Fare thee well, comrade: A tribute to Ernie Tate
By James Clark and Pam Frache
Spanish state: the Catalan February 14 election backgrounded
By Dick Nichols
By Richard Fidler
How pioneer Communists assessed the Russian Soviet Republic
By John Riddell
February 6, 2021 — Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal reposted from John Riddell's Marxist Essays and Commentary — The Communist International (or Comintern) was founded in Moscow in 1919, with the goal of helping to extend the socialist revolution that had taken place in Russia across Europe and around the world.
The Russian Communist (Bolshevik) party that had led in establishing Soviet power was respected in the International as a prime source of strategic and tactical guidance. Yet the Comintern’s statutes did not accord any primacy to the Russian Communist Party (RCP). Like other Comintern sections, the Russian party was answerable to the International’s world congresses.
Broken world, broken people – we need a path to a better future
By Shawn Hattingh
United States: After Trump, what prospects for Biden in the global imperial disorder?
Introduction and translation by Richard Fidler
Canada: New Year calls for a new COVID-19 strategy
By David Camfield and Claudyne Chevrier