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Thirty years ago, a social movement helped bring down one of the
most powerful British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century. For the
30th anniversary of the Poll Tax rebellion, Simon Hannah looks back
on those tumultuous days of resistance, telling the story of the
people that beat the bailiffs, rioted for their rights and defied a
government. Starting in Scotland where the 'Community Charge' was
first trialled, Can't Pay, Won't Pay immerses the reader in the
gritty history of the rebellion. Amidst the drama of large scale
protests and blockaded estates a number of key figures and groups
emerge: Neil Kinnock and Tommy Sheridan; Militant, Class War and
the Metropolitan Police. Assessing this legacy today, Hannah
demonstrates the centrality of the Poll Tax resistance as a key
chapter in the history of British popular uprisings, Labour Party
factionalism, the anti-socialist agenda and failed Tory ideology.
*A Guardian Book of the Day* The defeat of socialist firebrand
Jeremy Corbyn as Labour Leader in 2019 confirmed Tony Benn's famous
retort 'the Labour party has never been a socialist party, although
there have always been socialists in it.' For over a hundred years,
the British Labour Party has been a bastion for working class
organisation and struggle. However, has it ever truly been on the
side of the workers? Where do its interests really lie? And can we
rely on it to provide a barrier against right-wing forces? Simon
Hannah's smart and succinct history of the Labour left guides us
through the twists and turns of the party, from the Bevanite
movement and the celebrated government of Clement Attlee, through
the emergence of a New Left in the 1970s and the Blairism of the
1990s, to Corbyn's defeat and his replacement by Keir Starmer. This
new edition is updated throughout, with a new final chapter and
conclusion bringing the story up to date.
*A Guardian Book of the Day* The defeat of socialist firebrand
Jeremy Corbyn as Labour Leader in 2019 confirmed Tony Benn's famous
retort 'the Labour party has never been a socialist party, although
there have always been socialists in it.' For over a hundred years,
the British Labour Party has been a bastion for working class
organisation and struggle. However, has it ever truly been on the
side of the workers? Where do its interests really lie? And can we
rely on it to provide a barrier against right-wing forces? Simon
Hannah's smart and succinct history of the Labour left guides us
through the twists and turns of the party, from the Bevanite
movement and the celebrated government of Clement Attlee, through
the emergence of a New Left in the 1970s and the Blairism of the
1990s, to Corbyn's defeat and his replacement by Keir Starmer. This
new edition is updated throughout, with a new final chapter and
conclusion bringing the story up to date.
Thirty years ago, a social movement helped bring down one of the
most powerful British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century. For the
30th anniversary of the Poll Tax rebellion, Simon Hannah looks back
on those tumultuous days of resistance, telling the story of the
people that beat the bailiffs, rioted for their rights and defied a
government. Starting in Scotland where the 'Community Charge' was
first trialled, Can't Pay, Won't Pay immerses the reader in the
gritty history of the rebellion. Amidst the drama of large scale
protests and blockaded estates a number of key figures and groups
emerge: Neil Kinnock and Tommy Sheridan; Militant, Class War and
the Metropolitan Police. Assessing this legacy today, Hannah
demonstrates the centrality of the Poll Tax resistance as a key
chapter in the history of British popular uprisings, Labour Party
factionalism, the anti-socialist agenda and failed Tory ideology.
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