
Remembering the Battle of Cable Street
85 years ago today, the working class of London's East End organised against Oswald Mosley's race hatred – and delivered the greatest defeat in British fascism's history.
85 years ago today, the working class of London's East End organised against Oswald Mosley's race hatred – and delivered the greatest defeat in British fascism's history.
69 years ago, Britain detonated its first nuclear bomb test off the coast of Australia, officially becoming the world's third nuclear power. Seven decades later, Australians are still dealing with the fallout.
Last week, cleaners at University of the Arts London went on strike. It is just the latest battle in the fight against outsourcing and diminishing conditions across the economy – but it is one they intend to win.
Despite staff shortages, workers on different contracts in the NHS are being pitted against each other for shifts – a tactic designed to prevent them from organising effectively to improve conditions.
Last month, Ocado Zoom drivers made headlines for organising against rock-bottom pay and outsourcing of their jobs. Now, they are unionising – and determined to win better.
In recent weeks, Labour has confirmed its rightward drift on housing by emphasising home ownership instead of social housing and renters' rights – but embracing the market will do nothing to solve the housing crisis.
Sheffield-born musician Richard H. Kirk passed away last month. His music, in Cabaret Voltaire and after, told a story of darkness and paranoia growing into a utopian, expansive vision of the future.
After being refused a pay rise despite big profits for investors, staff at the Polyflor factory in Manchester went on strike. Their ensuing victory is a warning to bosses: never take your workforce for granted.
The Nadine Dorries-assisted demolition of Dorman Long Tower symbolised the evisceration of local industrial heritage in the name of profit-driven redevelopment – and proved the 'Conservatives' only conserve when it suits them.
A new poll from Survation and Autonomy has revealed overwhelming support for increasing the minimum wage to £15 per hour – just days after the issue led to a resignation from Labour's Shadow Cabinet.
Keir Starmer's leaders speech was the longest in recent memory, but contained hardly any substance – an admission that Labour under his watch won't respond to crisis with any great ambition for change.
This week, Grace speaks to Geoff Mann, Professor of Geography at Simon Fraser University, about neoliberalism, state power, and why democracy is so important to anti-capitalist struggle today.