40 years ago this week, an army of riot police laid siege to the pit village of Easington to crush its defiant support for the miners' strike. Four decades on from Thatcher's assault, their community still bears the scars.
First broadcast 30 years today, Phillipa Lowthorpe’s cult Blackpool documentary <i>Three Salons at the Seaside</i> is a piece of experimental filmmaking centred on working-class care and femininity.
Energy companies are set to extract an extra £1.5 billion from the public this year, more than enough to restore Winter Fuel Payments. The choice is simple: protect corporate profits or keep pensioners warm this winter.
40 years ago this week, an army of riot police laid siege to the pit village of Easington to crush its defiant support for the miners' strike. Four decades on from Thatcher's assault, their community still bears the scars.
First broadcast 30 years today, Phillipa Lowthorpe’s cult Blackpool documentary <i>Three Salons at the Seaside</i> is a piece of experimental filmmaking centred on working-class care and femininity.
Energy companies are set to extract an extra £1.5 billion from the public this year, more than enough to restore Winter Fuel Payments. The choice is simple: protect corporate profits or keep pensioners warm this winter.
Despite what Keir Starmer claims, there's nothing inevitable about another round of harsh cuts — it is a deliberate decision to avoid confronting the powerful.