The Economy Will Not Simply Bounce Back
Yesterday's OBR projections that Britain would rebound spectacularly from the coronavirus crisis are wildly optimistic – and will be used to advance the case for harsh spending cuts if they go unchallenged.
Yesterday's OBR projections that Britain would rebound spectacularly from the coronavirus crisis are wildly optimistic – and will be used to advance the case for harsh spending cuts if they go unchallenged.
A former staffer on Jeremy Corbyn's leadership campaigns describes the hostility he faced when he went to work in Labour's HQ – and says members need to act to prevent an unaccountable clique from taking control again.
Big Pharma is dependent on public research – but when a crisis like coronavirus comes around, it does everything it can to keep its products for a select few. It's time to rethink how our medicines are produced.
The coronavirus recession will change the world, and we can't afford to repeat the mistakes of 2008 – it's time for a new economy that expands public wealth, empowers workers and is sustainable by design.
"Labour's members – who dedicate their lives to campaigning for the party – will not tolerate staff on six-figure sums undermining their efforts from within." A CLP chair calls for an investigation and decisive action.
This weekend's revelations about the conduct of party staff in undermining the 2017 general election campaign and abusing elected representatives demand an immediate investigation, argue Jon Trickett and Ian Lavery.
In April 1920 a general strike demanding the release of prisoners rocked Ireland and brought the country to a standstill — one hundred years later, it remains the pinnacle of Irish labour history.
In April 1920 a general strike demanding the release of prisoners rocked Ireland and brought the country to a standstill – one hundred years later, it remains the pinnacle of Irish labour history.
On Easter Sunday, we remember Ireland's 1916 Rising – and the role the working-class played in the revolutionary upheaval it initiated.
Tech giants see coronavirus as an opportunity to expand their powers of surveillance under the guise of supporting public health – but any new powers they accrue will likely become permanent.
If countries with high levels of poverty and weak health systems are forced to repay creditors in the midst of coronavirus, they will go under – the Global South needs a debt write-off and serious financial support.
Over the past decade Tory governments have used voluntary work as cover for their cutbacks. We can't let them do it again now – it's time to properly fund public services.