Green Party deputy leader MOTHIN ALI, who will speak at the International Anti-War Conference in London on June 20, says Britain needs to rethink its priorities – and its allies
“THEY make the laws to chain us well” is a line in a song written by singer-songwriter Leon Rosselson about the radical Diggers who established a socialist community at St George’s Hill in Surrey in 1649 after the English civil war.
Rosselson’s words expressed a political recognition reached by the Diggers’ leader Gerard Winstanley more than 350 years ago — that laws are used as a tool by the rich and powerful to control and exploit workers and the masses.
Winstanley declared his views more than 350 years ago, but they are apposite today.
The unions are unhappy with the Employment Rights Act 2025 and with good reason. KEITH EWING and Lord JOHN HENDY KC take a close look at why the Bill promised more than it delivered
Labour’s long-promised Act has scraped through the Lords. While the law marks a step forward, its lack of collective rights leaves workers short-changed — and sets the stage for a renewed campaign for an Employment Rights Bill #2, argues TONY BURKE
Ben Chacko talks to RMT leader EDDIE DEMPSEY about how the key to fixing broken Britain lies in collective sectoral bargaining, restoring unions’ ability to take solidarity strike action and bringing about the much-vaunted ‘wave of insourcing’
It is only trade union power at work that will materially improve the lot of working people as a class but without sector-wide collective bargaining and a right to take sympathetic strike action, we are hamstrung in the fight to tilt back the balance of power, argues ADRIAN WEIR


