This is the week that the Tory cuts really started to bite.
Last week a 250-strong Unison union meeting in Lambeth met to discuss a swathe of local attacks.
Government plans to hand over control of most NHS spending to family doctors would unleash the biggest wave of privatisation ever seen in the health service.
Socialist Worker’s anti‑cuts pull-out poster is going down a storm.
The latest report from the Public Sector Pensions Commissions released last week is neither independent nor factually accurate.
BP, the British-based oil company responsible for the enormous oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is to pay much less tax because it can offset the costs of cleaning up the damage it has caused.
The Metropolitan Police is to pay £25,000 in compensation to two protesters who were beaten by police during a demonstration in London.
Joe Glenton, the British soldier who refused to fight in Afghanistan, was released from military prison on Monday after serving four months for going absent without leave (Awol).
The BNP’s Richard Barnbrook was defeated in a council by-election in Goresbrook ward in Barking and Dagenham, East London, yesterday.
More than 3,900 people booked up in advance for the annual Marxism festival in central London last weekend—and hundreds more bought tickets during the event.
The spirit of international resistance ran through the meetings, with much discussion of the turmoil and fightback in Greece.
A jury at Hove Crown Court last week acquitted seven activists who last year broke into an arms manufacturer and damaged equipment.