A decade after the UK voted to leave the EU, multiple outlets review how Brexit affects the country’s economy and politics, using maps, charts and policy comparisons. CNBC and Al Jazeera compile data to show changes in areas often discussed in the Brexit debate, including economic growth performance, immigration flows, currency movements, trade patterns and political outcomes. The Conversation and BBC-related items describe how the referendum has left Britain politically divided, with “Leavers and Remainers” still coexisting rather than resolving into a single consensus. AP frames Brexit as a force that reshapes and strains British politics, while The New York Times and other analysis-oriented coverage highlight assessments that Brexit has weighed on UK growth over the ten-year period. The Guardian focuses on whether specific Brexit promises have materialized, citing examples such as claims connected to the NHS and popular consumer or budget-related pledges. Across these accounts, the common theme is that Brexit has brought measurable changes and long-lasting political realignments, but sources differ in emphasis and in how they interpret the extent and causes of outcomes.