Wednesday, October 5, 2016

The Ghosts of Cable Street by the Men they could not Hang : The official labour movement tried to stop the anti-fascist protests and organised an alternative rally in Trafalgar Square



The Battle of Cable Street took place on Sunday 4 October 1936




The magnificent mural in Cable Street in East London, depicts the 1936 battle of Cable Street, when East end residents stopped Oswald Mosley and his fascist followers marching through their streets. In this powerful dissection of what happened, the real battle we learn was three way, between the police, the fascists and local people. Interwoven with eye witness testimony from Bill Fishman, Alan Hudson provides a riveting account of the events, the context and many hidden truths. The official labour movement tried to stop the anti-fascist protests and organised an alternative rally in Trafalgar Square. Lessons for today come thick and fast and we are left to contemplate the mural's contemporary meaning.

DEMOCRACY AND CLASS STRUGGLE SAYS RED SALUTE TO STEPNEY'S COMMUNIST PARTY THE REVOLUTIONARY CORE OF LONDON'S COMMUNISTS WHO LED THE STRUGGLE AGAINST MOSELEY AT BATTLE OF CABLE STREET





Democracy and Class Struggle says Remember how Labour Party opposed militant opposition to Fascism .

The history of the "British" Labour Party is a history of a servant of Imperialism despite having some radical social democrats from Bevan to Corbyn