ROGER D HARRIS and SARA FLOUNDERS challenge propaganda against the blockaded socialist island
THIS May Day gives the opportunity to re-emphasise the demand that needs to be raised in all the current political debates – the protection of and extension of workers’ rights. The same forces that started the attack on workers’ rights in earnest in 1979 and maintained that attack until today are still looking to keep their foot on the throat of the working class. Those same forces are seeking the same policies across the world in every continent.
May Day gives us the chance to show our solidarity with workers around the world facing the same enemy of multinationals and financial institutions. We give particular attention to those facing the most intense attacks in countries like Colombia. Workers are also the main victims of wars being carried out in places like Libya, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Workers and their families suffer under the myriad repressive regimes that suppress human rights and equality struggles and attack different communities within their borders as we have seen in Burma, Turkey/Kurdistan, and so many other countries.
May Day is a celebration of those who do the work in any country, the work that ensures the society operates, creates the wealth and maintains all the public services. In most places in Europe and across the world it is celebrated as a public holiday and that is a battle we have still to win in Britain. This year the London May Day Committee is calling for a renewal of the demand to make May 1 a public holiday in Britain.
That call needs to be made through trade unions, the Labour Party and community organisations. Make May Day the day to celebrate workers’ achievements and join across the world with other workers. The achievements of workers should be recognised but also all those who cannot get jobs or jobs only offering poor contracts and conditions. There is plenty that needs doing in our society and all should have the opportunity to make their contribution and be able to live a full and secure life.
One hundred years after 1.7m workers shut the country down in defence of the miners, the struggles that sparked the 1926 General Strike are still with us – and will be honoured on London’s May Day march this year, writes MARY ADOSSIDES
BEN CHACKO says in different ways, the centenary of the General Strike and that of Fidel Castro’s birth point to priority tasks for the British left in the coming year
Climate justice and workers’ rights movements are uniting to make the rich pay for our transition to a green economy, writes assistant general secretary of PCS JOHN MOLONEY, ahead of a major demonstration on September 20
RICHARD BURGON MP points to the recent relative success of widespread opposition to the Labour leadership’s regressive policies as the blueprint for exacting the changes required to build a fairer society


