What happens now that a deal's been done?published at 18:49 Greenwich Mean Time 30 December 2020
The UK and EU begin a new relationship on 1 January 2021.
Read MoreThe UK faces an extra £2.4bn bill from Brussels if it remains part of the EU, Boris Johnson says
David Cameron warns an EU exit could push up mortgage rates
Leave campaigners say the UK could be pushed into future eurozone bailouts if it stays in the EU
Former PM Sir John Major attacks the "squalid" and "deceitful" campaign to get the UK out of the EU
Aiden James and Jackie Storer
The UK and EU begin a new relationship on 1 January 2021.
Read MoreThe Dutch prime minister warns other countries will retaliate if the UK leaves the EU and adopts a points-based migration policy.
Read MoreThe deadline to register to vote in the UK's European Referendum is at midnight on 9 June. Here's how to register.
Read MoreThe Chancellor, George Osborne, believes more stringent checks on the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic are inevitable, should the UK leave the EU.
Read MoreStaying in the EU is the "riskier" option for the UK because it will be unable to control rising migration, Boris Johnson warns - as Remain campaigners accuse his side of "fantasy politics".
Read MorePlease click here to follow live page updates from Sunday 5 June onwards.
Reality Check
The claim: The Vote Leave campaign is claiming that "UK taxpayers will keep paying for the huge bills caused by the euro crisis" and that "these bills will only increase".
Reality Check verdict: The UK will not pay for future eurozone bailouts. This has already been agreed by EU leaders. In addition, the UK-EU deal from February, which will be implemented if the UK votes to stay in the EU, reinforces this and states that the UK would be reimbursed if the general EU budget is used for the cost of the eurozone crisis.
Westminster Hour
Radio 4's Westminster Hour
Jacob Rees-Mogg launches an extraordinary attack on the former Prime Minister John Major. The Conservative backbencher tells Carolyn Quinn on the Westminster Hour that the former PrM "destroyed hundreds of thousands of jobs with his failed European policy". He said John Major "ought to know how to behave better" and it was "all to do with his bitterness over his failings".
Both sides in the 1975 European referendum made some bold claims - did any of them come true?
Read MoreNo doubt Andrew Marr will quiz Boris Johnson on a wide range of topics, and it's possible the EU's role in the UK fishing industry could be one of them. The former London mayor, from the Leave campaign, told BBC's Countryfile British fishermen needed to be freed from "crazy" EU rules.
But his views clashed with those of the prime minister, who told the programme the value of the UK's fishing industry had gone up over the last five years.
The EU's Common Fisheries Policy sets rules for the amount of fish each country's boats can catch.
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Elsewhere, in a letter to David Cameron and George Osborne, leading Vote Leave campaigners say remaining in the EU would tie Britain's economy to a eurozone "crisis", which is a "danger to Britain".
Justice Secretary Michael Gove, former London Mayor Boris Johnson, and Gisela Stuart, MP for Birmingham Edgbaston, warned the UK would not be protected from future potential bailouts of eurozone countries.
"The eurozone institutions remain broken and have been unable to cope with the euro's crisis," they wrote.
Our main story this morning is the warning from David Cameron that the cost of an average mortgage in the UK could rise by nearly £1,000 a year if Britain leaves the European Union.
He and other Remain campaigners say uncertainty caused by exiting the EU could tighten credit conditions and push up rates according to Treasury analysis.
Leave campaigners, though, are calling the claims "desperate stuff".
Hello and welcome to today's live coverage of the EU referendum campaign. We'll bring you all the main news from Sunday's political programmes, as well as analysis on the latest arguments from the Leave and Remain sides.
Michael Gove has faced live questions on the EU referendum. The pro-Leave justice secretary's grilling was the followup to David Cameron's the night before. He called on voters to "take back control" from "Europe's elites". He faced often hostile questions including on Vote Leave's claims about the cost of the EU. Scroll down for as-it-happened text commentary or read the report of the show here.
After the programme, Vote Leave called for an extra £100m a week - saved by quitting the EU - to be spent on the NHS.
The Remain campaign said Mr Gove had "failed to set out a credible plan for Britain outside the EU".
Earlier:
JP Morgan warned it may cut up to 4,000 UK jobs if there is a vote to leave the European Union
The Electoral Commission said polling cards were wrongly sent to at least 3,462 EU citizens who are not allowed to vote in the referendum
Downing Street said family members of British soldiers who died in the Iraq war will not have to pay £767 for copies of the Chilcot report
Douglas Carswell, UKIP's only MP, said Michael Gove "did fantastically" during a Sky News interview.
He said the audience was "shockingly hostile" to David Cameron but applauded Michael Gove after pretty much every answer.
He said it had been a very good evening for the Leave campaign.
Mr Carswell said: "He went down incredibly well with the audience in the studio."
Tory MP and justice minister Dominic Raab, an "Out" campaigner, told Sky News that Mr Gove portrayed an optimistic view.
He said: "We didn't descend into any of this negative scaremongering.
"I think that the message is positive as it is about taking back control."
Lord Falconer, shadow justice secretary and "In" campaigner, told Sky News: "Michael never mentioned once what the detail of the economy would look like."
"My feeling is that the British people want the facts and Michael was a fact-free zone tonight."
He said there were "a lot" of economists who said the UK would suffer a "severe economic downturn" if we leave the EU.
Britain Stronger In Europe tweets...
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Ukip leader tweets...
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