Blog

  • Trump’s Executive Order Is Not About Anti-Semitism

    Trump’s Executive Order Is Not About Anti-Semitism

    Bill V. Mullen and Christopher Vials reflect on the Trump Administration's recent executive order, which claims to protect Jews in the face of growing fascist violence in the U.S. Instead, they argue, it is only the latest salvo in the president's culture war against the left and its perceived institutional homes.

  • ‘Grévolution’: first round of a general strike

    ‘Grévolution’: first round of a general strike

    Since the middle of December, France has been gripped by a wave of large scale strikes. In this article the French collective Plateforme d’Enquêtes Militantes analyses the composition of the strikes, and the potential for its continued escalation.

  • Image of the Year

    Image of the Year

    2019 has been a year of planetary unrest, with mass struggles springing up in places as diverse as Haiti, France, Ecuador, and Iran. Yet, it is the struggles in Chile, sparked by a 4 per cent rise in the price of a metro ride, that have been most emblematic of this new cycle of mass mobilisation. In this article, Joshua Clover reads the striking image of a train on fire in the Elisa Correa station of the Santiago metro, and asks what it can tell us about our new era of riot and protest. 

  • Longing for Lavery: From the Labour Party to the Party of Labour

    Longing for Lavery: From the Labour Party to the Party of Labour

    With Jeremy Corbyn stepping down as leader of the Labour Party, and deputy leader Tom Watson resigning, the biggest question facing the party is how will take its top two jobs and lead its renewal after the recent election defeat? Here, Philip Proudfoot and Ashok Kumar argue that only by having Ian Lavery as deputy leader can Labour win back the North.

  • "Legitimate Concerns"

    "Legitimate Concerns"

    Following Labour's defeat in last week's general election, and the collapse of the vote in the North and Midlands, there has been a revival of Blue Labour and debate about the white working class and the need for Labour to regain their votes. Eleanor Penny argues that the only viable option for Labour is a vision real economic offer of revival, combined with a true story of where power lies, not a pandering to bigotry and xenophobia.

  • After the election, what next for Northern Ireland?

    The results of the recent British general election signalled a momentous shift for one area in particular: Northern Ireland. In this article, Luke Butterly analyses the results and asks what this signals for the future of the region.

  • Europe and the class divide

    Europe and the class divide

    While intellectual and economic elites support the European Union in its present form, the less well-to-do reject it, Thomas Piketty reminds us in his column in Le Monde. But there is no fatality to this. The evil is deep and long-standing. In all referendums held over the past twenty-five years, the working classes have systematically expressed their disagreement with the European construction proposed to them, while the richer and privileged classes have supported it.