It’s Time to Declare a National Food Emergency
Today in Britain, 7.3 million people don't have enough to eat. It is the great moral scandal of our time – but the government is determined to look the other way.
Today in Britain, 7.3 million people don't have enough to eat. It is the great moral scandal of our time – but the government is determined to look the other way.
Stopping last night's deportation flight was a victory for activists across the country who fought to defend asylum seeker rights. Now it's time for the scheme itself to be scrapped.
Scotland's network of remote shelters, known as bothies, are among our only genuinely free, communal institutions – and they were won by trespass.
Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara was born on this day in 1928. An icon of Cuba's liberation, he committed his life to the cause of the oppressed – and in the process, became one of the twentieth century's most influential figures.
On this day in 2017, 72 people lost their lives in the Grenfell Tower fire. Half a decade on, families are still waiting for justice – and those with the power to prevent a repeat still aren’t willing to use it.
In South East London, sound systems have long formed a part of political resistance. A music festival in Lewisham taps into that history.
The Tories' plan to axe 91,000 civil service jobs is only the latest in a long line of attacks proving the contempt in which they hold working people – and making the case for a fightback clearer than ever.
During six years as health secretary, Jeremy Hunt waged war on workers and ran the NHS into the ground – now, media pundits want us to believe he’s the ‘sensible’ alternative to Boris Johnson.
In today's French parliamentary election, a new coalition has united the Left around a bold programme and a common project: to elect Jean-Luc Mélenchon as the country's prime minister.
Britain is 'upgrading' its trade agreement with Israel and doing nothing to stop the import of goods made in illegal settlements on occupied Palestinian land. It's a decision to be complicit in Israel's apartheid regime.
P&O were able to get away with illegally sacking 800 staff because of Britain’s close relationship with the companies’ Emirati owners – a reminder that fighting for workers' rights means fighting the global networks that encourage their exploitation.
80% of journalists come from professional or upper-class backgrounds, making the industry wildly unrepresentative of the majority of the population. With that kind of makeup, it's no wonder the media is facing a crisis of trust.