Andy Burnham’s growing stature has fuelled hopes of a Labour revival – but ALAN SIMPSON warns that Britain’s crisis runs far deeper than just its leadership and traces its roots to decades of financialised capitalism
WHEN Chuka Umunna gave up his Labour Party membership earlier this year I was ecstatic.
Finally, I thought, the Blairite soundbite machine that had misrepresented my home constituency of Streatham in Westminster for years was going to be replaced.
One of the many anti-Corbyn MPs who has done nothing but attempt to undermine Jeremy since he became leader of the Labour Party (despite his vote tally being increased by a whopping 11,738 when standing under Corbyn’s manifesto in 2017 as opposed to Ed Miliband’s in 2015), Umunna has long been out of touch with working-class and popular opinion in Streatham.
The new Scottish Parliament looks set to continue a cycle of managerial tinkering while public services face the axe, writes STEPHEN LOW
By-election poll puts Starmer's future on a knife-edge
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
VINCE MILLS cautions over the perils and pitfalls of ‘a new left party’


