Wise words on the Irish question

Words are weapons and can also save lives. It’s possible the wise words of a young Danish sociologist could have saved hundreds of lives in Northern Ireland if they had been heeded. Gary Kent explains why This slim but weighty pamphlet was published by the Independent Labour Party in 1972 and in that year’s...

Time for the Tobin Tax

Gary Kent argues that the global financial crisis makes the case for a Tobin Tax even more compelling. Some ideas are nurtured for decades before they shoot to prominence usually to the surprise of those who have long advocated them. This could be the fate of the Tobin Tax, originally devised by the American...

The Cost of Expenses

It is right that there is anger over MPs’ expenses, says Will Brown, but let’s not damn all politics. The row over MPs’ expenses and the misuse of public funds have rightly been met with pubic anger and criticism. It is indeed indefensible that MPs should be making a fast buck from the public...

ILP Weekend

  Crunch Times: Politics And The Crisis   ILP Round Table Seminar  Esplanade Hotel, Scarborough  13th-14th June 2009 Saturday   13th June   2.00 – 5.00pm Sunday     14th June   9.30am – 12.30pm   Session 1: The economic crisis • What just happened?  • What does it tell us about capitalism? Session 2: The mess we’re in...

A challenge remaining

Judging by the Compass conference in June, the left has yet to develop a coherent political strategy, says WILL BROWN Lenin is not a figure one immediately associates with the soft left yet there he was on a giant screen at the front of a packed conference hall proclaiming ‘The victory of ideas needs...

Picking at the pensions pickle

JONATHAN TIMBERS appreciates a useful contribution to the left’s developing approach to the pensions debate Anyone who believes that we can continue to exist as we do now with our current pension system is living in a dream world. In 2002, there were 3.35 working people for every person of pensionable age. By 2050...

A more generous attitude of mind

The education bill is a wasted opportunity, say its critics. MATTHEW BROWN looks at a comprehensive alternative It ought to be the thing that unites us. Comprehensive education seems such a straight-forwardly progressive idea that you’d think it’d be the one area of policy the left could agree on. The notion that all children...

Trouble on the buses?

BERNARD HUGHES provides a quick before-and-after survey of three areas of transport to help illustrate the marketisation issue Let me start with some caveats. First, it deliberately takes no ideological position about the question of public ownership of the means of providing public services. It’s a strictly mechanical cui bono look at the results....

Developing democracy

STEPHEN YEO argues that cooperative politics can help to address the democratic deficit. As mainstream politics, including Labour’s, becomes more consumerist and less based on values and principles, the task of bringing cooperation into politics, rather than politics into cooperation, becomes more urgent. There is a growing democratic deficit in Britain, which cooperative and...

Mutuality and radical politics

SEAN CREIGHTON traces the historical association of mutual organisations and the labour movement, and questions what the ‘new mutualism’ can offer to radical politics in the future. Scarborough’s Central Public Library is housed in the Oddfellows Hall opened in 1840. From 1857 it became the base for the Mechanics’ Institute and its library. The...

Reimagining socialism, reinventing democracy

BARRY WINTER finds much to admire in Hilary Wainwright’s book Reclaim the State, but says she is still romantically optimistic about the prospects of new left parties. My interest in Hilary Wainwright’s recent and, I think, important book initially came from a desire to discover more about the practical ‘experiments in popular democracy’ indicated...

The Challenge of Mutuality

This issue of Democratic Socialist is dedicated to continuing the discussions and debates raised by the ILP’s weekend school, held in Scarborough at the beginning of May. Entitled ‘The Challenge of Mutuality’, the school brought ILPers and non-ILPers together to discuss the politics of cooperation, mutuality and social enterprise, and examine their relevance to...