A small point about the BBC and its infatuation with the right. One of the highlights of the campaign results is how badly the right has done. But its article
Everyone who can should come to Trafalgar Square with a touch of purple tomorrow, Saturday 8 May, if you like the idea of democracy in Britain.
We have been told how to vote (or is it to pray) by our religious leader into today's Sunshine.
He says: "I have always hated celebrities lecturing
As the election comes down to the wire, voters should stick to their guns.
As UK politics trembles on the edge of a hung parliament the new generation need to reshape the democratic movement around them
In a powerful analysis that echoes many of the arguments published in OK, distilled into a strong, convincing case, Andreas Whittam Smith argues that we are witnessing a historic protest
I have signed in my personal capacity a letter organised by Richard Reeve of Demos in today's Guardian. It says a great opportunity for reform is opened up
Alex Massie has written an exemplary instant rebuttal of the Conservative Party briefing paper warning against a hung parliament. Remarkable because it is set out in his Spectator blog and
Fred Halliday, great scholar, international fighter for justice and openDemocracy columnist, died on 26 April 2010. We opened our website to tributes which poured in from around the world in an unprecedented, online salute.
If there is a coalition in the UK after 6 May it might be between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives.
A new major exhibition of the man who was England's greatest sculpture ignores, yet borrows from, the controversial re-assessment on the 1980s that Moore was the artist of a labour movement at once mighty but defeated and will be seen as the most awesome witness of human carnage of the First World
HEALTH WARNING This is an article from the Guardian, Friday 26 Aug 1988 (very slightly corrected) published as part of an archive of essays on Henry Moore, including from Art