‘Guilty Men’ at 80
Eighty years ago this month, Michael Foot, Frank Owen and Peter Howard published ‘Guilty Men’ – a blistering condemnation of ruling class appeasement of Nazi Germany which became a national sensation.
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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.
Eighty years ago this month, Michael Foot, Frank Owen and Peter Howard published ‘Guilty Men’ – a blistering condemnation of ruling class appeasement of Nazi Germany which became a national sensation.
15 years ago today, Jean Charles de Menezes was shot dead at Stockwell station in London. His brutal killing stands as a monument to the tragic consequences of police violence and racism.
Paul W. Fleming, newly-elected leader of artists’ union Equity, writes about the fight against precarity and job losses in the sector – and how organising the creative industries can breathe life into the labour movement.
By refusing to keep the NHS off the table in trade negotiations with the US, the Tory government has sent a clear message – they are open to selling off our health service at the right price.
Mike Davis and Jon Wiener’s history of Los Angeles in the 1960s can sometimes feel as long as the decade itself, but is a monumental and moving tribute to a heroic, violently suppressed moment of possibility.
Yesterday, Michael Brooks passed away. He was a pioneer of left-wing media whose contributions to the cause of socialism and generosity to his comrades and friends will outlast him.
Anti-colonial revolutionary and theorist Frantz Fanon was born on this day in 1925. His life and work continue to inspire and empower a new generation of dreamers and fighters.
The crisis facing young people can’t be solved by half measures. We need a Young Labour that fights for the systemic change our generation demands – that’s why I’m running for chair.
With 1 in 3 working families a payslip away from homelessness and a wave of layoffs on the horizon, Britain faces a major economic crisis – but you wouldn’t know it from the government’s policy response.
Recent years have seen a string of victories for left-wing insurgents in New York, from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to Jamaal Bowman – but what does it mean for socialist politics in America?
The final survivor of La Nueve, the company of Spanish Republican soldiers who were the first to enter Paris in 1944, died earlier this year from coronavirus. We remember Rafael Gómez Nieto.
Covid-19 has shown once again that the market can’t rise to the challenges we face – if the world is to fare better with the coming climate crisis, we need to replace the market with a system of democratic planning.
An open letter from Scottish Labour and trade union activists urges members to stay in the party, fight for socialist policies and organise ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections.
Decades after he oversaw a brutal regime that mutilated and murdered millions of Congolese, King Leopold’s legacy is finally being challenged in Belgium – but there won’t be justice until a debt is repaid to Congo itself.
The failure of Corbynism was its inability to cut through in working-class communities. The risk of a Starmer-led Labour Party is that it abandons that effort altogether.
In the 1970s, Gough Whitlam’s proposal to bring about a ‘social revolution’ as Australian prime minister threatened America’s Cold War hegemony – so the intelligence services set about a plan to remove him.
Decades of anti-public service ideology has seen the state’s capacity diminished through waves of cuts and outsourcing – if it is to play an active role in the economy again, it must be rebuilt.
A decade of cuts have undermined Britain’s health service. But in North Devon, residents fought back – and now their hospital is playing a leading role in the battle against Covid-19.
On this day in 1966, British Rail scrapped the colour bar at Euston Station after a campaign by a black worker, Asquith Xavier, and his union – the win paved the way for the Race Relations Act just two years later.
The Tories’ recent announcements won’t be enough to prevent a deep economic crisis – we need a bold alternative from the Left that argues for investment in jobs, public ownership and democratisation.