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Talk of 'vision' won't save Labour. Our movement faces international crisis
KEVIN OVENDEN says last week's Labour rout has deep roots – reversing it means rebuilding mass politics
GRIM DEFEAT: Votes are counted in the Hartlepool by-election, which Labour lost by a landslide

THE extraordinary first year of Covid obscured the scale of the crisis facing labour movement politics. 

Now, like a dam breaching, the results of last week’s elections in England have unleashed a flood of realisation. The danger is this: sinking now or clinging to bits of driftwood only to sink later. 

Last week was not itself an epochal shift. It was the latest imprimatur upon changes that have been underway for two decades. It means some fundamental questioning about the state we are in as a labour and socialist movement. That is true not only in Britain but across Europe and elsewhere. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
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