Another Year Of COVID And Workers Are No Better Off
Nearly two years into the pandemic and the promises made to workers about a just recovery have amounted to very little.
Nearly two years into the pandemic and the promises made to workers about a just recovery have amounted to very little.
The OWRAC Future Of Work Report should not be seen as a positive step for gig and contract workers.
The federal government’s design of their new sick leave policy is nothing short of goofy.
“Inflation mania” is representative of a much deeper class struggle over the distribution of society’s resources.
Of the various social inequalities exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, perhaps none is greater than the discrepancy between the wealth accumulated by e-commerce companies like HelloFresh and the plight of their workforces.
For this week’s Class Struggle newsletter, I spoke with David Camfield about the ongoing faculty strike at the University of Manitoba.
Ford may have shifted his rhetoric, but his government is — and always has been — bad for workers.
Workers celebrated as essential only a year ago amidst a deadly pandemic are now being asked to accept stagnant wages, crumbling social infrastructure, and public sector austerity.
Rhetoric aside, the cancellation of the CRB shows that the Liberals are trying to return to the pre-pandemic status quo.