EU
The prime minister and EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier have been setting out tough opening positions for the next stage of Brexit negotiations.
Brexiteers partied in Parliament Square as the UK's 47-year membership to the EU came to an end.
With the withdrawal agreement signed and ratified, Britain is out of Europe! Well, not quite. First of all, we have to go through the transition period. Not much will initially change. You will still be able to travel, live and work in Europe as previous but Boris Johnson’s government has a tough twelve months to hammer out what the future relationship with Europe will look like.
For some, Brexit is a triumph. For others, it is a tragedy. HuffPost UK visited Brussels as British MEPs on both sides of the debate packed up and waved goodbye.
Blue passports are in, the department for exiting the EU is out. Here’s what lies on the horizon now Britain has left the European Union.
Is there any chance our farewell could in fact be just a temporary goodbye?
On Friday, our Senedd will lower the EU flag, but defiantly raise Y Ddraig Goch in is place – two Red Dragons to one Union Jack, Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price writes.
Boris Johnson announces plans to take personal charge of his own "task-force Europe" as Leo Varadkar talks up Brussels' team.
It probably won't be melted back down again this time.
“This represents the death knell for frictionless trade," said one business leader.