The Milburn review presents itself as a plan to help young people into work, but Dr DYLAN MURPHY argues it is laying the groundwork for a harsher benefits regime
WHY would young people, worried about their studies, income, availability of work and the pressures of friends and family, care about a struggle — the Battle of Cable Street — which took place 84 years ago?
The Battle of Cable Street is a distant memory even for our grandparents and very much an unknown for those of us born in more recent years. But some events stand out as turning points and deserve to be recorded in popular memory and in the history of the working class.
At the time, Cable Street dealt a decisive blow to anti-semitism and fascism in Britain — but today my generation find themselves confronting it again, albeit under different circumstances and in different guises.
Through marches, music, schools and political debate, campaigners in Tower Hamlets are using the 90th anniversary of Cable Street to inspire resistance to modern racism. GLYN ROBBINS explains
CJ ATKINS commemorates one of the most dramatic moments in working-class history
Once again Tower Hamlets is being targeted by anti-Islam campaigners, this time a revamped and radicalised version of Ukip — the far-right event is now banned by the police, but we’ll be assembling this Saturday to make sure they stay away, says JAYDEE SEAFORTH
KEVIN COURTNEY of Stand Up to Racism and JOHN PAGE of the Ella Baker School of Organising announce a joint project aiming to unite trade unions and social movements in creating new narratives to fight the divisive rhetoric of the far right


