A Departing Letter
In his final editorial, Tribune editor Ronan Burtenshaw reflects on his five years in the job.
Issue 20
In his final editorial, Tribune editor Ronan Burtenshaw reflects on his five years in the job.
As council after council declares bankruptcy, the media treats them as isolated scandals — but the reality is a system buckling under the weight of rising costs and funding cuts.
Well-funded public transport is an obvious solution to climate change, the cost-of-living crisis, and crumbling infrastructure. The establishment is determined to make it a cash cow instead.
By refusing to borrow or raise taxes, Labour is betting all its chips on growth to fund public spending — with no credible plan to stimulate it.
If you want to understand why nothing in Britain works anymore, look no further than the free market economics that have put the country on a path to national decline.
While Keir Starmer’s Labour Party veers ever further to the Right, Spain’s centre-left government took bold steps to tackle inflation — and was rewarded at the polls.
Even as Amazon has grown to become one of the biggest companies in the world, its workers have organised across borders to fight for better pay and conditions. In both their successes and failures, there are lessons for the labour movement.
The story of Chile’s exiles in Britain
Disco Elysium was a widely successful video game with left-wing politics. Then company shareholders fired its creators and stole their work.
Revolution+1 cleverly uses the story of Shinzo Abe’s assassin to chronicle the ills of contemporary Japan.
In the suburbs of Paris the names of the public places invite you on a journey through political history.