WeeklyWorker

WW archive > Issue 146 - 06 June 1996

Labour declares war on youth

At last new Labour is not imitating the Tories...

Letters

Above the rest; Against fascists; Argentine justice

Tax potholes in Scotland

SLP: what’s possible, what’s not ...

Party notes

No way back

Irish Republican Socialist Prisoners respond to ‘Historical reality’ in last week’s Weekly Worker on splits in the IRSP and Inla

No secret

Summer Offensive ’96

‘Peace process’ on track

Irish elections

New Labour?

Topsy-Turvy

Phil Rudge reviews William Morris (the Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington); William Morris: questioning the legacy (Crafts Council Gallery, Pentonville Road, Islington); William Morris (talk by Tony Benn, at WM Gallery, Lloyd Park, Forest Road, Walthamstow)

On the edge

Breon James reviews Sunspots, by Judy Upton, directed by Lisa Goldman (Red Room, 42-44 Gaisford Street, Kentish Town, London; £6, £4 concessions)

Why strike failed: Communist Party statement

From the Workers’ Weekly, paper of the Communist Party of Great Britain, June 4 1926

Zionist defeats Zionist

Those who wait

Around the left

Bourgeois democracy, Albanian style

New words, same old ideas

Hardly anyone could have failed to notice that the ‘stakeholding economy’ has become one of the buzz words of the 1990s - and even of the next millennium. Where has it come from and why does new Labour like it so much? Eddie Ford offers some explanations

Understand history: don’t repeat it

“Invalidating” the membership of those deemed to be “breaching the democracy” of the SLP seems to be an NEC code word for an anti-communist witch hunt. There are important lessons from the 1920s

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