Covert compromises and public shouting matches are the norm in how our governments interact with each other, writes Paul Evans.
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Mae the welsh agenda yn gylchgrawn Saesneg sydd yn cael ei hariannu gan Gyngor Llyfrau Cymru. Mae erthyglau’r cylchgrawn yn Saesneg ond mae’r tudalennau am waith y Sefydliad Materion Cymraeg ar gael yn ddwyieithog.
Covert compromises and public shouting matches are the norm in how our governments interact with each other, writes Paul Evans.
Anna Mercer looks at why inter-parliamentary working in Northern Ireland has been, and remains, a challenge.
The best way to protect the UK’s internal market and the devolution settlement is by collaboration and cooperation, writes Jeremy Miles MS.
The UK Government’s post-Brexit vision is a power grab to tie Wales to the Conservatives’ trade deals, writes Adam Price.
Theo Davies-Lewis looks at the first Senedd debate on the right to hold an independence referendum.
Dr Brian Merfyn Jones and Dr Edward Thomas Jones argue that independence is desirable and that our existing devolved structures should be utilised to prepare Wales.
Dr John Ball writes that proponents of a federalist solution to the United Kingdom forget that power devolved is power retained.
Manon Roberts on the importance of investing in a climate-friendly economy and society.
Peter Daniels argues that London must take Wales’ needs seriously, and that talk of independence in the context of the pandemic is far from ‘frivolous’