With speculation growing about a Labour leadership contest in 2026, only a decisive break with the current direction – on the economy, foreign policy and migrants – can avert disaster and offer a credible alternative, writes DIANE ABBOTT
What is there left to say about austerity? I can barely conjure up the energy to write about it. The hideousness of stripping vital funding away from everything a society needs to function is as self-evident as Boris Johnson’s narcissism.
It seems I’m not alone in feeling this way. Even the Tories don't talk about it anymore. Nor do they even try to justify it with perverse economic arguments and backwards logic. Instead, austerity has this Voldemort-like quality to it whereby the Tories dare not speak its name — but they still enact its policies.
“The thing that underpins austerity is the Tories’ obsession with neoliberalism,” says Labour’s MP for Derby North Chris Williamson.
Luckily there are a growing number of people like Williamson within the Labour Party who are willing and able to act upon the burning indignation that seven years of Tory rule has set alight within them.
Ben Chacko talks to RMT leader EDDIE DEMPSEY about how the key to fixing broken Britain lies in collective sectoral bargaining, restoring unions’ ability to take solidarity strike action and bringing about the much-vaunted ‘wave of insourcing’
A recent Immigration Summit heard from Lord Alf Dubs, who fled the Nazis to Britain as a child. JAYDEE SEAFORTH reports on his message that we need to increase public empathy with desperate people seeking asylum
It’s tiring always being viewed as the ‘wrong sort of woman,’ writes JENNA, a woman who has exited the sex industry



