Leaders of the three main parties think they have to shift to the right to win public support.
Britain is more unequal today than it was a year ago.
The racist murder of teenager Stephen Lawrence opened up the institutional racism at the heart of Britain’s police 20 years ago.
The bombing at the Boston marathon last Monday left at least three people dead and many more injured.
Politicians of all stripes have spent the past week telling us Margaret Thatcher was a “great” individual who transformed Britain. Others have compared her to previous “great” prime ministers.
The Tories have lost one of their heroes and millions of workers are celebrating.
Nuclear bombs are the most deadly weapons of mass destruction that exist. Yet some in the workers’ movement insist on defending the maintenance and expansion of Trident nuclear missiles and submarines on the grounds that it is good for jobs.
The millionaire Tories running the government are on the rampage.
A series of Tory attacks are set to take effect on Monday of next week. It will be 1 April, a landmark date in the government’s offensive against the working class.
It’s hard to believe that Britain had just been hit by a heat wave this time last year. This March has been the coldest in 50 years.
Only two weeks ago the media was full of talk that the coalition was cracking.
Hundreds of thousands of workers could lose billions more pounds from their pensions and pay because of a shift in inflation measures.