Public sector workers can stop the government from attacking their pensions. Some 2.6 million workers struck together on 30 November. The powerful strike brought many public services to a standstill.
Millionaire bankers and bosses are furious that RBS chief executive Stephen Hester has been forced to give up his obscene bonus.
Climate change could be good for British businesses, according to Tory environment secretary Caroline Spelman.
When David Cameron came to office, he tried to dress up his vicious programme of cuts with the rhetoric of a "Big Society".
Usually we hear that immigrants are taking all our jobs. Now we are told they’re taking all our benefits too. "370,000 migrants on the dole" declared the Daily Telegraph. "Stop this abuse of British hospitality" demanded the Daily Mail.
Barely a day goes by without the grotesque spectacle of Labour Party leaders seeking to prove they can be every bit as vicious as the Tories.
Since the sinking of the Titanic 100 years ago, it has supposedly been standard that ships are built for safety first.
Just days after two of Stephen Lawrence’s killers were sentenced, the main issue of race dominating the media was black Labour MP Diane Abbott’s tweet.
David Cameron’s demand for a referendum on Scottish independence within 18 months was a cynical attempt to protect the unity of the British state.
The pensions dispute is about much more than pensions. The government knows this—and millions of workers know it too.
After nine years of war and occupation US troops have pulled out of Iraq.
The robber barons of Europe have fallen out—but their rows are an expression of a much deeper crisis. They face the prospect of economic catastrophe.