'It was grim, it was grim for me, grim for TB [Tony Blair] and there is this huge stuff about trust.' So lamented New Labour's chief spin-doctor in his diary on 1 June.
Was Alastair Campbell responsible for the government's deliberate lies about Iraq's 'Weapons of Mass Destruction'? The Hutton inquiry evidence suggests not.
Badge "endangers" aircraft - Cabinet Office IT company run by former Tory minister - New Labour schools minister can't do sums
The decision taken by the Socialist Alliance at its annual conference in May to explore the possibilities of building a broader and more credible political coalition has provoked fierce debate in some quarters.
Workers' confidence has continued to show signs of recovery in the last couple of months. The huge stop the war movement has politicised a whole new generation of union activists as well as revitalising an older layer.
Before the war, John Barry of Newsweek produced an amazing scoop. He obtained a leaked copy of the interview between General Kamal, Saddam's son in law, and the UN weapons inspectors.
War on Want and Justice for Colombia organised a mock execution of 13 British trade union leaders and several MPs outside parliament recently, in a demonstration of solidarity with the terrorised Colombian trade union movement.
Two years after Washington launched the 'war on terrorism', Alex Callinicos examines the motivations of the neo-cons and the difficulties they face.
Anne Ashford charts the resistance to the occupation of Iraq.
Britain is colluding in torturing prisoners from the Afghan war.