JAMIE BRITTON recommends that we all buy at least two copies of a remarkable book of poems
AS YOUNG people from a place like Doncaster, being Labour supporters has always been natural. But we are now faced with the option of electing a Labour government more ambitious than any in our life time. The policies on offer cannot fail to inspire.
We are seeing the promise to properly fund the NHS, the greatest asset this country has. It is the thing that has saved so many lives and so many of our families’ lives. We are always in its debt and should always fight for it. Labour are the only party willing to do this properly and the only party that we trust to care for it.
It would be easy for people like us to just focus on the promise of arts funding. Such policies are so welcome and are certain to inspire future creatives and create spaces in which they can thrive. But the policies Labour are creating are ones we believe will affect the entirety of society.
Former Labour MP LAURA SMITH makes the case for The Many slate in the elections to Your Party’s new executive
All the areas that cause working people to feel insecure have to be addressed, through a return to unashamedly pro-worker politics, if the horror of a Farage government is to be avoided, writes IAN LAVERY MP
In the second part of a two-part article, CONOR BOLLINS asks why the government’s ambition when it comes to the military is not applied to sectors where it could do real good
The Gala’s core message of working-class solidarity offers renewed hope and provides the antidote to the anti-worker policies of Reform UK, argues IAN LAVERY MP


