Labour’s Green Revolution
Labour’s plans to invest in a million green jobs can transform the very parts of Britain decimated by Thatcher’s economic reforms – and begin to undo the damage of deindustrialisation.
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Miriam Pensack is a writer, editor, and doctoral candidate in Latin American history at New York University.
Labour’s plans to invest in a million green jobs can transform the very parts of Britain decimated by Thatcher’s economic reforms – and begin to undo the damage of deindustrialisation.
Tomorrow Jeremy Corbyn will launch Labour’s manifesto with a firebrand speech that takes on the elite who have rigged our economy – and promises a future worth fighting for.
With the persecution of Evo Morales’ political party and the killing of indigenous protestors, Bolivia is fast sliding into a brutal dictatorship that makes a mockery of claims about restoring democracy.
In pledging to freeze corporation tax cuts, Boris Johnson has exposed a decade of Tory arguments that cutting taxes would increase revenue to be little more than a propaganda exercise for the super-rich.
From the hostile environment to Windrush and relentless Muslim-bashing, the Conservative record in government shows how comfortable the party is with racism.
Labour’s broadband plans would bring Britain’s infrastructure into the 21st century while helping workers and businesses – exactly what the free market has failed to do for decades.
After a decade of cuts and privatisation, the Tories are trying to claim the mantle of defenders of the NHS – here’s 10 points about their real record when it comes to public healthcare.
The Wing, London’s new private members’ club founded by a former Hillary Clinton aide, is the latest chapter in the story of capitalism covering itself in the veneer of women’s empowerment.
The roots of the ‘Hostile Environment’ go a long way back – to the racial categories of the British Empire, and the classing of Jewish refugees as ‘aliens’.
In modern Britain, sectors like hospitality have been designed to operate on low pay and precarious hours. The only solution is a trade union.
This weekend’s fire in Bolton has exposed the dreadful quality of much of Britain’s student accommodation – a forest of plastic towers designed to maximise profit and minimise regulation.
Former Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa on the coup in Bolivia, the campaign to criminalise Latin America’s Left and the need to fight back against the far-right agenda on the continent.
For decades terms like ‘affordable,’ ‘social,’ ‘mixed’ have been used as cover for market failures in housing – it’s time to move on from those schemes and commit to a real solution: council housing.
The makers of an exhibition on working class queer bodies in the industrial heartland of Russia reflect on art, censorship and politics.
In 2017’s general election comeback, Momentum played a key role in mobilising Labour supporters across the country. This time they plan to go one further – and help Labour into Downing Street.
In this election, Labour can turn the entire debate about housing upside down. It must not miss that chance.
This year’s Oslo Architecture Triennale moved away from the corporate flash of most architecture events to imagine a world of environmentally-sustainable futures.
Nine years of Tory cuts have left local government in Britain on its knees with budgets decimated by 60%. Labour’s manifesto should commit to radical plans to rebuild our councils.
Court judgements like those in the CWU case show that there is no effective right to strike in the UK. It’s time to scrap the anti-union laws and put power back into workers’ hands.
Today Labour has announced plans to provide full-fibre broadband free to everyone in Britain through a new public company. It can be the start of a truly democratic approach to the internet.