The swathe of Tory posters disfiguring billboards up and down Britain signal that the general election campaign is underway.
The Right to Work conference of resistance and solidarity on 30 January was a stunning success. It needs to be quickly followed up.
Parliament is rotten to the core. Three Labour MPs – David Chaytor, Elliot Morley and Jim Devine – and one Tory peer are facing criminal charges over their expenses.
Spot the difference. Last April, David Cameron strutted the stage at the Tory spring conference, talking tough. He declared an "age of austerity", and boasted that the Tories would face up to the "incredibly tough decisions" on government spending.
CLIMATE CHANGE deniers are on the offensive. They are using small sections of correspondence between climate scientists to claim that the evidence for global warming is faked.
Supporters of the English Defence League (EDL) and the British National Party (BNP) laid siege to Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, last Saturday.
Britain’s recession has officially ended—by the narrowest possible statistical margin. The economy grew by just 0.1 percent in the three months to December.
The Right to Work conference on 30 January must be a priority for everyone.
Gordon Brown has crushed any lingering belief that Labour is going to run an election campaign that addresses the needs of working class people.
The outcome of the UN climate talks at Copenhagen will be rises in carbon dioxide emissions. The draft texts provide a variety of ways for countries and companies to keep polluting.
BA boss Willie Walsh, backed by torrents of drivel in the right wing media, says a strike by cabin crew will wreck the company.
Walsh has deliberately provoked this dispute. The Unite union has spent months trying to negotiate with him. It even came up with a cost-cutting plan of its own to save BA £140 million.