Paul Wells: Catch up Britain—there will be Brexit and there won’t be a deal, and the name for that is a no-deal Brexit
Image of the Week: The British PM gambled on her own unpopularity to get her Brexit plan through parliament—and lost
Leah McLaren: Nobody knows the way out, and watching a nation’s entire political elite exposed as incompetent and craven is deeply disorienting
Opinion: As the deadline to leave the EU looms, Theresa May faces a rebellion over her latest Brexit plan. Still, Britain carries on, into a breech of its own making
Opinion: The former U.K. foreign secretary will surely continue his Wile E. Coyote-esque chase for power—and here are the ‘policies’ that will fuel it
Analysis: Internal Tory politics are playing out on a national stage, threatening the government—and, along with it, the entire delicate enterprise of Brexit
Trump explains the purpose of the combined U.S., Britain and France military action
Did the U.K. Conservatives prove that micro-targeted online political ads can harm campaigns, rather than help them?
From the surge in young voters to what the results means for Brexit to Boris Johnson’s next move, here are the key takeaways
Theresa May confirmed she will attempt to form a government with the Democratic Unionist Party after failing to win a majority in the June 8 U.K. general election.
British Prime Minister Theresa May called it the most important election in a generation but campaigned like she didn’t care. Voters noticed.
Theresa May’s Conservatives led in the polls, and were on course for a strong majority. They were a sure bet – until they weren’t.