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Corporate greed / 21 December 2025
21 December 2025

A government grant to study hep B vaccination in African newborns has sparked alarm among public health experts. MIKE STOBBE reports

engels
Food / 21 December 2025
21 December 2025

From London’s holly-sellers to Engels’s flaming Christmas centrepiece, the plum pudding was more than festive fare in Victorian Britain, says KEITH FLETT

Strike Map book
Protest / 21 December 2025
21 December 2025

From a lockdown digital project to a vital tool for class solidarity, ROBERT POOLE and HENRY FOWLER reflect on half-a-decade of struggle

food bank
BFAWU survey / 21 December 2025
21 December 2025

New survey findings from the BFAWU reveal a grim reality: low wages and years of government cuts have left millions unable to afford food, heating or a dignified life. A legally enforced right to food is now urgently needed, argue SARAH WOOLLEY and IAN BYRNE MP

Mistletoe for sale during the annual mistletoe and holly auction at Burford House Garden Stores in Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire
Environment / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

Despite the loss of England’s traditional orchards, Britain’s most festive plant is holding its ground, says ADELE JULIER

General view of 10 Downing Street, in Westminster, London
Politics / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

Labour’s long-promised Act has scraped through the Lords. While the law marks a step forward, its lack of collective rights leaves workers short-changed — and sets the stage for a renewed campaign for an Employment Rights Bill #2, argues TONY BURKE

EMPHASIS ON PLAN: Members of the Unite rally at the Scottish Parliament in November last year in protest at Petroineos plans to close Grangemouth oil refinery
Climate Crisis / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

As fossil fuels have had their day, JOSIE MIZEN makes it clear that it is now the government’s responsibility to initiate the transition to alternative employment in a manner that is organised, efficient and effective

President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after signing an executive order reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous drug in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025
The ‘Special Relationship’ / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

As the dollar falters and US power turns predatory, Britain and Europe must abandon transatlantic illusions and build a collectivist alternative before the system implodes, writes ALAN SIMPSON

SITES OF RESISTANCE: Glasgow Govan’s Village Hotel strikers have been victorious [Pic: Matt Kerr]
Aw That / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

From childhood summers in a post-industrial village to midnight picket lines in Glasgow, the promise of ‘social mobility’ rings hollow for MATT KERR

NEVER ALONE: Israeli activists from Free Jerusalem movement protest against the evictions of Palestinian residents from the east Jerusalem neigbourhood of Silwan yesterday
Palestine / 20 December 2025
20 December 2025

None of these Israeli officials shows the slightest interest in Trump’s ‘peace plan’ or in the Palestinian vision of statehood, warns RAMZY BAROUD

OPTIONS DRY UP: A satellite picture from Planet Labs PBC shows Lar Dam outside of Tehran, Iran on November 18 2025 and illustrates the worsening drought around the capital / Pic: Planet Labs PBC via AP
Middle East / 19 December 2025
19 December 2025

The June 2025 attacks on Iran have heightened the risk of a wider war, exposed the fiction of a rules-based international order and left ordinary Iranians trapped between external aggression and internal repression, says the Committee for Defence of Iranian People’s Rights

PALESTINIAN PIETA: The mourning over the body of Ammar Sabbah, 16, killed in an Israeli military raid near Bethlehem on Tuesday, December 16 2025
Palestine / 19 December 2025
19 December 2025

Once the bustling heart of Christian pilgrimage, Bethlehem now faces shuttered hotels, empty streets and a shrinking Christian community, while Israel’s assault on Gaza and the tightening grip of occupation destroy hopes of peace at the birthplace of Christ, writes Father GEOFF BOTTOMS

Wilfred Willett and his seminal Birds of Britain / Pic of Willett Country Standard
History / 19 December 2025
19 December 2025

A WWI hero, renowned ornithologist, medical doctor, trade union organiser and founder member of the Communist Party of Great Britain all rolled in one. MAT COWARD tells the story of a life so improbable it was once dismissed as fiction

US TARGET: President Nicolas Maduro joins a rally in Caracas, on December 10, to mark the anniversary of the Battle of Santa Ines in 1859, when the progressive forces, led by the Hugo Chavez of the time, general Ezequiel Zamora defeated the oligarchy
Latin America / 18 December 2025
18 December 2025

Trump is gambling with an entire continent, behind the rhetoric of drugs and security lies a dangerous hunt for raw materials and an illegal push for regime change, asserts MARC VANDEPITTE

visitors book
Anti-Fascism / 18 December 2025
18 December 2025

After years hidden away, Oldham’s memorial to six local volunteers who died fighting fascism in the Spanish civil war has been restored to public view, marking both a victory for campaigners and a renewed tribute to the town’s proud International Brigade heritage, says ROB HARGREAVES

Coalition of the willing
Eastern Europe / 18 December 2025
18 December 2025

While pretending to seek peace, Europe is heading toward a collision course with Russia – using security guarantees, troop deployments, expropriation and censorship as tools, writes SEVIM DAGDELEN

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer departs 10 Downing Street, London, to attend Prime Minister's Questions at the Houses of Parliament. Picture date: Wednesday December 17, 2025
Politics / 18 December 2025
18 December 2025

Opinion polls point to electoral collapse, parliamentary rebellion and a looming leadership challenge as Starmer’s Labour haemorrhages working-class support and the far right exploits the vacuum left by a hollowed-out party, says NICK WRIGHT

A military helicopter spraying Agent Orange during the Vietnam War
Science and Society / 17 December 2025
17 December 2025

The long-term effects of chemical weapons such as Agent Orange mean that the impact of war lasts well beyond a ceasefire

Presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast, of the opposition Republican Party, waves after winning the presidential runoff election in Santiago, Chile, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025
Latin America / 17 December 2025
17 December 2025

CJ ATKINS argues that despite losing the election, Chile’s left remains big and organised and must unite to resist the new far-right government

Unite Hospitality Glasgow Strike Bulletin / 17 December 2025
17 December 2025

Take a read of the latest Unite Hospitality Glasgow Strike Bulletin and hear from workers fighting for better pay and dignity at work

A pint being pulled at a pub in London, Dcember 2024
Society / 17 December 2025
17 December 2025

Alba party leader KENNY MacASKILL makes some suggestions on how to save our pubs and reduce irresponsible drinking

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/menzies-punches-table-frustration-after-first-round-loss
Features / 16 December 2025
16 December 2025

The catastrophe unfolding in Gaza – where Palestinians are freezing to death in tents – is not a natural disaster but a calculated outcome of Israel’s ongoing blockade, aid restrictions and continued violence, argues CLAUDIA WEBBE

Photo: Derbyshire Unison
Features / 16 December 2025
16 December 2025

After years of austerity and denial under a new Reform UK council, a failing Send service was pushed into the spotlight by staff, unions and parents — culminating in a £1.3m funding boost and a 50% increase in front-line workers. MARTIN PORTER explains

Feminist books
Features / 16 December 2025
16 December 2025

Held at a last-minute undisclosed venue amid fear of disruption, a Women’s Rights Network event brought together authors and activists, offering a day of debate on feminism’s past, present and future. JADE MIDDLETON reports

GETTING THE WORD OUT: Campaigners and charities including Show Israel the Red Card and Scottish Friends of Palestine hold a protest ahead of the Scotland Women v Israel Women Euro 2025 qualifying fixture at Hampden Park in Glasgow, calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza
Voices of Scotland / 16 December 2025
16 December 2025

Trade union leaderships have so far stopped short of the bold industrial action over Gaza seen in Italy and Greece. NATHAN HENNEBRY calls for a re-radicalising of the union movement and rebuilding class power as vital to turning solidarity into action

FESTIVE MESSAGE: Actors from the London Touring Players perform the parts of Ebenezer Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Past, 2023
Features / 15 December 2025
15 December 2025

From the workhouses of the 1840s to today’s market capitalism, A Christmas Carol remains a sharp critique of charity rationed by class, says KEITH FLETT

WRONG-HEADED: Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy during a visit to Inner London Crown Court ahead of an announcement of major reforms to the criminal justice system
Features / 15 December 2025
15 December 2025

Evidence suggests Lammy’s proposals would come at a high cost: reduced fairness, diminished trust and greater racial inequality in the criminal justice system, argue TARA LAI QUINLAN and KATHARINA KARCHER

ANTI-IMPERIALISM: People take part in a rally opposing US intervention, in Caracas, Venezuela, Saturday December 13 2025
Features / 15 December 2025
15 December 2025

Trump’s escalation against Venezuela is about more than oil, it is about regaining control over the ‘natural’ zone of influence of the United States at a moment where its hegemony is slipping, argues VIJAY PRASHAD

DRANG NACH OSTEN: Bundeswehr armoured infantrymen during an exercise with the training device known as the duel simulator. Photo: Bundeswehr/S.Wilke/CC
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

The federal government’s plans to finance the war in Ukraine with Russian assets, and a possible deployment of German troops, put the population in Germany in the highest danger, argues SEVIM DAGDELEN

CHANGING TIMES: The recent inauguration of President Rodrigo Paz of Bolivia
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

PABLO MERIGUET reviews some of the neoliberal measures promised by the recently inaugurated Paz administration in Bolivia, which include budget cuts, tax breaks for the wealthiest, and audits of previous administrations

ONE-TRICK-PONY: President of Argentina Javier Milei speaking at the 2025 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, US / Pic: Gage Skidmore/flickr/CC
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

Marxist economist JULIO GAMBINA tells Bert Schouwenburg why voters backed Javier Milei despite soaring poverty, how Washington is shaping Argentina’s future, and why the unions and wider left have yet to form a force capable of halting the far-right project

RAW EMOTIONS: The memorial beneath Grenfell Tower is expected to take ‘around two years to sensitively take down’
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

As we approach the half-anniversary of the Grenfell tragedy, the community gathers to remember loved ones while grappling with mixed emotions surrounding the ongoing deconstruction of the tower and the hopeful plans for a memorial, writes EMMA DENT COAD

This image from video posted on Attorney General Pam Bondi's X account, and partially redacted by the source, shows an oil tanker being seized by US forces off the coast of Venezuela, on December 10 2025. Photo: U.S. Attorney General's Office/X via AP
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

The new plan sets out an uncompromising bid for global dominance, casting even allies as obstacles to be subdued, writes DIANE ABBOTT

DANGERS: The first new nuclear reactor for a British power station for over 30 years arrives by barge at Combwich Wharf on the River Parrett, Somerset, to be used at Hinckley Point C, 2023
Features / 13 December 2025
13 December 2025

The argument for a “significant expansion” of nuclear power will deliver soaring electricity prices that condemn underserved communities to unending hardship and poverty, argues LINDA PENTZ GUNTER

NO END TO IDF KILLIGNGS: Mourners carry the bodies of Palestinians killed in an Israeli military strike, during their funeral in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip on December 4 2025
Features / 12 December 2025
12 December 2025

Historically the framework of that expulsion of Palestinians was predicated on the use of war as a pretext, as opposed to war as a response to Palestinian resistance, writes RAMZY BAROUD

UNSOILED SPIRIT OF GOOD WILL: Santa Dash through Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh to raise money for the charity When You Wish Upon A Star on December 7 2025
Features / 12 December 2025
12 December 2025

SYMON HILL looks at Tommy Robinson’s bid to use Christmas to spread division and hate — and reminds us that’s the opposite of Jesus’s message

Members of Palestine Action occupy and deface the entrance of a branch of Allianz Insurance offices in Gracechurch Street, London, in protest over its links to Israeli Arms company, Elbit Systems on March 10 2025
Features / 11 December 2025
11 December 2025

VICTORIA HOLMES salutes the brave stand being taken by Palestine Action hunger-strikers in British prisons, and explains their demands

A ship is seen off the coast of Gaza near a U.S.-built float
Features / 12 December 2025
12 December 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES finds the government went along with a US scheme to distract from Israel’s lethal Gaza blockade with an impractical floating pier scheme – though its own officials knew it wouldn’t work

Chen Chih-han. Photo: Kokuyo/Creative Commons
Features / 11 December 2025
11 December 2025

RUBEN BRETT introduces a charismatic martial artist and ‘ambassador of peace’ making waves among the youth of Taiwan

A video camera
Features / 11 December 2025
11 December 2025

DENNIS BROE says media ownership is not only grossly concentrated in the US, Britain and France – new mergers are advancing the power of the rich to censor the news

President Donald Trump arrives for a signing ceremony with Rwanda's President Paul Kagame and Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix-Antoine Tshisekedi at the U.S. Institute of Peace, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington
Features / 11 December 2025
11 December 2025

CAMERON HARRISON and CJ ATKINS analyse the White House’s new strategy in detail

Brian Ormondroyd
Obituary / 10 December 2025
10 December 2025

Charles Lubselski pays tribute to a lifelong communist and supporter of the Daily Worker and Morning Star

Rayner and Streeting
Eyes Left / 10 December 2025
10 December 2025
A general view of the Sizewell nuclear power plant in Suffolk. Picture date: Wednesday June 19, 2024. Picture date: Wednesday June 19, 2024
Opinion / 10 December 2025
10 December 2025

MARK JONES responds to issues raised in the recent report from Richard Hebbert on the Communist Party’s Congress debate on nuclear power

A dentist checking condition of a patient's teeth
Activism / 9 December 2025
9 December 2025

A searing scrutiny hearing has uncovered thousands of undelivered appointments, vanishing data and a system in chaos – galvanising councillors, patients and activists to demand urgent reform and an NHS dentist for all, writes SIMON BRIGNELL

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage (right) at the MacDonald Inchyra Hotel & Spa in Falkirk, with Lord Malcolm Offord who was announced by Nigel Farage as the latest defector to join the party during the rally in Falkirk. Picture date: Saturday December 6, 202
Voices of Scotland / 9 December 2025
9 December 2025

Fuelled by economic abandonment and a collapsing faith in politics, Farage’s party is transforming grievance into momentum north of the border, warns COLL McCAIL

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum addresses supporters gathered in the Zocalo in Mexico City, December 6, 2025, to celebrate the seven years since President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador electoral victory
Latin America / 9 December 2025
9 December 2025

Ten days after right-wing destabilisation attempts, Mexico’s leadership has emerged strengthened, securing historic labour and wage agreements, while opposition-backed protests have crumbled under scrutiny, says DAVID RABY

The Robin Hood statue in Nottingham
Working Class History / 7 December 2025
7 December 2025

MAT COWARD tells how 18th-century scholar and revolutionary democrat Joseph Ritson turned a medieval outlaw into England’s people’s hero — soon to be gracing panto halls around the nation

Unison deliver 5,000 'fair pay now' cards to constituency MSPs demanding the Scottish Government 'pays up on NHS pay' outside Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh
Workers' Rights / 8 December 2025
8 December 2025

Amid the festive lights, Scotland faces a stark holiday truth: only real investment in public services and the workers who sustain them can lift communities out of poverty, argues LILIAN MACER

US Navy Admiral Frank ‘Mitch’ Bradley (centre) commander of the US Special Operations Command, and General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (right) are escorted to a classified briefing, Dececmber 4, 2025
Imperialism / 8 December 2025
8 December 2025

A vast US war fleet deployed in the south Caribbean — ostensibly to fight drug-trafficking but widely seen as a push for violent regime change — has sparked international condemnation and bipartisan resistance in the US itself. FRANCISCO DOMINGUEZ reports

INTERMINABLE DELAYS: The lifting of a 245-tonne steel dome onto Hinkley Point C's second reactor building, at in Bridgwater, Somerset on July 17 2025 - scheduled to be finished by 2025 it now won’t be until 2031
Features / 6 December 2025
6 December 2025

The Communist Party of Britain’s Congress last month debated a resolution on ending opposition to all nuclear power in light of technological advances and the climate crisis. RICHARD HEBBERT explains why

THANKLESS JOB: A Stirling council gritting lorry gets stuck in the snow near Carronbridge, central Scotland
Aw That / 6 December 2025
6 December 2025

Behind the cute names of Scotland’s road gritters lies a workforce underpaid and overlooked – a fitting reflection of a Budget that protected profits, bungled its rollout and offered hardly a glimmer of hope, writes MATT KERR

Jeremy Corbyn (left) and Zarah Sultana on stage as the end of the Your Party founding two day conference at the ACC Liverpool, November 30, 2025
Opinion / 5 December 2025
5 December 2025

Your Party launched to packed halls and high expectations, but power struggles and sectarianism marred the inaugural conference. If it is to address the challenges of today, YP must rebuild from the grassroots, listen to workers and choose unity over purity, argues MARK SERWOTKA

judge
Lawman / 6 December 2025
6 December 2025

ANSELM ELDERGILL recalls the misjudgments, mishaps and moments of farce that shaped his years in legal practice

LONG DARK SHADOW: John Henry Whitley chaired, from 1917, a committee to report on ‘the Relations of Employers and Employees’ in the wake of the establishment of the Shop Stewards Movement. Photo:  Public domain
Features / 6 December 2025
6 December 2025

In the final part of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY explains how in 2018, after years spent rebuilding the PCS into a leading force against austerity, a damaging rupture emerged from within the union’s own left wing

(L to R) Flowering parsnip in its second year; Oven baked parsnip with honey and mustard / Pics (L to R): Pic: Skogkatten/CC Takeaway/CC
Gardening / 6 December 2025
6 December 2025

Commiserations if you failed this year, MAT COWARD offers six points which, if followed religiously, will ensure you succeed next year

[Pic: Camila Quintero Franco / Creative Commons]
Healthcare / 5 December 2025
5 December 2025

Labour, like the Tories, sees rising mental ill health simply as a spending problem — but it reflects a diseased society, argues DR DAVID MATTHEWS

push a small boat in an attempt to reach Britain, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in Gravelines, northern France
Features / 5 December 2025
5 December 2025

PRABHAT PATNAIK looks at how the development of capitalism from the start divided the world into unequal segments

NEARLY APOPLECTIC: Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte, left, corners US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau at Nato HQ in Brussels on Wednesday
Russia-Ukraine War / 4 December 2025
4 December 2025

While Trump negotiates peace with Moscow, Kiev and Brussels continue to pour fuel on the fire. Nato is preparing a big strike – and calling it defence, argues SEVIM DAGDELEN

Security guards stand watch as Haiti's Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime (centre) talks with the Mexico's Charge d'Affaires Jesus Cisneros after attending an event marking one year since the start of the Multinational Security Support Mission in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, June 26, 2025
Caribbean / 5 December 2025
5 December 2025

RUBEN BRETT of Liberation explains why the narratives we hear about the poverty-stricken Caribbean nation are deeply misleading

INTERVENTION: Richard Burgon is pushing a package of tax ref
Features / 4 December 2025
4 December 2025

RICHARD BURGON MP argues the left must build on recent victories and urgently unite around a bold cost-of-living programme

Britain’s biggest hunger strike in decades – and the media won’t touch it
Features / 4 December 2025
4 December 2025

As Palestine Action prisoners go weeks without food, alleging dangerous neglect and detention without trial, campaigners warn that a near-total media blackout is hiding a crisis that could turn fatal – and fuel a growing wave of public anger. ELIZABETH SHORT reports

CHALLENGES AHEAD: Jeremy Corbyn at the launch of Your Party at Liverpool ACC at the weekend
Features / 4 December 2025
4 December 2025

As the new party emerges from its founding conference with a bold socialist identity, its future hinges on whether it can provide the organisational clarity needed to turn class sentiment into class power, argues NICK WRIGHT

How Greek International Brigaders forged a lifelong anti-fascist legacy
Features / 4 December 2025
4 December 2025

Barred from returning home, a group of Greek Brigaders came to Britain and founded the League for Democracy in Greece – a movement that carried the flame of anti-fascist resistance from the 1930s through the cold war and beyond. ALI BASSAM ZAHID tells the story

Sarra Hoy and Chris Hoy (second left), during a roundtable on prostate cancer hosted by Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney in Edinburgh on August 8 2025; (inset) The light blue ribbon symbol of prostate cancer awareness / Blue ribbon pic: Pic: MesserWoland/CC
Science and Society / 3 December 2025
3 December 2025

Decisions about mandatory testing for prostate cancer have proved controversial. Can too much knowledge be a bad thing?

Jeremy Corbyn
Your Party / 2 December 2025
2 December 2025

Your Party can become an antidote to Reform UK – but only by rooting itself in communities up and down the country, says CLAUDIA WEBBE

IRON FIST: Mass exodus of Latin American migrants cross from Chile at the Santa Rosa border point in Tacna, Peru on Monday in a panic reaction at Jose Antonio Kast’s threats of expulsion
Politics / 3 December 2025
3 December 2025

Far-right forces are rising across Latin America and the Caribbean, armed with a common agenda of anti-communism, the culture war, and neoliberal economics, writes VIJAY PRASHAD

DETERIORATING CONDITIONS: Palestinians walk through a flooded temporary tent camp after heavy rainfall in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip;
Features / 2 December 2025
2 December 2025

Washington and its Western allies decry human rights abuses while arming and shielding Israel, turning contradiction into policy, argues RAMZY BAROUD

Teaching as an act of love and revolution in Cuba. Photo: Author supplied
Features / 2 December 2025
2 December 2025

A teaching delegation to Cuba offered IAN DUCKETT a powerful glimpse into a schooling system defined by care, creativity and the legacy of the island’s remarkable 1961 literacy campaign

Leaders of the Labour Representation Committee in 1906. From
Politics / 2 December 2025
2 December 2025

Looking back to Engels’s reflections on the ILP’s emergence in the 1890s offers a revealing lens on the forces shaping a new working-class politics in 2025, says KEITH FLETT

UNREST: Women sells goods at a market in Bissau, Guinea-Bissau
Features / 1 December 2025
1 December 2025

Claiming to be under arrest, president Embalo has left the country while his opponents remain in custody after a military coup a day ahead of the announcement of the final results, argues PAVAN KULKARNI

Dalton Trumbo at the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings in 1947. Photo: Public domain
Features / 1 December 2025
1 December 2025

The daughter of a legendary blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter has spoken out against the reactionary move, says MIKE SCHNEIDER

TARGETED: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro takes part in a government-organised civic-military march in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday November 25 2025
Features / 1 December 2025
1 December 2025

As the Trump administration escalates military pressure on Venezuela, a growing number of Caribbean governments are lining up behind Washington’s show of force, writes ROGER McKENZIE

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood speaking after Lucy Powell is announced as the new Deputy Leader of the Labour Party at an event in central London. Picture date: Saturday October 25, 2025
Human Rights / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

DIANE ABBOTT warns that Shabana Mahmood’s draconian asylum proposals fuel racist scapegoating and risk demoralising Labour’s base – potentially paving the way for Farage to No 10

A destroyed Israeli armored vehicle sits amid widespread devastation in Gaza City, November 27, 2025
International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

The UN has shamefully empowered the occupation of Gaza rather than ending it – we must redouble our efforts to build the movement required to establish a true peace, argues BEN JAMAL

Members of the Public and Commercial Services union (PCS) on the picket line outside St Andrew's House in Edinburgh, as civil servants in 132 Government departments walk out in a long-running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions. Picture date: Thursday March 16, 2023
Working Class History / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

In part V of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY argues that to confront capitalism’s escalating crises, unions must reorient toward class politics and help build a united, explicitly socialist alternative capable of representing the working class and its material needs

Zarah Sultana, MP for Coventry South, addresses protesters during a Stop Trump Coalition protest in Parliament Square, London, on day one of the US President's second state visit to the UK, September 17, 2025
Your Party Conference 2025 / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

Morning Star political reporter Andrew Murray speaks to ZARAH SULTANA on the mass party of the left holding its inaugural conference this weekend

CALL TO ARMS: (L to R) STUC poster; St Andrew's Day March and Rally in Glasgow on November 25 2023
Anti-Racism / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

ROZ FOYER explains the significance and tradition of today’s St Andrew’s Day March and Rally

Jeremy Corbyn, with Zarah Sultana (not pictured) speaking at a discussion on Your Party, their new political party, at The World Transformed conference, at Niamos Radical Arts Centre in Hulme, Manchester. Picture date: Friday October 10, 2025
Your Party Conference 2025 / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

With ‘Your Party’ holding its founding conference in Liverpool this weekend, JEREMY CORBYN speaks to Morning Star editor Ben Chacko about its potential, its priorities — and a few of its controversies too

Jamie Driscoll,, speaking at the Convention of the North, an annual gathering of Northern business, political and civic leaders, including mayors of northern cities, at Manchester Central in Manchester. Picture date: Wednesday January 25, 2023
Politics / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

JAMIE DRISCOLL’s group, Majority, with an inclusive approach and supportive training, aims to sidestep many of the problems afflicting Britain’s progressive movement

A Palestinian man carries a wounded girl into al-Shifa Hospital following Israeli strikes on the Gaza Strip, Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025
Gaza Genocide / 29 November 2025
29 November 2025

On International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, HUGH LANNING warns that the US-led “Comprehensive Plan” entrenches decades of Western complicity in Israel’s domination and denial of Palestinian land and rights

LAST RESORT: PCS picket at the House of Commons (Fran Heathcote on the right wearing a green beany) / Pic: Author supplied
Features / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

FRAN HEATHCOTE believes that while the the Chancellor outlined some positive steps, the government does not appreciate the scale of the cost-of-living crisis affecting working-class people, whose lives are blighted by endemic low pay

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves stands next to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer as he acknowledges guests during a visit to the Benn Partnership Centre, a community centre in Rugby, Warwickshire, November 27, 2025
Features / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

The 2025 Budget shores up the PM’s political position with headline-grabbing welfare U-turns, but with no improvements on offer to declining public services or living standards, writes MICHAEL BURKE

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz attends the general debate on the budget in the Bundestag, in Berlin, November 26, 2025. Photo: Michael Kappeler/dpa via AP
Features / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is pouring €11.5bn into the Kiev swamp, blocking Trump’s peace plan, and pushing Nato right up to Russia’s borders – no matter if it costs hundreds of thousands of lives, warns SEVIM DAGDELEN

WINNING HEARTS AND MINDS: President Catherine Connolly shakes hands with Lillie Mae Nkwocha, from St Marys Convent Primary School on November 12 2025 who proudly shows Connolly a portrait she drew of her
Features / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

The unifying victory of Irish progressive forces in the presidential campaign should be a salutary lesson to the left in this country, argues MARY GRIFFITHS CLARKE

Prime Minister Keir Starmer with Labour's new deputy leader Lucy Powell at an event in central London, October 25, 2025
Features / 28 November 2025
28 November 2025

Martin Taylor, the hedge-fund multimillionaire who has poured millions into pushing Labour rightwards, helped finance Lucy Powell’s supposedly dissenting campaign — suggesting her victory was not the ‘soft-left’ rebellion some have claimed, says SOLOMON HUGHES

Sir Richard Acland Labour MP arrives at the Houses of Parliament for its historic opening, October 26, 1950
Features / 27 November 2025
27 November 2025

MAT COWARD tells the story of the eccentric founder of a short-lived but striking experiment in ‘vital democracy,’ who became best known for giving away his estate to the nation

SEIZED: Mohammed Ibrahim, whose welfare is of increasing concern. Photo: Zaher Ibrahim
Features / 27 November 2025
27 November 2025

Groups are urging the US government to secure the 16-year old’s release as his mental and physical health decline dramatically after nine months inside Ofer prison, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER

CONTRAST: People dressed as revolutionary fighters carry a banner that reads in Spanish ‘Long live Mexico and the working class!’ during a parade marking the 115th anniversary of the Mexican Revolution in the Zocalo, Mexico City’s main square, November 20
Features / 27 November 2025
27 November 2025

A November 15 protest in Mexico – driven by a right-wing social-media operation – has been miscast as a mass uprising against President Sheinbaum. In reality, the march was small, elite-backed and part of a wider attempt to sow unrest, argues DAVID RABY

Nord stream. Photo: Pjotr Mahhonin/Creative Commons
Features / 27 November 2025
27 November 2025

Despite new European arrests, the evidence presented so far fails to explain the sabotage of the undersea pipelines – and veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh’s allegations of US responsibility cannot be easily dismissed, writes ROGER McKENZIE

Argentinian President Javier Milei
Latin America / 26 November 2025
26 November 2025

As President Javier Milei is set to unveil a radical rollback of Argentina’s labour laws, unions warn of an unprecedented assault on workers’ rights, says BERT SCHOUWENBURG

EDUCATED FUTURE: A small boy produces words on a Braille typewriter / Pic: author supplied
Features / 26 November 2025
26 November 2025

On a recent NEU delegation, STEVE HANDFORD’s eyes were opened to the educational achievements of the socialist island and the need for Britain to take a leaf out of its book

Nick Fuentes, far right activist, holds a rally at the Lansing Capitol, in Lansing, Mich., Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2020
Eyes Left / 26 November 2025
26 November 2025

As figures from Tucker Carlson to Nigel Farage flirt with neofascist rhetoric and mainstream leaders edge toward authoritarianism through war and repression, the conditions that once nurtured Hitlerism re-emerge — yet anti-war and anti-imperialist sentiments are also burgeoning anew, writes ANDREW MURRAY

People take part in a Stand Up To Racism counter protest during a protest by people attending a Save Our Future & Our Kids Futures protest outside the Cladhan Hotel in Falkirk, which is housing asylum seekers, September 21, 2025
International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

Amid national economic decay and with a lack of coherent left-wing responses, far-right narratives on women’s safety and immigration have taken root in former Labour heartlands. The WOMEN’S LIBERATION ALLIANCE warns that only a renewed politics rooted in an understanding of class, race and sex can stem the rise of authoritarianism

International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

With violence against women and girls reaching unprecedented levels – particularly in the north of England – Unison North West is driving a union-wide push for education, prevention and trauma-informed support, writes JOANNE MOORCROFT

Female racing driver Aseel al-Hamad celebrates the end of the ban on women drivers in 2018 with a lap of honour in a sports car. Photo: JaguarMENA/ Creative Commons
Women's Rights / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

As Saudi Arabia is hailed abroad for its ‘reforms,’ the reality for women inside the kingdom grows ever more repressive. On the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, MARYAM ALDOSSARI argues it is time to stop applauding the illusion – and start listening to the women the state works hardest to silence

The Justice for Colombia trade union delegation
Latin America / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

With Petro, Colombia has been making huge strides towards peace — but is all that at risk with the elections next year? MARK ROWE reports back after joining a delegation to the Latin American country

universal credit
Universal credit / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

DYLAN MURPHY reports that far from helping people back into work, the sanctions regime is inflicting unnecessary trauma on working-class families

A woman showing signs of depression (picture posed by a mode
International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

Despite new legal duties and strong commitments from the TUC, employers – and the trade union movement itself – still need to take the crisis of violence against women more seriously, writes KIRI TUNKS of the FiLiA Trade Union Women’s Network

Village Hotel Workers
Voices of Scotland / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

NICK TROY lauds the young staff at a hotel chain and cinema giant who are ready to take on the bosses for their rights 

University graduates
Features / 24 November 2025
24 November 2025

There are multiple avenues for governments and corporations to ensure academia and think tanks serve their agendas, explains IAN SINCLAIR – and we need to expose that

A man sells flags of Honduras and the ruling party LIBRE during the closing campaign rally of presidential candidate Rixi Moncada in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, November 22, 2025
Features / 24 November 2025
24 November 2025

JOHN PERRY examines the forces seeking to use the end of Xiomara Castro’s term to return Honduras to Washington’s camp, with this month’s elections at risk of interference

A boy tries to stand near missiles displayed in the National Aerospace Park of the Revolutionary Guard, just outside Tehran, Iran, November 13, 2025
Opinion / 24 November 2025
24 November 2025

THE threat of further attacks upon Iran, following the bombings by Israel and the United States in June 2025, looms large in the thinking of the Iranian people. The leadership of the Islamic Republic is however corrupt, divided and in danger of paving the way for foreign intervention. Codir’s executive member Steve Bishop reports

FALLING RATINGS: US President Donald Trump
Features / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

From mass protests to plummeting poll numbers on immigration and health policy, and from devastating cuts to Medicaid and Medicare to the anti-science upheaval at federal health agencies, the president’s agenda is radicalising voters against him, argues JOHN LISTER

NUMBERS GAME: Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth meets with students at Kings Park Secondary School in Glasgow
Aw That / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

Whether in recycling or energy policy, a deeper crisis in long-term thinking is apparent in Scotland. With the new Budget looming, MATT KERR wonders if we can move beyond shallow, headline-grabbing measures

Workers at Grangemouth oil refinery seeking to save their jobs earlier this year. The plant has ceased operation as a refinery and UK Labour has failed to create new jobs as part of a ‘just transition’
Features / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

Ahead of elections next year, Scottish Labour is seeking to jump-start its political fortunes – but without bringing wealth and wealth production under democratic control, the party’s future looks in doubt, says VINCE MILLS

Blackberry pie and bush / Pics: (L to R) Steven Pavlov/CC; Pic: Fir0002/CC
Gardening / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

MAT COWARD advocates cultivating blackberries, a growing in popularity crop for gardens and allotments

STEADFAST: Members of the Public and Commercial Services union (PCS) on the picket line outside HMRC in East Kilbride during a strike in the long-running civil service dispute over pay, jobs and conditions, May 2023
Features / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

In part IV of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY tells how austerity minister Francis Maude’s attempt to destroy the PCS Civil Service union totally backfired

John Wheatley. Photo: wellcomeimages.org/CC
Features / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

Building is the solution for much of our housing crisis – and will also help to address poverty, ill health, and even anti-social behaviour and alienation, writes KENNY MacASKILL

ELECTORAL TURBULENCE: View from the tower of Old Town Hall in Prague. Photo: A Savin/Creative Commons
Praxis / 22 November 2025
22 November 2025

JOHN CALLOW examines what went wrong for the Czech communist party in the recent parliamentary elections, where it failed to meet the threshold to return deputies and some now talk of the party abandoning its commitment to socialism

WAR-FREE EDUCATION: Students protest outside King's College London on Tuesday October 7 2025
Features / 21 November 2025
21 November 2025

CONOR BOLLINS looks at the sinister moves to entice young people towards military and arms industry careers

Israeli tanks are parked in a staging area near the border with Gaza, in southern Israel, November 18, 2025
Features / 21 November 2025
21 November 2025

The Morning Star here publishes a statement from the Egyptian Communist Party condemning the UN security council resolution on Gaza

Protesters march past the Milken Center for Advancing the American Dream, during a
Features / 21 November 2025
21 November 2025

From a “basket of deplorables” to “imbecilic morons,” US officials have ramped up their ad hominem rhetoric towards their own citizens, writes Linda Pentz Gunter

Eve of budget protest
Features / 21 November 2025
21 November 2025

Austerity in a red tie is still austerity, warns RAMONA McCARTNEY of the People’s Assembly – rally with us to demand different choices

‘ILLEGAL TRADITION’: An engraving entitled ‘The Leader of the Luddites’, 1812
Features / 20 November 2025
20 November 2025

Inspired by a hit TV show, KEITH FLETT takes a look at the murky history of undercover class war

MAKING INROADS: Zack Polanski has been rising in the opinion polls
Features / 20 November 2025
20 November 2025

While the Greens have won popularity for their call for a wealth tax, it’s unclear whether they’d be willing to break with the most powerful forces of capitalism, argues NICK WRIGHT

TROUBLED LEGACY: Between 50,000 and 100,000 people stood silently with clenched fists raised during the procession of the hearses containing the bodies of three of the people murdered during the Atocha massacre, Madrid, January 26 1977
Anti-Fascism / 20 November 2025
20 November 2025

Spanish dictator Francisco Franco died 50 years ago today November 20. JIM JUMP looks back at his blood-soaked rule and toxic legacy on Spain today

Attendees listen to Brazil’s President Lula during Cop30
Features / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

From summit to summit, imperialist companies and governments cut, delay or water down their commitments, warn the Communist Parties of Britain, France, Portugal and Spain and the Workers Party of Belgium in a joint statement on Cop30

 ‘Clown Trump, if you’re against Maduro, you’re against me’ placard at a gathering of the civilian defence network in the Petare neighborhood of Caracas last Saturday
International Relations / 19 November 2025
19 November 2025

The British government won’t confirm wide reports it has withheld intelligence sharing with the US over fears Trump’s attacks on boats near Venezuela are illegal, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER

Cartoon: Lewis
Features / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

The collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation poses an existential threat — but do today’s politicians have the capacity to deliver the more resilient and sustainable economics of tomorrow, wonders ALAN SIMPSON

Atom
Science and Society / 19 November 2025
19 November 2025

Neutrinos are so abundant that 400 trillion pass through your body every second. ROX MIDDLETON, LIAM SHAW and MIRIAM GAUNTLETT explain how scientists are seeking to know more about them

Demonstrators protest outside of the White House in Washington, November 15, 2025
Latin America / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

The global left must be unwavering in it is support for Venezuela as Washington increases its aggression, and clear-eyed about the West’s cynical motives for targeting it, says CLAUDIA WEBBE

Women's rights badge
Voices of Scotland / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

KATE RAMSDEN invites readers to attend Scotland’s Morning Star autumn conference, where women’s liberation will be the focus of debate

Sudanese women displaced from El-Fasher stand in line to receive food aid at the newly established El-Afadh camp in Al Dabbah, in Sudan's Northern State, Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025
Neocolonialism / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

ROGER McKENZIE shines a light on conflicts in Sudan and Nigeria, where Western powers are intent on laying claim to valuable resources necessary for market dominance

An apartment is seen damaged after a Russian attack on residential neighbourhood in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025
Global Politics / 18 November 2025
18 November 2025

Israel’s genocide in Gaza persists, while the war in Ukraine continues with no negotiated settlement in sight. As Europe rearms and Britain expands its nuclear capabilities, CAROL TURNER reviews the alternatives

DECEPTIVE: Sir Keir Starmer, pictured at Labour conference in 2018
Features / 17 November 2025
17 November 2025

JOHN ELLISON takes a look at Sir Keir Starmer’s track record of duplicity and betrayal since taking the Labour leadership role, as highlighted in a new book, The Fraud, by Paul Holden

Robert Griffiths at congress
Features / 17 November 2025
17 November 2025

The Morning Star publishes the Communist Party of Britain's 58th congress address by general secretary ROBERT GRIFFITHS, delivered on November 15 2025

Copies of the Morning Star
Features / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

Morning Star campaigns manager CALVIN TUCKER gives the latest of his fortnightly updates on the all-important 95th Anniversary Appeal

Zohran Mamdani
Features / 14 November 2025
14 November 2025

If we want to do better than before then we have to learn from all our experiences – good and bad – and bring those to bear today, writes KEVIN OVENDEN

(Right) The Reichstag burns on February 27 1933. (left) Sir Oswald Mosley addressing the faithful / Pic: (R) Bundesarchiv/CC
Features / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

DYLAN MURPHY looks back to when mass resistance led by the Communist Party of Great Britain broke the back of British fascism in 1934

Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS), speaks at a May Day rally in Trafalgar Square, London, May 1, 2017
Features / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

In part III of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY tells the extraordinary story of the attempts by ‘moderates’ to prevent leftwinger Mark Serwotka from taking the leadership of the then-newly formed PCS union

People take part in a Palestine Solidarity Campaign rally in central London, November 30, 2024
Solidarity / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

Trade unionists must raise our voices not only for justice and against occupation, but also to protect our fundamental right to protest, writes LOUISE REGAN, ahead of a not-to-be-missed PSC conference

A man wearing a Labour rosette
Features / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

The multiple crises this country is facing are policy-driven – and more of the same won’t turn things around, argues DIANE ABBOTT MP

Prime Minister Keir Starmer departs 10 Downing Street, London, to attend Prime Minister's Questions at the Houses of Parliament, November 12, 2025
Labour Party / 15 November 2025
15 November 2025

As the PM and his chief of staff’s blunders have mounted up, ANDREW MURRAY wonders who among Labour’s diminished ‘soft left’ might make a bid for the leadership

A GRAVE SENSE OF URGENCY: Bernie Sanders heads to the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Washington on Monday
Features / 14 November 2025
14 November 2025

DYLAN MURPHY focuses on the big tech oligarchs’ war against workers and how AI and robotics could destroy 100 million US jobs by 2035

(L to R) Lopping Hall opened in 1884; Thomas Willingale plaque at St John the Baptist Church, Loughton, Essex / Pics: (L to R) Pic: Nigel Cox/geograph.org.uk/CC, Pic: Spudgun67/CC
Features / 14 November 2025
14 November 2025

MAT COWARD reminds us that the resilience of ordinary folk can turn the tables on the mighty and 'entitled'

F-35B Lightning on HMS Queen Elizabeth in 2020, they are not nuclear-capable hence the upgrading to F-35As which are equipped for US B61 nuclear bombs / Pic: LPhot Luke/MOD/CC
Features / 14 November 2025
14 November 2025

A new report says the government’s purchase of US nuclear-armed aircraft prioritises transatlantic politics over military needs and ignored its own Strategic Defence Review, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER

MANY A TRUTH IS SAID IN JEST: A Reform UK supporter wearing a Sir Keir Starmer mask at the party’s annual conference in Birmingham, September 6 2025
Features / 14 November 2025
14 November 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES examines the shift in Labour rhetoric on racism and Reform UK – and what’s driving it

Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa speaks during an event to deliver benefits and to decry the protests against diesel price hikes, in Otavalo, Ecuador, September 24, 2025
Latin America / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025

LEE BROWN highlights the latest attempts to undo progressive reforms instated during the presidency of Rafael Correa

Media outside BBC Broadcasting House in London following the resignation of BBC Director-General Tim Davie, November 11, 2025
Media / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025

Davie and Turness are two scalps for Trump, Farage and Johnson, writes STEPHEN ARNELL

Palestinians walk through the destruction caused by the Israeli military in Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City, November 11, 2025
Communist Party of Britain / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025

Ahead of the Communist Party’s forthcoming Congress, KEVAN NELSON takes a look at the global issues of war, peace and imperialism that will be up for discussion among comrades this weekend

STILL GOING STRONG: Phlebotomists pictured earlier this year, in July, as they marked 100 days of action. Photo: Unison South West
Features / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025

ROGER McKENZIE calls for greater support from trade unionists and the general public for female workers involved in industrial disputes

'RERUM COGNOSCERE CAUSAS/DISCOVER THE CAUSES OF THINGS’: Fighting departamental closures - the occupation of Jessop West in 2023 at the University of Sheffield / Pic: Sheffield Action Group/CC
Features / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025

JACK DAVIDSON explains the motivation behind the UCU strike action at the University of Sheffield

Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana take part in a discussion on Your Party, their new political party, at The World Transformed conference, at Niamos Radical Arts Centre in Hulme, Manchester. Picture date: Friday October 10, 2025
Eyes Left / 12 November 2025
12 November 2025

While all of good faith on the left should wish the new party well, ANDREW MURRAY pinpoints some of the major challenges it will need to grapple with as it approaches its founding conference later this month

Cartoon: Songi
Media / 11 November 2025
11 November 2025

TIM LEZARD dissects the motives behind the apoplectic right-wing attack on the BBC

IN WASHINGTON’S SIGHTS: A man wears shirt with a image of US President Donald Trump during a government-organised rally against foreign interference, in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday October 30 2025
Features / 11 November 2025
11 November 2025

Western nations’ increasingly aggressive stance is not prompted by any increase in security threats against these countries — rather, it is caused by a desire to bring about regime changes against governments that pose a threat to the hegemony of imperialism, writes PRABHAT PATNAIK

FRESH THINKING NEEDED: Brazilian firefighters walk outside the venue for the Cop30 UN Climate Summit, in Belem, Brazil
Features / 11 November 2025
11 November 2025

Reaching co-operation is supposed to be the beginning, not the end, of global climate governance, argues LISA VANHALA

RITUALS: Wooden crosses with poppies and names of those being remembered at the Cenotaph in Victoria Square, St Helens, Merseyside
Features / 11 November 2025
11 November 2025

WILL DRY speaks to three former members of the armed forces about the political hypocrisy surrounding Armistice Day, how war is a function of class society, and the far right’s use of militarism and nationalism to divide working people

A vendor sells local newspapers with headlines referring to US President Donald Trump's comments about Nigeria, on the street of Lagos, Nigeria, Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025
Maga Diplomacy / 10 November 2025
10 November 2025

Nigeria’s presidential spokesman grovels to the West in response to Washington intimidation, writes PAVAN KULKARNI

FORERUNNER: A stamp of Thomas Muntzer, issued by the GDR in 1989 Pic: Public domain
History / 10 November 2025
10 November 2025

NICK MATTHEWS recalls how the ideals of socialism and the holding of goods in common have an older provenance than you might think

Christina McAnea
Workers' Rights / 10 November 2025
10 November 2025

Roger McKenzie talks to general secretary of Unison CHRISTINA McANEA about the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on members, the local government funding emergency and the threat of Reform UK

freedom-of-speech
Lawman / 9 November 2025
9 November 2025

ANSELM ELDERGILL examines the difficulties surrounding freedom of expression

 Lord Radcliffe, who conducted an investigative tribunal after a series of ‘spy scandals’ during Harold Macmillan’s premiership
History / 9 November 2025
9 November 2025

In part II of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY explores how witch-hunting drives took hold in the Civil Service as the cold war emerged in the wake of WWII

Humza Yousaf (centre, when still first minister) visits the Hillcrest Homes housing development in Dundee, in April 2024. The number of new affordable homes completed in Scotland had fallen in each of the last three years, from 23,486 in 2022 to 19,988 in 2024
Aw That / 8 November 2025
8 November 2025

The right to buy may have been scrapped in Scotland, but the damage it has done lives on even now, writes MATT KERR