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Western Europe

European Union

  • A Socialist Alternative to the European Union
    This long document by Alan Woods provides a comprehensive answer to many key questions for the European labour movement. What is Maastricht? Why are they introducing all these cuts? Would it be better without Maastricht? Will it succeed? and most important of all, how do we fight it and what is our alternative. (June 1997)
  • The Political Situation of the Youth in the West
    It is clear that there is a rising tide of activism across the planet. From Seattle to Prague, the new protest movement signifies the begining of a broader movement of the masses. But how can we harness this energy and enthusiasm in order to transform the world? Tom Rollings from the UK explains how Marxists can intervene in these movements in order to build a revolutionary alternative to capitalism. (October, 2000)

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Spain

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  • Marxism and the National Question
    This short article by Alan Woods, was originally written for the Galician language magazine "Onte e Hoxe" and it deals with the general position of Marxism in relation to the national question and also explains the position in relation to Kosovo. (July 7, 1999)
  • Spanish students against NATO
    Thousands of students participated yesterday (April 20th) in Spain in a national day of action against the bombing of Yugoslavia. The protest was called by the Students Union (Sindicato de Estudiantes). (April 23, 1999)
  • A Marxist Analysis of the Basque Elections
    The high turn out rate of 70.7% in the election in Euskadi (Basque name for the Basque country), 11 points higher than the last regional elections of 1994, reflects the enormous interest of the Basque population in finding a solution to their problems, starting with an end to the long nightmare of repression and terrorism. The bourgeois parties - both Basque (PNV and EA) and Spanish (PP) - have been trying to divide and polarize the population along national lines, aiming to divide and confuse the workers' movement. From the Spanish Marxist magazine El Militante. (November 1998)
  • The Spanish Revolution 1931-37
    This article by Ted Grant was first published in 1973 as part of the discussions which were taking place in the Spanish underground movement against Franco. I summed up the lessons of the Spanish revolution and served as a contribution to the rearming of the new generation of workers and youth in the Spanish Young Socialists, the UGT and the PSOE. Also available is the introduction to the 1996 edition of the pamphlet, reprinted as a reply to the Stalinist lies on the Spanish Civil War which resurfaced again in the discussion around Ken Loach's film Land and Freedom.
  • Lessons of Spain
    Ted Grant looks at the lessons of the Spanish Revolution in this introduction to Trotsky's Pamphlet on the subject. From the selected writings of Ted Grant The Unbroken Thread. (1938)

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Portugal

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To mark the 25th anniversary of the Portuguese revolution we reprint two articles:

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Italy

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  • First strike against the war in Italy
    On 3rd April 100,000 people marched in a demonstration in Rome against the NATO bombing campaign in Yugoslavia. A week later another demonstration of over 50,000 took place. There is a lot of opposition to the NATO bombing among the workers and youth in Italy in spite of the government's support.(April 23, 1999)

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France

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  • France: mass strikes shake bosses
    Over recent years, the French labour movement has been in the forefront of the struggle to defend public services, wages, working conditions and pensions. Since the public sector transport strike of 1995, millions of workers have been involved in some form or other of militant action. In the last few weeks, a series of huge strikes and demonstrations have once again shaken the bosses, the government and the state institutions. Greg Oxley from the French Marxist paper La Riposte reports.
  • French Perspectives
    At the present time, of all the European countries, it is in France that the class struggle has been unfolding on the highest level. Contrary to the claims of the capitalist media, there is nothing specifically "French" in this development, nor in its immediate causes. Throughout the whole of Europe, workers and the youth are faced with the same problems. Over the next period, the economic boom will pass away without having solved a single one of these problems. Indeed, in many respects, it will have served only to make matters worse. It can only be a matter of time before struggles break out on a similar scale in the rest of the continent. November 2000. From the French Marxist paper La Riposte.
  • Class Struggles in France, 2000
    France is on the verge of another massive upsurge of the class struggle. This article explains the processes going on at the present time in France, and perspectives for socialism. From the French Marxist magazine La Riposte. (October 2, 2000)
  • Mehdi Ben Barka Appeal
    We appeal to all labor movement activists for letters of protest, demanding that the French government immediately open all the secret service files on the Ben Barka Affair, and any other material presently covered by the state secrecy laws covering to collaboration between the French State and the Moroccan secret services in relation victims of assassination, torture or imprisonment of opponents of the Hassan II regime. (May, 2000)
  • The Ben Barka affair and the situation in Morocco today
    In the interview published in La Riposte, Bachir Ben Barka, the son of Mehdi Ben Barka, the assassinated founder of the Moroccan Socialist Party (USFP), explains the long and largely fruitless struggle waged by his family to obtain access to the files of the French secret services. Towards the end of the interview, Bachir refers to the possibility that the files may at last be opening by the Jospin government. However, whereas certain files were in fact opened, the most important information about who killed Mehdi Ben Barka, on whose orders and in what circumstances, and how the body was disposed of, has been once again withheld from the family under the state secrecy laws.
  • Interview with Mehdi Ben Barka's Son Bachir
    This interview was originally published in the French Marxist magazine La Riposte. In it, the son of assasinated Moroccan socialist leader Mehdi Ben Barka explains the reasons why his father was kidnapped and assasinated with the help of the French government. We are launching an international solidarity appeal to force the authorities to re-open this case and make public all the secret documents being witheld from Ben Barka's family.
  • A New Stage of the World Revolution
    A detailed analysis of the November/December 1995 General Strike in France. On those months millions of workers and youth took the streets of France in a movement which in certain aspects was even bigger than that of the May 1968. The effects of such a movement were felt all over Europe. In June 1996 workers in Germany carried banners saying: "We want to struggle in the French way".
  • May 1968
    A look at the important events in France, 1968.
  • The French Revolution
    This article was written in 1989 to commemorate 200 years of the Great French Revolution. We are republishing it with a new introduction by the author. Alan Woods explains the internal dynamics of the revolution and above all the role played by the masses.

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Denmark

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  • Danish Strike: "We Can Run the Country Without the Bosses!"
    On Monday, April 27th nearly 500,000 Danish private sector workers went on an all-out strike demanding an extra week paid holdaiys a year and the 35 hour week. The strike, which lasted for nearly eleven days was the biggest movement since 1985 when 1 million workers paralysed Denmark for ten days. This article traces the development of the strike day by day and draws conclusions. (May 1998)

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Germany/Austria

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Flag of Austria

  • Austria one year after Haider
    One year ago a shock wave went through Western Europe with the coming to power of the coalition government of the OVP and FPO in Austria. A lot has happened since then. Herbert Bartik of the Austrian Marxist journal 'Der Funke' was interviewed by Filip Staes of the editorial board of Vonk. (Belgian Marxist paper).(February 2001)
  • Austria: Resistance! Resistance!
    "Widerstand! Widerstand!" - "Resistance! Resistance!" - that is the main slogan of the protest wave which has been shaking Austria for more than three weeks. When it became clear that the conservative Peoples Party (ÖVP) was to form a coalition with the extreme right-wing Freedom Party of Jörg Haider, this sharp political turn sparked a spontaneous movement never seen before in Austria. Gernot Trausmuth, Editorial board of the Austrian Marxist magazine Der Funke. (February 25, 2000)

  • Interview with an Austrian Marxist
    Interview with Austrian Marxist Herbert Bartik, regarding the recent entry of the extreme right-wing Freedom Party into the Government. (February 2000)
  • Austria: Unions bring down coalition between SP and PP
    On Friday 21 January, pressure from the trade unions forced the break-down of coalition talks between the Socialist Party and the Conservative Peoples' Party. Gernot Trausmuth looks at the implications of this for the future of the class struggle in Austria.
  • Austria after the elections: Social democracy in crisis
    On October 3rd Austria was shaken by a political earthquake. After decades of "social partnership", after 13 years of a 'Grand Coalition' between the Social Democrat Party (SP) and the conservative Peoples Party (VP) characterised by enormous stability these parliamentary elections mark a turning point in Austria's post-war history. "Not one stone remained upon another". That's how the journalists tried to describe these elections. Especially the big success of the extreme right-wing party of Jörg Haider, the FPÖ, was not only a shock to a lot of people in Austria, but also internationally.   (October, 1999)
  • One year after the election triumph:  SPD suffers devastating losses
    Things have changed rapidly in Germany. In September 1998, the Social Democratic Party SPD scored a big victory in the Bundestag elections, ousting the bourgeois coalition under Kohl which had held power for 16 years. The start of the new "red-green" coalition government under chancellor Schröder was accompanied by aspirations of millions of workers, unemployed, old age pensioners and youth. Now the SPD as well as the Greens are stumbling from defeat to catastrophe to disaster.  See also:  Der Funke (October, 1999)
  • Elections in Germany Landslide Defeat for Kohl - Victory for the Left
    A historic defeat for chancellor Kohl and a clear victory for the left are the most outstanding features of the German election on September 27. After exactly 16 years of Kohl in office, German workers and youth said: enough is enough. German is now likely to be governed by a coalition of Social Democrats and Greens. Hans Gerd Ofinger analyses the implications from Germany. (September 28, 199)8 Visit also the web site of the German Marxist magazine Funke.

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Belgium

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  • Belgium After the White March
    The dismissal of judge Connerotte in October 1996 sparked a mass movement which shocked the whole society in Belgium. Ordinary people were no longer afraid of challenging the state institutions: the police, the judges, the government, even the King. A Marxist analysis on the causes and effects of such a movement.

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