
The Left Can Win
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias on radical politics and what it takes to build mass movements.
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias on radical politics and what it takes to build mass movements.
We need to fight for social housing instead of private ownership. Spain's anti-eviction movement shows how we can do it.
Ahead of Sunday's vote, the Greek Communist Party answers questions about their vision and platform.
Material progress and democratization are still the basic tenets of any viable socialist politics.
The definitive explanation of the Democratic National Committee's "Datagate" scandal and what the mainstream media got wrong.
Federal Reserve policies did more to smash the power of American workers than Ronald Reagan’s union busting.
The Attica Prison inmates who rebelled on this day in 1971 remain a symbol of resistance in the face of injustice.
Proponents of Colombia's peace deal underestimated their opponents' strength and failed to mobilize their own base.
Trump’s victory signals a deep crisis of neoliberalism.
Trump’s victory signals a deep crisis of neoliberalism.
108 years after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, the struggle of Jewish-American workers offers a stirring radical vision for Jews and non-Jews alike.
Tech workers’ high pay doesn’t mean they’re not workers — and it won’t always protect them from their bosses.
Donald Trump came to Washington vowing to take on the foreign policy establishment. But Beltway elites have mostly gotten their way.
Resistance leader? Not really. Democratic congressman Adam Schiff personifies the link between foreign policy hawks and deep-pocketed defense contractors.
They’re fighting against austerity and privatization — and for the very idea of public institutions.
As another World Cup begins, there is no better guide to its joys and iniquities than the late Eduardo Galeano — a lifelong fighter for justice and “beggar for good soccer.”
Now let us raise your children.
The rise of Bolsonaro in Brazil, Trump in the US, and the far right throughout Europe has the word “fascism” on everyone’s lips. But that rising Right is distinct from twentieth-century fascism in key ways.
David Ranney was part of the wave of US revolutionaries who went into factories in the 1970s to organize workers. In an interview, he discusses his new book about those explosive years — and the pitched battles his coworkers waged against both their corrupt union and the company.
Argentina’s mass movement for abortion rights has produced an insurgent, class-based feminism that intends to grow alongside the emancipation of the whole working class.