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James Walsh

James Walsh is a former Guardian social and community editor for news

June 2018

  • Are You Being Served?

    News quiz
    Retirements, resignations and robberies: it's the Friday News Quiz

  • A woman lays flowers at the Savita Halappanavar mural in Dublin

    Friday news quiz: from the Irish referendum to swearing on TV

April 2018

  • Thierry Henry, Patrick Viera and manager Arsene Wenger

    'Au revoir, Arsène, et merci': fans on Wenger's Arsenal departure

    Football fans pay tribute to Arsène Wenger, who announced he is leaving Arsenal at the end of the season

March 2018

  • Jeremy Corbyn and Owen Smith

    Should Labour back a second Brexit referendum? Our readers debate

    Labour’s Owen Smith is pushing for a public vote on the final Brexit deal, but our readers are unsure how this would work in practice

February 2018

  • Jeremy Corbyn Sets Out Labour’s Position On Brexit<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 26: Anti-Brexit demonstrators protest with flags during a snow flurry outside the Houses of Parliament on February 26, 2018 in London, England. Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn’s Brexit speech today confirmed that a Labour Government would negotiate full tariff-free access to EU markets for UK business. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

    'It's still pie in the sky': Remain voters on Corbyn and Brexit

    We asked our readers what they make of the current state of the Brexit negotiations
  • Rowan Atkinson in Blackadder Goes Forth

    From Blackadder to Buffy: readers on the most shocking TV deaths

    They’ve been murdered by serial killers, plunged to Earth on a Cyberman ship and disappeared in the trenches – you told us what character killings-off left you reeling
  • quiz comp

    What do you remember about the week's biggest stories - quiz!

    Trump / Morgan, Theresa May in China and not so secret army bases

January 2018

  • The British Prime Minister Poses With Her Reshuffled Cabinet<br>LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JANUARY 09: British Prime Minister Theresa May (C-L) leads her first cabinet meeting of the new year following a reshuffle at 10 Downing Street on January 9, 2018. in London, United Kingdom.Theresa May’s reshuffled cabinet meets for the first time today. Justine Greening quit the government last night after being moved from Education, she is replaced by Damian Hinds. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt’s role has been extended to include social care, Esther McVey becomes Work and Pensions Secretary and Karen Bradley replaces James Brokenshire as Northern Ireland Secretary. (Photo by Daniel Leal-Olivas - WPA Pool/Getty Images)

    'McVey's appointment is vindictive': readers on the Tory reshuffle

    McVey in, Greening out – our readers give their take on Theresa May’s cabinet reshuffle

November 2017

  • Demonstrators dressed as custom officials set up a mock customs checkpoint at the border crossing in Killeen, near Dundalk to protest against the potential introduction of border checks following the decision by the UK to leave the EU on February 18, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / Paul FAITHPAUL FAITH/AFP/Getty Images

    'An absolute shambles': readers on the Irish border and Brexit

  • Avocado on toast, cut out on white background<br>DM3C0X Avocado on toast, cut out on white background

    Politics quiz of the week: Brexit, Grenfell and smashed avocados

October 2017

  • Hey Bartender<br>Bloody Mary!?

    Your underwhelming photos
    Your underwhelming Halloween photos

  • Donald Tusk suggests Britain remaining in the EU still a possible outcome<br>epa06285875 A pro EU campaigner outside parliament in London, Britain, 24 October 2017. European Council President Donald Tusk said in an address to the European parliament on 24 October that it was up to the UK how Brexit ended. Tusk suggested that Britain remaining in the EU was still a possible outcome. EPA/ANDY RAIN

    Brexit, bluff and McCarthyism: who said what this week?

  • British Prime Minister Theresa May (R) and European Council President Donald Tusk (L) participate in a bilateral meeting during an EU summit in Brussels on October 20, 2017. The EU is expected to say that they will start internal preparatory work on a post-Brexit transition period and a future trade deal with Britain. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / Geert Vanden WijngaertGEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT/AFP/Getty Images

    The EU summit, Brexit, and Theresa May: who said what? - quiz

  • Demonstrators fly a Union flag (top), and an EU flag outside of the Houses of Parliament in Westminster, central London on October 12, 2017.
Britain and the EU are stuck in a "disturbing" deadlock over the Brexit divorce bill, although a breakthrough remains possible in the next two months, EU negotiator Michel Barnier said Thursday. The stalemate will stoke fears swirling in London and Brussels of a breakdown in talks that could see Britain leaving the European Union in March 2019 without an agreement to soften the blow. / AFP PHOTO / Daniel LEAL-OLIVASDANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/Getty Images

    Brexit, 'no deal' and the Tories: who said what?

  • 'We were lied to': voters who have changed their mind on Brexit

  • Bike blog
    'Simply stunning': your favourite cycle rides around the world

  • 'We've lost control of the narrative': Tory voters on Theresa May

  • Music blog
    'Tom has gone and we'll go too': one last song for folk legend Tom Paley

September 2017

  • The A836 at Achnabourin, Sutherland, Scotland

    'Pure inspiration': our writers pick their favourite cycle rides

  • BRITAIN-LONDON-BREXIT-RALLY<br>(170913) -- LONDON, Sept. 13, 2017 (Xinhua) -- People gather to attend a rally at Trafalgar Square in London, Britain on Sept. 13, 2017. A rally was held here on Wednesday calling to maintain the rights of the EU citizens in Britain and British citizens in the EU after Brexit. (Xinhua/Stephen Chung)PHOTOGRAPH BY Xinhua / Barcroft Images

    The week in Brexit: who said what?

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