UKIP’s rise isn’t the end of politics – but it does mean the end of the left-right continuum
UKIP has short-circuited the left-right continuum and defied triangulation.
UKIP has short-circuited the left-right continuum and defied triangulation.
The rise of far-right popularism is a sign that the economic policy of austerity in Europe really has failed.
A closer look at 10 of the UK’s new representatives in Brussels is shocking, even by UKIP’s standards.
At least the UKIP leader avoids the dizzying spin which the voters are seeing through so clearly.
Left Foot Forward asked a number of leading progressives what they think Labour needs to do to defeat UKIP.
The answer to poverty isn’t to pitch one worker against another of a different nationality; it’s to combat the systems and structures that lead to such inequality.
All parties are failing to articulate a clear vision for Britain’s relationship with the EU.
Don’t despair, there are progressive answers to the questions posed by UKIP.
For liberalism to survive, its thinkers and activists will need to wrest control from those so mired in the Westminster bubble.
People like Miliband, they just don’t yet view him as a prime minister.