
Voting For the Boss
Employers are leveraging their power over workers to sway employees’ votes.
William G. Martin teaches at SUNY-Binghamton and is co-author of After Prisons? Freedom, Decarceration, and Justice Disinvestment (2016) and a founding member of Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier; he covers local justice matters at www.justtalk.blog
Employers are leveraging their power over workers to sway employees’ votes.
Swedish labor economist Rudolf Meidner spent his career pushing radical reforms that would shift power from business to workers.
Libertarians tend to get flummoxed when confronted with this simple question.
The ongoing strike at York University highlights the crucial role of militants in the labor movement.
Are graduate students workers? This month, Illinois grad students answered that question using labor’s oldest weapon: the strike.
Resignation, not hope, was the big winner in Italy’s general election.
As Germany’s natalist far right rises, a growing progressive movement is challenging the country’s Nazi-era abortion laws.
The US, not Russia, pioneered the use of state-sponsored social media manipulation.
With a tightening labor market, CEOs are chasing after the same workers they once derided as unemployable.
Four years ago, Tony Benn’s politics were pronounced dead along with him. Now they reign.
Workers on strike in UK universities said no to a bad deal yesterday — and they’re prepared for the long haul.
Seventy years ago, a popular revolution swept the Communist Party to power in Czechoslovakia. It quickly proved to be a hidden coup.
For more than four years, Pinochet’s air force was paralyzed by 3,000 Scottish workers who refused to service its planes.
Striking UK lecturers can still win the fight for their pensions — and reclaim their union.
The US political system is set up to limit the influence of the poor. Why should we blame them when it does exactly that?
Le Monde Diplomatique’s Serge Halimi dissects the collective suicide of France’s center-left — and how its new far left can pick up the pieces.
The early German socialists fought for the persecuted at home and abroad — convinced that the liberation of workers in Germany was linked to the liberation of oppressed peoples around the globe.
Once marginal and reviled, evangelical Christians became a vital political bloc in the 1980s thanks to resolute organizing.
With the Right threatening a fragile peace, today’s elections are the most important in Colombia’s recent history.
A decade ago, The Wire series finale aired. The show was a Marxist’s idea of what TV drama should be.