Morning Star editor BEN CHACKO says assessing a Labour leader whose mission was to smash the left must involve addressing the delusions that fuelled his rise
THE two-million-strong demonstration against the Iraq war on February 15 2003 remains, 20 years later, the biggest protest in British history. It is estimated that one in every five households in the country had at least one person on the demonstration.
It was also the biggest day of co-ordinated protests across the globe, with tens of millions of people taking to the streets in over 600 cities.
The scale of the demonstration dispels the lies of Tony Blair, Alistair Campbell and the MPs that supported the war who say it was the right decision or that the arguments supporting an invasion were credible at the time. The film Official Secrets portrays well the impact of the demonstration and the prevalence of the anti-war arguments.
As extremist movements grow on the streets and at the ballot box, the emergence of the Together Alliance points to a vital strategy: unity across trade unions, campaigners and communities, says TONY CONWAY
Trade unionists must raise our voices not only for justice and against occupation, but also to protect our fundamental right to protest, writes LOUISE REGAN, ahead of a not-to-be-missed PSC conference
In an address to the Communist Party’s executive at the weekend international secretary KEVAN NELSON explained why the communists’ watchwords must be Jobs not Bombs and Welfare not Warfare


