A Sympathetic Establishment Won’t Save Us
The portrayal of Aberfan in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ teaches the audience to judge the establishment based on its reaction to working-class disasters – rather than its complicity in their causes.
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Ko Leik Pya works as a teacher and writer in the UK and Myanmar. He writes here under a pseudonym.
The portrayal of Aberfan in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ teaches the audience to judge the establishment based on its reaction to working-class disasters – rather than its complicity in their causes.
After decades of attacks on trade unions and workers’ rights, inequality in Britain is soaring. But in this election, finally, workers have a chance to vote for a government that would empower them.
In government, Labour would double the size of Britain’s co-operative sector – a bold ambition that would change how the economy works, and who receives its rewards.
The Tory Party has nearly all the advantages in British politics – including the backing of wealthy donors and the billionaire press – but their weakness among voters under 50 suggests the future isn’t theirs.
In this election, Labour has put forward a bold agenda to tackle Britain’s pressing social crises while the Conservatives have hidden behind a paper-thin manifesto that promises more of the same.
With a radical manifesto, an enthusiasm for change and an active membership, a Labour victory in next week’s election could transform Britain for a generation.
Yesterday saw France grind to a halt with mass strike action against proposed pension reforms – but unions are aware it was just one step in a long struggle against Macron’s neoliberal project.
The Tories despise the NHS not only because it delivers free public healthcare, but because it points a way towards a different kind of society where the market does not dominate our lives.
Today, UCU members return to their work after eight days on strike – but they know that the fight to reclaim education as a public good has only begun.
For years, conditions in Britain’s workplaces have been deteriorating amid stagnant wages, insecure hours and a lack of protections – but in this election workers have a chance to vote for something better.
The last decade has seen the Conservative Party run a concerted campaign against democratic and civil rights – if they win next week, all indications are that it will get much worse.
For decades, Britain’s economic growth has been trapped in London at the expense of the rest of the country – Labour’s regional manifestos demonstrate how that cycle could be broken.
Labour’s plan to introduce a ‘Charter of Digital Rights’ is an urgently needed response to corporate surveillance, algorithmic interference in politics and the data-for-profit industry.
On both sides of the Atlantic socialists are united in a common struggle: for healthcare to be a human right, not a commodity.
In 2017, Labour lost out in Southampton Itchen by just 31 votes. Now the party is determined to win back a working-class constituency that exemplifies the challenges facing the postindustrial south.
During their time in government, Jo Swinson and her Lib Dem colleagues set about pricing thousands of workers who were unfairly sacked out of access to justice.
Recently released figures show the staggering extent of NHS privatisation – with £15 billion worth of contracts outsourced to private companies since 2015 alone.
Weapons sales to oppressive regimes, humanitarian disasters and covert wars with no accountability – the Tories’ foreign policy is a disaster which the British press refuses to challenge.
Ahead of today’s NATO Summit, Britain faces a choice – line up behind Trump’s America on the world stage, or break with it and pursue a foreign policy of peace under Jeremy Corbyn.
In this election the North of England will choose between a Labour Party that is fighting to tackle regional inequality – and a Tory Party that has spent the last decade deepening it.