
Notes on Italy’s Election
After yesterday’s Italian election, the old is dying and something superficially different but not altogether new has been born.
Jonathan Sas has worked in senior policy and political roles in government, think tanks, and the labor movement. He is an honorary witness to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. His writing has appeared in the Toronto Star, National Post, the Tyee, and Maisonneuve.
After yesterday’s Italian election, the old is dying and something superficially different but not altogether new has been born.
On this day in 1943, a strike in Italy’s FIAT company marked the beginning of the end for Mussolini.
A new report shows Americans are working longer hours — even as millions can’t find jobs at all.
West Virginia has been the site of mass labor militancy many times before. Here are some of the highlights.
In Italy, where fascism was born, far-right violence is a growing feature of political life once again.
Today’s Italian election has much to tell us about Europe’s future.
Italy’s left is struggling to present an alternative in an election where abstention is expected to hit record levels.
An update from West Virginia, where it’s virtually certain the strike will continue on Monday.
It’s unclear how the standoff between West Virginia workers and the state senate will end, but if nothing else, this week’s decision to keep striking is a reminder that the rank and file can lead.
While nationalists agitate over the Macedonia naming dispute, the Macedonian left is seeking alliances with progressive forces in the region.
The naming dispute between Macedonia and Greece sounds trivial to outside observers, but it’s fueling right-wing nationalism in both countries.
Without the bold initiative of a core of deeply rooted, radical teachers, there would be no strike in West Virginia right now.
Whether in or outside a grand coalition, Germany’s Social Democratic Party lacks the political imagination and organization to revive itself.
West Virginia teachers are engaged in an inspiring illegal strike. They’re also showing why we desperately need Medicare for All.
One lesson from the West Virginia teachers’ strike is clear: nobody is coming to save us. We’ll have to do it ourselves.
Italy’s Five Star Movement offers a hollow promise of democracy.
If we want a more democratic society, we need more democratic schools.
“We’re not going back to work until there’s solid proof that our demands are going to be met,” a teacher unionist on strike in West Virginia tells Jacobin.
The rise and fall of Wisconsin’s remarkable 2011 uprising holds lessons for a post-Janus world.
Obama had a “scandal-free” presidency, liberals say. It’s true — but only because in Washington, scandalous behavior is par for the course.