The Milburn review presents itself as a plan to help young people into work, but Dr DYLAN MURPHY argues it is laying the groundwork for a harsher benefits regime
AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN, who served as chancellor of the Exchequer under Arthur Balfour and David Lloyd George, and as foreign secretary under Stanley Baldwin, famously said that an old friend of his, one of Britain’s diplomats in China, told him that an old, and powerful, Chinese curse is: “May you live in interesting times.”
Now that expression — which may well, it seems, not be quite as authentic as Neville Chamberlain’s half-brother would have had us believe — has haunted us this week.
Because, in the days since Britain voted to leave the European Union, we have certainly been living in interesting times.
With ‘Your Party’ holding its founding conference in Liverpool this weekend, JEREMY CORBYN speaks to Morning Star editor Ben Chacko about its potential, its priorities — and a few of its controversies too
In the run-up to the Communist Party congress in November ROB GRIFFITHS outlines a few ideas regarding its participation in the elections of May 2026
While Reform poses as a workers’ party, a credible left alternative rooted in working-class communities would expose their sham — and Corbyn’s stature will be crucial to its appeal, argues CHELLEY RYAN
From Gaza complicity to welfare cuts chaos, Starmer’s baggage accumulates, and voters will indeed find ‘somewhere else’ to go — to the Greens, nationalists, Lib Dems, Reform UK or a new, working-class left party, writes NICK WRIGHT


