The new Employment Rights Act is a step forward, but restoring collective bargaining and union power remains essential to tackling insecurity, outsourcing and low pay, says PAUL WHITEHOUSE
WILLIAM LOWER and Robert Mackie, both shipyard workers in 1930s Sunderland, struggled to maintain steady jobs and were actively involved in the National Unemployed Workers Movement (NUWM). Both were staunch anti-fascists, fighting locally before taking the bold step to join the struggle for international socialism in the Spanish civil war as part of the International Brigade.
Together, they travelled aboard the ship Ciudad de Barcelona when crossing the Pyrenees was no longer an option. Tragically, William lost his life when the ship was torpedoed by an Italian submarine supporting Franco. Robert survived the attack but died just six weeks later, serving in the British Battalion of the XV International Brigade, at the Battle of Brunete.
Their sacrifice is commemorated at the Solidarity Park monument on the beach of Malgrat de Mar in Catalunya, created with the participation of over 700 people and indirectly involving thousands more. The monument celebrates the memory of all international brigaders who perished on the Ciudad de Barcelona. Every year, their legacy is honoured through an international anti-fascist arts festival and an educational programme engaging both local and international students in a historical memory arts project.
TONY FOX reports from a commemoration of the legendary Battle of Jarama in which four Stockton-on-Tees volunteers fell
Spanish dictator Francisco Franco died 50 years ago today November 20. JIM JUMP looks back at his blood-soaked rule and toxic legacy on Spain today
TONY FOX invites readers to come and hear the story of the remarkable Liverpudlian International Brigader Alexander Foote
LYNNE WALSH tells the story of the extraordinary race against time to ensure London’s memorial to the International Brigades got built – as activists gather next week to celebrate the monument’s 40th anniversary


