Migration Watch’s new Eurosceptic policy: a victory for Blue Labour
Migration Watch have come round to the Eurosceptic Blue Labour position they rejected three years ago.
Migration Watch have come round to the Eurosceptic Blue Labour position they rejected three years ago.
Carl Packman reports on the Maurice (Lord) Glasman’s talk at Localis, where he elaborated further on the Blue Labour brand.
Cormac Hollingsworth argues that Lord Glasman is focusing on the smallest, least relevant areas of policy, and ignoring the only one that can make a difference: Growth.
Carl Packman reviews Rowenna Davis’ new book on Glasman and Blue Labour, and finds that the politics behind the damaged goods remain of importance.
Guy Shrubsole addresses Maurice Glasman’s arguments that Labour and the greens need to work together to build a new populist politics of the environment.
Richard Carr surveys the overall political landscape before discussing the role community ownership might have to play in defining Labour in opposition.
Left Foot Forward presents exclusive extracts from Rowenna Davis’s new book, “Tangled Up In Blue”, looking at David and Ed Miliband’s thoughts on community organising.
Maurice Glasman has led the Labour movement to attempt to understand itself again, and for that he deserves nomination for Most Influential Left-Winger 2010/11.
Blue Labour told us many valuable things – but Maurice Glasman is now straying onto dangerous territory, writes Left Foot Forward’s Daniel Elton.
Blue Labour has been a reawakening for the Labour Party – but it coincides with a yearning for a half-remembered dream and risks alienating the broad centre-left.