For the third time Britain's Parliament has rejected a plan to leave the European Union, setting the Brexit project back to square one. The choices now look like a longer delay or a disorderly, possibly chaotic, departure. https://nyti.ms/2FK2kaA
For Brexit supporters, March 29 — the originally scheduled day for Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union — was supposed to be one big party, with a gala celebration of the official departure at 11 p.m. Instead, the champagne is still on ice. https://nyti.ms/2FImbGW
Parliament has twice rejected the agreement that Mrs. May negotiated with the European Union for Britain’s departure, known as Brexit, and both times the D.U.P. has voted against it, largely because of concerns about the Irish border. https://nyti.ms/2Jul15U
Britain’s looming departure from the European Union — Brexit, as it is known — could depress growth for years to come, meaning that budget pressures, and the austerity era, may be far from over https://nyti.ms/2E7J0SC
Another day, another Brexit vote, this one on a proposal that could delay Britain’s departure from the European Union for a few months or even until the end of the year rather than leave without a deal https://nyti.ms/2G5IuXL
Britain's chief Brexit negotiator dismissed alarming news reports about the implications of a no-deal departure from the European Union, adding that there were no plans to deploy the army to secure food supplies, and no realistic threat to the food supply https://nyti.ms/2Py19hq