Articles
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
P&O has admitted that it broke the law in failing to consult with staff over sacking 800 workers done by video link. No consequences have followed from this. Yet if the worker's union had broken the law then the full weight of the state would swiftly have been brought to bear with funds seized, officials in court and an attempt to destroy the organisation.
Saturday, March 26, 2022
While people in Britain face numerous assaults on their living standards - inflation, soaring energy prices and cuts to benefits to name a few, workers in the garment industry face particularly bad conditions. Servicing the cut-throat fast fashion industry, they are virtually hidden from view in unsafe sweatshops or homeworking and earning much less than the minimum wage. Legislation is ineffective in improving workers conditions and trade unions find it hard to organise due to the vulnerability of workers who fear for their livelihoods. Such is the real world for a section of the working class in Britain today.
Monday, March 21, 2022
As Boris Johnson hangs on to his premiership, courtesy of the war in Ukraine, the manoeuvering round his fate sheds a light on the workings of the state and the media manipulation of the political agenda as different factions of the Tory Party fight it out. Meanwhile Labour leader, Keir Starmer is failing to offer an alternative, whilst eagerly embracing war-mongering and attacking the peace movement and the left.
Sunday, March 20, 2022
British farming is in dramatic decline and many hoped that leaving the EU and its Common Agricultural Police would signal a change of fortunes for the industry. however, the transition plans put in place by the Tories have failed to address the many problems faced by British agriculture.
Saturday, March 19, 2022
The loyalty of fans to the clubs they support runs deep, but football is increasingly big business. The ownership of Newcastle United by Mike Ashley and now the Saudi Public Investment Fund tests fan's loyalties and raises ethical questions. But there are other models of ownership which could address these issues.
Sunday, November 28, 2021
There is an urgent need for socialist policies and working class campaigning, yet some on the left seem to want to dilute our power by introducing proportional representation in UK parliamentary elections. Though seemingly more democratic, this self-defeating move would drive politics to the right through enforced coalitions with the Liberal Democrats. And this is only one of the problems with PR, which has failed to produce any positive change where it has already been implemented in elections in Britain. In fact through permanent coalitions will deliver less of what people voted for rather than more.
Saturday, November 27, 2021
COP 26 happened in Glasgow at the beginning of November and demonstrated the difficulties that free-market capitalism has in addressing major global challenges which require collaboration and planning. However, faced with its own extinction it is not impossible for capitalism to set aside some of its rivalries to try to save itself. Whether it will succeed is another matter and it will be worrying if the future of humanity is left in its hands.
However, as capitalism tries to save itself it will have scant regard for the impact of its climate change policies on working people and the developing world. Workers are rightly skeptical of vague promises about new green jobs. The North Sea oil industry is a specific example of this. Workers are interested in transferring from an industry in decline to green jobs, but they themselves identify a lack of planning by the UK, the Scottish and local governments to make this possible. Market forces mean that contracts for wind turbines, for example, go abroad and there is a lack of validation of their skills and qualifications if they want to move jobs. Like other workers across all industries in recent decades they have faced casualisation through bogus self-employment, cuts in wages and conditions and health and safety concerns.
Friday, November 26, 2021
Well into our second year since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, the world capitalist economy is now also suffering from a new malaise, a global economic pandemic involving some symptoms which seem entirely new and others which have not been seen for many years. These symptoms can only be understood in terms of capitalism, and of the actions taken by the capitalist states and central banks to shore the system up. It involves price inflation. This is not caused by workers demanding higher pay, but by the use of monetary policy to protect big business and the ultra-rich.