Vaughan Gething succeeds Mark Drakeford as Welsh first minister, following a vote in the Senedd.
The strike saw different political factions uniting, which eventually led to a more collaborative form of politics in Wales.
Rhun ap Iorwerth replaced Adam Price as Plaid Cymru leader.
The BBC is celebrating 100 years of broadcasting in Wales.
He was an important philosopher, mathematician and social reformer of his time. But Richard Price was subsequently written out of history.
“We now have a leave alliance”.
Cooperation is far from easy in the furious tribalism of Westminster.
Welsh Labour and Plaid exceeded expectations in the election - will the Conservatives ever be able to catch up?
James Tilley, University of Oxford; Ben Williams, University of Salford; Daniel Fitzpatrick, Aston University; John Garry, Queen's University Belfast; Kathryn Simpson, Manchester Metropolitan University; Laura McAllister, Cardiff University; Matthew Cole, University of Birmingham; Michael Kitson, Cambridge Judge Business School; Neil Matthews, University of Bristol; Parveen Akhtar, Aston University; Richard Murphy, City, University of London; Robin Pettitt, Kingston University; Stuart Wilks-Heeg, University of Liverpool, and William McDougall, Glasgow Caledonian University
Rolling coverage of the general election results from expert academics.
She faced criticism for not taking part in the BBC head-to-head, but the PM would have struggled had she done another late U-turn.
Leanne Wood: socialist, republican, feminist – and the woman who is changing the face of Welsh politics.
Things really didn’t go as expected – and the pressure is on.
All eyes were on the race for second place in the 2016 Welsh Assembly elections.
Plaid did not fare as well as its Scottish cousin in the general election - and history can tell us why.
Fran Amery, University of Bath; Catherine Happer, University of Glasgow; Charles Lees, University of Bath; Craig McAngus, University of Stirling; David Cutts, University of Bath; Eric Shaw, University of Stirling; Jennifer Thomson, Queen Mary University of London; John Van Reenen, London School of Economics and Political Science; Jonathan Tonge, University of Liverpool; Louise Thompson, University of Surrey; Michael Saward, University of Warwick; Neil Matthews, Queen's University Belfast; Peter Lynch, University of Stirling; Rainbow Murray, Queen Mary University of London; Roger Awan-Scully, Cardiff University; Sophie Whiting, University of Liverpool; Stuart Wilks-Heeg, University of Liverpool, and Victoria Honeyman, University of Leeds
Experts provide a rolling response, live as the results come in for the 2015 general election.
Politicians promising to expand free childcare is no bad thing, but it is difficult to deliver in practice
Both Labour and the Conservatives could do deals with smaller parties to survive in a minority government. Here’s how it works.
Plaid Cymru doesn’t have much detail to offer when it comes to defence.
Our immigration expert evaluates the manifestos of 16 political parties, to see how their policies on immigration stack up.
Civil servants are left out of manifesto writing, and we’re all worse off for it.