Recently it seemed that Labour’s loony left might one day die out. Now they have a new generation.
The ideological gap between Labour members and MPs is growing wider and wider.
Let’s not get carried away: he might not win the Labour leadership. But after such a strong performance, surely he deserves a Shadow Cabinet job.
The Opposition can’t even bring themselves to express their concern about the inconvenience to hard-working people.
A member of Labour’s governing body will speak alongside Trotskyites, Stalin apologists and Len McCluskey’s left-hand man.
From fracking to Trident to Syriza, if you’re looking for evidence of a divided left today’s papers alone offer an embarrassment of riches.
The rise of ideologically pure minor parties makes reported hopes of using Iraq War to distance Miliband’s Labour from Blair’s seem far fetched.
Over the past four decades or so, Labour has suffered a remarkable decline in its political biodiversity
Osborne’s balancing act; Farage riding a tiger; Backbench rebels; Labour miserablists; and a few crucial days in May.
Yet more watering down leaves the Labour leader hawking a medicine that won’t work.
Torn between obeying the unions and appealing to voters, her welfare policy is in tatters.
Grangemouth, Falkirk, Ineos intimidation, VAT underpayments, and now this. The Unite leader is an anti-Midas.
I was a Labour parliamentary candidate in 2010. But then I found the real party of working people.