnight.
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Faced with an intractable problem, bravery is needed. Instead, the only thing on offer is playground politics.
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It might have worked at one point, but the atmosphere now is too febrile for this innovation to make a difference.
May was meant to deliver Plan B, but she left MPs disappointed.
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The prime minister has failed to present anything different to parliament. Here’s what could happen now.