MORE than 1,000 jobs and Harland and Wolff’s (H&W) four shipyards have been saved by Spain’s state shipbuilder in a deal with the British government.
H&W was put into administration in September for the second time in five years, despite being a subcontractor in a £1.6 billion Royal Navy contract for new fleet support ships, plunging its Belfast yard in jeopardy, along with its Methil and Arnish sites in Scotland and Appledore in Devon.
Now Labour Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has announced a deal which will see the lead player in that contract, Navantia, step in to buy the yards as a “huge vote of confidence in the UK.”
JOHN LANG recalls how Murdoch used scabbing electricians and even devised a fake newspaper to force a confrontation with printers – then sacked them all
As unions sound the alarm on kafala-like dependence, FC Barcelona must decide whether their values extend beyond the pitch, writes KIVANC ELIACIK
KIM JOHNSON MP places the campaign in the context of the history of the working-class battles of the 1980s, and explains why, just like Orgreave and the Shrewsbury Pickets before it, justice today is so important for the struggles of tomorrow
CHRIS HOOFE calls for support for GMB’s Potters’ Pledge campaign, aimed at making sure the historic pottery industry based in Stoke-on-Trent is supported over cheap, low-quality imports and counterfeits


