
Tribune vs. the Nuclear Bomb
From the moment the first bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Tribune was at the forefront of the campaign against nuclear weapons. It was a cause that shaped the magazine for decades.
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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.
From the moment the first bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Tribune was at the forefront of the campaign against nuclear weapons. It was a cause that shaped the magazine for decades.
Tribune’s editor sat down with the Coventry MP to discuss her path into politics, her experience in Parliament, and the question of where the Left goes next.
Under the cover of the culture war, the government is introducing a wave of authoritarian legislation designed to erode our democratic rights. But the only way to defend the right to protest is to exercise it.
Rising inflation is driving the cost of living crisis, but it isn’t an act of God. It’s the result of policy decisions that favour the rich — and socialists need to have an alternative.
The Help-to-Buy scheme is marketed as an effort to solve the housing crisis, but it’s actually about the Tories helping those who benefit from the crisis get even richer.
With Partygate destroying what remains of the public’s trust in politics, it is tempting to dismiss the desire for honest politicians as naïve – but truthfulness should be a cornerstone of any socialist project, argues Rebecca Long-Bailey.
Over two centuries since enslaved Haitians broke their chains and declared a republic, their descendants remain subjugated by Western imperialism and its homegrown collaborators.
Across the country this year, UCU workers are striking not just for wages, pensions, and conditions — but for a higher education system worth learning in.
After years of deregulation and neglect, Britain’s bin workers are rising up in a wave of local disputes for decent pay and dignity on the job.
The crisis impacting working people isn’t a result of blind economic forces — it is the result of a class war waged from above.
The fact that P&O bosses can openly admit to breaking the law without fear of consequences exposes the reality – Britain’s economy is rigged against workers in the interests of a wealthy elite.
Since Thatcher’s deregulation, the gap in public transport has become one of the starkest markers of inequality between London and the North – that’s why Liverpool’s buses are coming back under public control.
More than two million refugees have fled the war in Ukraine for Poland in the last month. In Warsaw, they have been met by a self-organised solidarity movement involving thousands of volunteers.
Relationship problems are usually considered private ones – but from financial stress to overwork, the pressures caused by capitalism can upend our romantic lives too.
Insecurity is no longer confined the gig economy. In sector after sector, practices associated with companies like Uber are becoming the norm – and workers are the ones losing out.
For decades, attacks on trade unions have decimated workers’ rights in Britain. The P&O scandal is the result – and it could be your job next.
My fight for re-election will be tough. The establishment doesn’t want socialists in parliament – and it’s only through a people-powered campaign that I can win.
During austerity and Covid, workers were told they had to sacrifice for the good of the economy while the rich got richer – don’t let the ruling class fool you again.
William and Kate’s visit to Jamaica was designed to strengthen the monarchy’s links to the Caribbean – instead, Jamaicans are demanding apologies for colonial crimes and campaigning to make the country a republic.
Last year, millions of people across Britain faced food poverty as queues at food banks reached record levels. The cost of living crisis will see those numbers grow – and the Chancellor’s failure to intervene is a national disgrace.