The basis for 20th-century social democracy in Britain is gone, argues ANDREW MURRAY – but there are measures a Burnham government could take that would break with neoliberalism
I am still waiting for the real history of WWI to be written. My grandfather Sapper James Morris was a member of the little known Tunnelling Companies of the Royal Engineers.
He was one of 1,516 tunnellers who died in WWI. These men, many of them miners, were described by their leader, Captain Jack Norton Griffiths as “heroes of obscurity ... whose names feature only marginally on the great lists.”
Few decorations were awarded to the tunnellers and the Imperial War Museum has not yet published their unit diaries.
Plaid Cymru’s Caerffili by-election win raised hopes on the left — but the complex realities of Wales suggest the Senedd election may be far less predictable, argues CATRIN ASHTON
In part one of a two-part feature, CONOR BOLLINS asks whether we should be concerned about the Prime Minister’s military recruitment plans


