2020: A Workers’ Perspective
As 2020 draws to a close, we hear from those at its frontlines: nurses, teachers, posties, binmen – the workers who've kept society going through Covid-19, despite the best efforts of the government.
As 2020 draws to a close, we hear from those at its frontlines: nurses, teachers, posties, binmen – the workers who've kept society going through Covid-19, despite the best efforts of the government.
As Covid wreaks havoc on the NHS, the government's plan to open schools this Monday is a serious risk to public health. School workers have a duty to push back – and we have a duty to support them.
2020 has been a difficult year for the socialist movement, with significant defeats in many countries – but the Left's answers to the crises we face remain far more compelling than any offered by the Right or Centre.
This month's Danish budget promised more state spending, but also to help workers take control of their workplaces. The democratic ownership agenda might be dying in Labour – but it lives on elsewhere.
For many, 2020 has been a nightmare; for others, it's been a moneymaker. Big corporate interests have profited from the pandemic – and screwed the workers who kept society running.
2020 was a difficult year for trade unions – from mass redundancies to 'fire and rehire' schemes. But there were also seeds of worker militancy, and these provide hope for the struggles ahead in 2021.
As we head into 2021, Grace Blakeley reflects on the first months of A World to Win podcast – and remembers some of the show's highlights along the way.
The commodification and marketisation of care – and its unloading onto the underpaid and unpaid – has been brutally exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic. In its wake, we need an entirely new system.
Neoliberalism has marketed itself on efficiency and pragmatism for almost fifty years, but Britain's experience of Covid-19 has exposed those claims as false – at the cost of many thousands of lives.
This year, students exposed the myth of England's 'meritocratic' education system and overturned the government's A Level results. But dealing with the class divides in our schools will be a far longer struggle.
For much of the twentieth century, Ireland's ruling class resisted social-democratic reforms. Instead, they treated poverty as a moral failing – and built a brutal carceral state to correct it.
Rumours that Home Secretary Priti Patel was exploring the reintroduction of the death penalty were met with surprise – but it would just be the latest chapter in a decade of Tory governments devaluing human life.