Just six months before Britain is due to leave the EU in the country's biggest shift in foreign and trade policy in more than 40 years
Public finances have been dented by 26 billion pounds a year, the equivalent of 500 million pounds a week and a figure that is growing
The uncertainty has led to concerns that Britain will leave without a deal which businesses, particularly carmakers, have said would be hugely damaging
Carmaker says it could halt output at its Burnaston plant
London and Brussels hope to agree a deal by the end of the year to avoid tariffs and trade barriers but Prime Minister Theresa May's proposals have been criticised by both Brexiteers and the EU
Labour's Jeremy Corbyn has so far resisted calls to back a 'People's Vote', or new referendum on the decision to quit the EU
Nathalie Loiseau, France's minister for European affairs, said May's so-called Chequers proposals, whereby British goods would enter the EU's single market freely, were "too negative"
Earlier this week, May was left looking isolated after leaders told her to re-work her plans, and set her a deadline of next month to come back with new ideas
"We would like the almost impossible to happen, that the UK has another referendum," Maltese's PM tells BBC radio
Only 39 percent of U.K. investors are optimistic about the country's economic outlook, according to the UBS report
Hot pink appeared at the Richard Malone, Gareth Pugh and Pam Hogg shows with the former also using bright blues and greens
Weighing the pros and cons in the final analysis is not easy
Writing in the The Observer, Khan warned that with the UK due to leave the EU in six months, by March 2019, it now faced either a "bad deal" or "no deal"
The EU and UK hope to clinch a deal later this year so that Parliaments on both sides can ratify it before Brexit
JLR, which is due to open a new plant in Slovakia later this year, said it was already cheaper to build abroad
Parliament returns from its summer break on Tuesday
Bloc doesn't want London to be a low-regulation financial hub
Leavers may have finally grasped the costs of an EU exit
The pound's weakness is also complicating life for Britons with European clients
A clean Brexit means that the UK will have to go back to the World Trade Organization and then set up from zero