What I Learned from Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn didn’t win, but he fought for socialist politics even when it was difficult – if we are to have any hope of achieving radical change in our lifetimes, we must do the same.
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Raven Hart is co-founder of the Bristol Cooperative Alliance, an organisation that aims to promote a decentralised economy that empowers local communities and facilitates democratic self-determination.
Jeremy Corbyn didn’t win, but he fought for socialist politics even when it was difficult – if we are to have any hope of achieving radical change in our lifetimes, we must do the same.
By forcing the government into a u-turn on A-level results, an emerging generation has learned its political power – but to win a decent future, it will have to fight for many years to come.
In the first episode of A World to Win, Grace interviews former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn about the past five years, the government’s handling of the pandemic – and the future of socialism.
Tonight in the Champions League, a Gulf dictatorship takes on a sports drink company for a place in the final. It’s a symbol of a game that is losing all connection to the communities that built it.
There is no path to meeting climate targets and avoiding devastation that doesn’t run through a dramatic reduction in the use of cars. Now is the time to seize on this reality and invest in the alternatives.
Britain’s high streets were already in crisis before Covid-19, but now many are on the verge of dereliction – it’s time for a bold plan to socialise them and build thriving centres of community life.
A preview episode of our new podcast ‘A World to Win,’ which will provide socialist views and analysis on a weekly basis from Grace Blakeley and her guests.
As governments collect vast amounts of data on their citizens, decision-making is increasingly outsourced to algorithm – in the hope that behaviour can be modified and sites of democratic resistance diminished.
On Keir Hardie’s birthday, we republish an excerpt from his 1910 pamphlet ‘Marx, the Man and his Message’ explaining why Marx’s work remains a “consecrated treasure” for the working class of the world.
From skyrocketing unemployment to remote working and reduced hours, the Covid-19 pandemic is transforming the world of work – and the Left needs to provide its vision for the future before it’s too late.
This year the Tories have turned England’s A-levels into a postcode lottery, further disadvantaging working-class youth. If students want justice they will need to follow their Scottish counterparts – and fight back.
Labour MP Dawn Butler on being stopped by the police, the far-right campaign of abuse which followed – and why she intends to keep fighting the structural racism that plagues policing in Britain.
Georgii Daneliya was one of the Soviet film directors genuinely beloved by Soviet audiences. His gentle comedies depict the USSR as neither dystopia nor utopia, but as most people actually lived it.
In Belarus, a populist government that long claimed the support of its people finds itself repressing a historic protest movement – and its demands for a more democratic politics.
Italy’s far-right remains on the rise – with both the Lega and Fratelli d’Italia projected to gain in September’s elections. The country’s political direction offers a stark reminder of what happens when a fighting Left disappears.
Scotland’s SQA results fiasco is just a symbol of growing inequalities in Scottish education which are leaving working-class students behind. It needs to change – and that starts with John Swinney’s departure.
Pubs are reopening, but they don’t feel the same as they did before the pandemic. What are the possibilities for the future of the public house as a public space?
The CEO of parcel giant DHL recently said the company had “never been in better shape,” with profits soaring during the Covid-19 crisis – but its workers face unsafe conditions, a lack of sick pay and paltry rewards.
Almost half of the women workers who have lost their jobs during Covid-19 cite lack of childcare as a factor. It’s time to recognise childcare as a public good – and make it available to everyone.
England’s privatised test and trace system is failing by all international standards, but two corporations – Serco and Sitel – stand to make three quarters of a billion anyway. It should be a national scandal.