|
By Socialist Appeal
|
|
Tuesday, 06 May 2008 |
The Tory victories in the local elections on May 1st
mean that the Conservatives will almost certainly go on to win the next general
election and form the next government. Theoretically the Labour leadership
could turn the situation round, but they seem incapable of changing their
disastrous course. New Labour is in meltdown.
|
|
|
By Socialist Appeal
|
|
Friday, 25 April 2008 |
Every time you think things cannot get any worse for Gordon
Brown, something else comes along. With Labour trailing badly in the polls and
facing what may be yet another round of bad election results come May, even
some normally ‘loyal’ Labour MPs have started to raise the question of getting
rid of Brown as leader. Labour MPs
are rebelling, not because they have suddenly discovered a long-lost socialist
conscience, but because they are staring at the strong possibility that Labour
will lose the next election and they will lose their seats.
|
|
|
By Socialist Appeal
|
|
Friday, 18 April 2008 |
|
They’re back from the dead. We thought we’d driven a stake
through their rotten hearts in the Labour landslide of 1997. Now they’re 13
points ahead in the polls. They should be history. So why are they making a
comeback? Because New Labour have been rumbled. They said they were being
prudent with the economy. They talked about, ‘no return to boom and bust.’ Now
we can see that they were just lucky. Don’t
let the failure of New Labour be the opportunity for the Tories. Reclaim the
Labour Party. It was set up as our party, as a party for the working class.
Fight the Tories with socialist policies.
|
|
|
By Hands Off Venezuela
|
|
Monday, 14 April 2008 |
As part of their
bi-monthly meeting, the Greater London Labour Representation Committee (LRC)
invited the Hands Off Venezuela campaign to lead a discussion on the recent
events that have taken place in Venezuela. The LRC, originally formed in 1900
to fight for political representation for the Labour Movement, was re-formed in
2004 to secure a voice for socialists within the trade unions, the Labour Party
and Parliament. Will Roche from the HOV campaign gave a summary of events
dating from the re-election of President Chavez in 2006, in particular, the
development of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV).
|
|
|
By Socialist Appeal
|
|
Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
It is easy to write off Boris Johnson as a buffoon. There is
a real danger he will be running London, a city of 7½ million people in a
couple of months time. Make sure Johnson is not made London’s Mayor in the May
1st elections. As Compass points out, “his buffoonery conceals a
hard line right wing set of views – a type of Norman Tebbitt in clown’s
uniform. The quotes below are taken from their pamphlet Boris Johnson – a man of the Tory hard right.
|
|
|
By Steve Jones
|
|
Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
May 1st, May Day, will see one of the tightest and most important
elections to hit London for some years. The election of London Mayor is
being hotly contested between Ken Livingstone for Labour and Boris
Johnson for the Tories.
|
|
|
By UNISON press release
|
|
Wednesday, 19 March 2008 |
It is almost impossible to believe the rank stupidity and/or duplicity
of the people masquerading as Labour Ministers. This is a press release
from UNISON in response to the latest claptrap from Kim Howells, in
which he makes allegations that put at risk the lives of trade unionists
in Columbia. Please use this information in your own unions and demand
the retraction of Howells' allegations.
|
|
|
By Terry McPartlan
|
|
Friday, 25 January 2008 |
So if things weren't bad enough for Gordon Brown, it looks like the
Labour Party has been taking big donations from Tory voters. Apparently, a number of confused members of the public have discovered that their bank accounts have been used to
transfer funds to the Labour Party. This all
sounds a bit fishy. Can we expect a new episode of "Our friends in the North"?
|
|
|
By Kenny McGuigan, Glasgow
|
|
Friday, 25 January 2008 |
The Electoral Commission has launched an investigation into an illegal
donation to Wendy Alexander MSP's campaign to take over from Jack
McConnell as Labour leader in the Scottish Parliament, following
Labour's worst electoral defeat in 50 years.
|
|
|
By Steve Jones
|
|
Thursday, 24 January 2008 |
|
Hain resigns: New Labour enmired in sleaze
New Labour's indecent closeness to big business claimed another victim
as Hain resigned today. The police are now on his tail. The victim is
not Hain. His resignation will, after all, give him more time to count
his money. The victim is the working class who have voted for Hain and his mates in order for Labour to do a job for ordinary working people,
not grovel to big business.
|
|
|
By Barbara Humphries
|
|
Friday, 04 January 2008 |
Did Blair and his right wing policies make Labour
electable? The defeats of the 1980s led many activists to despair. The claim that dominance of the Party by the left was
responsible for the defeats needs careful scrutiny, as it is completely
at odds with the facts. Like all other aspects of history, the story of
the 1980s has been written by the so-called victors and what actually
happened needs to be investigated.
|
|
|
By Kenny McGuigan, Glagow
|
|
Tuesday, 18 December 2007 |
The Electoral Commission
has launched an investigation into an illegal donation to Wendy Alexander MSP's
campaign to take over from Jack McConnell as Labour leader in the Scottish
Parliament. The crisis
unfolded when the Sunday Herald learned that every donation to the Wendy
campaign was under £1,000. Many were for £950. Under the Elections Act 2000,
all donations of £1,000 or more must be declared to the Electoral
Commission.
|
|
|
By Mick Brooks
|
|
Friday, 16 November 2007 |
In 1970, just like today, the Labour Party seemed dead from
the neck up. After six years of desperately disappointing government, Labour
had been unceremoniously bundled out of office. The Tories were back, aiming to
put the boot in to the working class.
|
|
|
By Labour Representation Committee - www.l-r-c.org.uk
|
|
Friday, 21 September 2007 |
We are making available to our readers an appeal by the Labour
Representation Committee on the issue of internal party democracy. On Sunday
Labour Party conference kicks off. If Brown's proposals are accepted it appears
that from next year CLPs and affiliates will no longer have the right to take
resolutions to Party conference.
|
|