EU tries aviation blackmail
The EU has banned the European Aviation Safety Agency from talking with the UK Civil Aviation Authority about fallback arrangements in the event of no deal on Brexit, jeopardising travel across Europe.
The EU has banned the European Aviation Safety Agency from talking with the UK Civil Aviation Authority about fallback arrangements in the event of no deal on Brexit, jeopardising travel across Europe.
It’s been called the biggest disaster to befall our railways in peacetime history – caused by the complexity of the privatised rail industry and an inept government that doesn’t understand how the industry works…
Two years after the referendum, how far are we along the path to freeing ourselves from the EU, taking control and striking out for a truly independent nation?
With tariff wars looming, Britain needs to look to its own industrial needs for steel…
Uniting Britain and defeating separatism are essential for securing our nation’s independence. And as class struggle spreads in public services, transport and energy, support for separatism weakens…
The tangle of detail and objections is designed to trap us in the EU net.
On the 50th anniversary of CPBML’s founding – Easter 1968 – our London May Day rally heard two reflections on the party: one by two who joined 50 years ago, including a founder member, and another from a young comrade…
With its decision to block Britain from sensitive parts of the Galileo project, the EU is treating us like an enemy…
The global steel sector is again in a state of overcapacity, at the greatest level it has ever been.
The banks have managed to convince many that they create wealth. Really?
A former British ambassador to Germany analyses how it dominates the EU…
As our working class fought to survive, organisation began locally and grew organically, not relying on outside help…
Are we going to press ahead confidently for a full Brexit that will allow the potential of our nation to flourish, or will we be cowed by the EU?
Another month, another EU crisis meeting in Brussels. Over the weekend of 23/24 June it was the turn of migration to top the agenda.
Pickets were out in force in East Dunbartonshire at the end of June after Unison members went on strike over cuts to terms and conditions including reductions to holidays.
An ageing workforce and an industry dependent on EU labour add up to an imminent crisis for construction.
The West Midlands is undergoing a rebirth, with more jobs created than in any other region, a trade surplus with China, and businesses like HSBC UK relocating to the region.
Unite is balloting workers at three of Total’s North Sea oil rigs for industrial action following the company’s refusal to reduce the number of unpaid working days.
The hygiene levels of a growing number of primary schoolchildren are so bad that teachers are having to provide basic items of personal hygiene to large numbers of them, says a charity.
The demand for housing continues to rise, with continuing uncontrolled migration into Britain playing a significant part.
The Charity Gingerbread has warned that single parents, particularly those who are working, are losing out under Universal Credit.
Members of Unison, the largest union in the NHS, have voted overwhelmingly to accept the latest pay agreement.
A major contribution to the current celebrations of the 200th anniversary of Karl Marx’s birth – and the 170th of the Communist Manifesto – has been the remarkable revival of a long-forgotten choral setting of passages from the book itself.