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Morning Star (British newspaper)

The Morning Star is a left-wing British daily newspaper with a focus on social, political and trade union issues.[3] Originally founded in 1930 as the Daily Worker by the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), ownership was transferred from the CPGB to an independent readers' co-operative, the People's Press Printing Society, in 1945 and later renamed the Morning Star in 1966. The paper describes its editorial stance as in line with Britain's Road to Socialism, the programme of the Communist Party of Britain.[4]

Morning Star
Front page of the Morning Star from 27 June 2020
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatTabloid
Owner(s)People's Press Printing Society[1]
EditorBen Chacko
Founded1 January 1930; 94 years ago (1930-01-01)
(as Daily Worker)
25 April 1966; 57 years ago (1966-04-25)
(as Morning Star)
Political alignment
HeadquartersWilliam Rust House, 52 Beachy Road, Bow, London E3 2NS
Circulation10,000 (as of 2008)[2]
ISSN0307-1758
Websitemorningstaronline.co.uk

The Daily Worker initially opposed the Second World War and its London edition was banned in Britain between 1941 and 1942.[5] After the Soviet Union joined the Allies, the paper enthusiastically backed the war effort. During the Cold War, the paper provided a platform for critics of the US and its allies. This included whistleblowers who provided evidence that the British military were allowing their forces to collect decapitated heads during the Malayan Emergency,[6] and exposing the mass graves of civilians killed by the South Korean government.[7]

The paper prints contributions by writers from a variety of left-wing political perspectives. Contributors include Jeremy Corbyn, Virginia Woolf,[8] Angela Davis,[9] Billy Strachan,[10] Len Johnson,[11]: 102  Wilfred Burchett,[12] Claudia Jones, Jean Ross, and Harry Pollitt.[13] Correspondent Alan Winnington had his British passport revoked in 1954 for his reporting on massacres in the Korean War, and favourable representation of North Korean prisoner-of-war camps.[14] Some non-political topics covered by the paper have included arts reviews, sports, gardening, book reviews, and cooking.

The Daily Worker (1930–1966) edit

Early years edit

 
Daily Worker delivery bag

The Morning Star was founded in 1930 as the Daily Worker, the paper representing the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), and was immediately preceded by and grew out of the Weekly Worker (10 Feb 1923 - 21 Jan 1927) and Workers Life (28 Jan 1927 - 20 Dec 1929) newspapers.[15] The first edition was produced on 1 January 1930[16] from the offices of the newspaper in Tabernacle Street, London, after a meeting the day before by nine British communists, including Willie Gallacher, Kay Beauchamp, Tom Wintringham, Walter Holmes, and Robert Page Arnot.[5]: 12  In the first few decades of its existence, the Daily Worker contained cartoons for children. The Daily Worker's first issue contained a children's cartoon titled "Micky Mongrel the Class Conscious Cur", drawn by artist Gladys Keable, which would become a staple of the early paper.[11]: 117  The paper's first editor was journalist William Rust, while the paper's assistant editor and manager was Tom Wintringham, and was printed at Wintringham's Unity Press. In January 1934, the Daily Worker's offices moved to Cayton Street, off City Road. The first eight-page Daily Worker was produced on 1 October 1935.

Second World War edit

On 3 September 1939, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain spoke to the nation on the BBC, at which time he announced the formal declaration of war between Britain and Nazi Germany. Daily Worker editor J. R. Campbell, backed by his political ally, Party General Secretary Harry Pollitt, sought to portray the conflict against Hitler as a continuation of the anti-fascist fight.[17] This contradicted the position of the Comintern in the aftermath of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact (which became CPGB policy on 3 October) that the war was a struggle between rival imperialist powers, and Campbell was removed as editor as a result, being replaced by William Rust.[18]

The paper accused the British government's policies of being "not to rescue Europe from fascism, but to impose British imperialist peace on Germany" before attacking the Soviet Union.[18] The newspaper responded to the assassination of Leon Trotsky by a Soviet agent with an article on 23 August 1940, entitled "A Counter Revolutionary Gangster Passes", written by former editor Campbell.[19]

The paper criticised Sir Walter Citrine after his meeting in Paris with French Labour Minister Charles Pomaret in December 1939. Time said of the events following the meeting, "Minister Pomaret clamped down on French labour with a set of drastic wage-&-hour decrees and Sir Walter Citrine agreed to a proposal by Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir John Simon that pay rises in Britain be stopped".[20] Citrine sued the Daily Worker for libel after it accused him and his associates of "plotting with the French Citrines to bring millions of Anglo-French Trade Unionists behind the Anglo-French imperialist war machine"; the publisher pleaded the British press equivalent of "fair comment".[clarification needed] Citrine alleged, in response to his lawyer's questioning, that the Daily Worker received £2,000 per month from "Moscow", and that Moscow directed the paper to print anti-war stories.[20]

During this period, when the Soviet Union had a non-aggression pact with Germany, the Daily Worker ceased to attack Nazi Germany.[21] On 21 January 1941, publication of the newspaper was suppressed by the Home Secretary in the wartime coalition, Herbert Morrison (a Labour Party MP).[14] It had repeatedly ignored a July 1940 warning that its pacifist line contravened Defence Regulation 2D, which made it an offence to 'systematically to publish matter calculated to foment opposition to the prosecution of the war'. A Scottish edition of the Daily Worker was produced from its plant in Glasgow from 11 November 1940. On 16 April 1941, the Daily Worker offices at Cayton Street were totally destroyed by fire during the Blitz. The paper moved temporarily in 1942 to the former Caledonian Press offices in Swinton Street (whence the old Communist Party Sunday Worker, edited by William Paul and Tom Wintringham, had been published from 15 March 1925 until 1929). New offices were acquired in 1945, at a former brush-makers' warehouse at 75 Farringdon Road, for the sum of £48,000.

When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa in June 1941, the situation changed; British Communists became fervent supporters of the war.[22] For the rest of the war, the paper was a strong supporter of the British war effort, and campaigned to organise a "Second Front" in Europe to assist the Soviet Union.[23] The government's ban on the Daily Worker was lifted in September 1942, following a campaign supported by Hewlett Johnson, the Dean of Canterbury, and Professor J. B. S. Haldane. A "Lift the ban" conference at Central Hall, Westminster on 21 March 1942 was attended by over 2,000 delegates. A key part of the campaign was to secure Labour Party support (Herbert Morrison was a fierce opponent of the Daily Worker). On 26 May 1942, after a heated debate, the Labour Party carried a resolution declaring the government must lift the ban on the Daily Worker.

The Daily Worker welcomed the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, editorialising "The employment of the new weapon on a substantial scale should expedite the surrender of Japan".[24][25] The paper also applauded the bombing of Nagasaki, and called for the use of additional atomic bombs against the Japanese.[24]

The People's Press Printing Society was formed just after the war in 1945. The society's purpose was to raise money for the paper under a co-operative ownership model, and it quickly attracted support from the labour movement. By January 1946 it had 10,000 individual members, as well as organisational membership from 186 trade union bodies and 17 other co-operatives.[26] One month later, in February 1946, a large rally was organised at the Royal Albert Hall, the Daily Worker which was then owned by Keable Press Ltd on behalf of the Communist Party of Great Britain, was sold to the People's Press Printing Society for a single shilling.[11]: 118 

Postwar edit

The Daily Worker reached its peak circulation after the war, although precise circulation figures are disputed – from 100,000[27] to 122,000[28] to 140,000[29] and even 500,000.[30]

The Daily Worker's campaigns against the colour bar in Britain inspired British middleweight champion boxer Len Johnson to join the Communist Party of Great Britain, and write a boxing column for the Daily Worker.[11]: 102 

The Daily Worker was fully supportive of the show trials in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria in the late 1940s, as well as the split with Tito and Yugoslavia in 1948.[31]

 
Photographic proof of British war crimes during the Malayan Emergency published by the Daily Worker, 10 May 1952.

In 1950 Daily Worker foreign correspondent Alan Winnington published I Saw the Truth in Korea, which provided evidence of mass graves containing thousands of corpses belonging to civilians executed by South Korean government during the Korean War.[32] The paper published alleged evidence of the America's use of biological weapons during the Korean War.[33][non-primary source needed] In response to Winnington's Korea reporting, Clement Attlee's cabinet discussed having Winnington executed by charging him with treason. However, it was instead decided to make him stateless by refusing to renew his passport.[34][failed verification] Phillip Knightley described Winnington as one of the most trustworthy voices of the war.[35]

In April 1952, the Daily Worker published photographs of a Royal Marine commando in the middle of a British military base posing with the decapitated human head believed to have belonged to a member of the Malayan National Liberation Army (MNLA).[36] The article also included eyewitness testimonies from British personnel in Malaya alleging that it was common for British troops to behead people.[37][6] An Admiralty spokesman accused the photographs of being forgeries and a "communist trick", though Colonial Secretary Oliver Lyttelton later confirmed to Parliament that the images were genuine. Lyttleton noted the decapitations were conducted by Iban headhunters by the British.[clarification needed][38][39] The Daily Worker then published several more photographs of MNLA guerrillas decapitated by Ibans, including photographs of an Iban wearing a Royal Marine beret while preparing a scalp above a basket of human limbs.[40]

In 1956, the Daily Worker suppressed correspondent Peter Fryer's reports from the Hungarian revolution, which were favourable to the uprising.[41] The paper denounced the attempted revolution as a "white terror", invoking the Horthy regime and earlier 1919–1921 period.[42]

By the late 1950s the paper was down to just one sheet of four pages. The last edition of the Daily Worker was published on Saturday 23 April 1966. An editorial in that final issue declared:

"On Monday this newspaper takes its greatest step forward for many years. It will be larger, it will be better and it will have a new name.... During its 36 years of life our paper has stood for all that is best in British working-class and Socialist journalism. It has established a reputation for honesty, courage and integrity. It has defended trade unionists, tenants, pensioners. It has consistently stood for peace. It has always shown the need for Socialism. Let all Britain see the Morning Star, the inheritor of a great tradition and the herald of a greater future".

In February every year between 1950 and 1954, the Daily Worker held a rally at Harringay Arena in Harringay, north London,[43] attended by about 10,000 people. Guests were entertained by tableaux set to music. Paul Robeson also sent recorded messages which were played during the rallies.[a]

Morning Star (1966–present) edit

History edit

The first edition of the Morning Star appeared on Monday, 25 April 1966. South African exile Sarah Carneson worked for the newspaper in the late 1960s.[44]

Until 1974, the paper was subsidised by the Soviet government with direct cash contributions, and from 1974 onwards was indirectly supported by daily bulk orders from Moscow.[27] Its chief executive from 1975 was Mary Rosser.[45]

By the late 1970s, the paper and the CPGB were beginning to come into conflict with one another, as the Eurocommunist trend in the CPGB grew, while the Morning Star at the time retained a pro-Soviet stance and opposed Eurocommunism.[46] An editorial in The Guardian, however, reported in 1977 that the paper was giving coverage to dissidents in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere in the Soviet bloc to the consternation of about a third of CPGB members who wanted a reversal to a strictly pro-Kremlin line. "The Morning Star is open for genuine debate about the future of the Left", it asserted.[47] A demonstration outside the East German embassy against the imprisonment of reformist Communist Rudolf Bahro was organised by the Morning Star that year.[48] Also in 1977, editor Tony Chater persuaded the Labour government to begin running advertisements in the newspaper, previously absent because of a lack of audited circulation figures.[49]

In December 1981, when the Polish Solidarity trade union movement was suppressed and martial law declared, the paper criticised the executive committee of the party for condemning the acts of the (then-Communist) Polish government.[50] In 1982, the Morning Star attacked the attitudes of Marxism Today, the party's monthly journal, which was controlled by the Eurocommunists.[51]: 186 

The newspaper attracted some wider media attention in September 1981 when the BBC paid to place six advertisements for its Russian-language service in the Morning Star, which was one of the few English language newspapers that the USSR government allowed to be circulated in the country. Four of these advertisements were printed as agreed, but the last two of the six were not printed. A spokesman for the newspaper said that the advertising department had not properly consulted with other teams before making the agreement, and that the BBC's broadcasts were part of Cold War propaganda.[52] The paper supported the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) during the miners' strike of 1984–1985, but the party had become critical of NUM leader Arthur Scargill's strategy towards the end of the strike.[53]

Meanwhile, in March 1984, the CPGB Executive Committee (EC) issued a seven-page document which was heavily critical of editor Tony Chater, in particular because he had refused to print an article which commemorated the sixtieth anniversary of the death of Lenin.[49] The EC put forward candidates to challenge those loyal to Chater at the 1984 AGM of the PPPS and called for Chater's replacement. He was expelled from the CPGB in January 1985, along with the assistant editor, David Whitfield, reportedly because the attempts to remove him as editor had failed. A statement by the party's EC asserted that the paper was "being systematically used to attack and undermine congress policy, support factional activities in the party, and help sectarian minority groupings in their opposition to the party majority".[49][54][55] In June 1985, however, AGMs of the PPPS held in Glasgow, Manchester and London voted by about 60 to 40% for candidates backed by the management committee of the Morning Star.[51]: 187 Chater remained editor of the paper until 1995 when he retired.[56] Control of the newspaper passed from the Eurocommunist leadership of the CPGB to the newly established pro-Soviet Communist Party of Britain (CPB).

On the day before the Berlin Wall began to be demolished in 1989, under a headline reading "GDR unveils reforms package", the newspaper commented that "The German Democratic Republic is awakening", and quoting material supplied by East Germany's ruling Socialist Unity Party: "A revolutionary people's movement has set in motion a process of serious upheaval ... The aim is dynamically to give socialism more democracy"[30]

Soviet bulk orders ended abruptly in 1989 (the Communist Party of the Soviet Union had still been buying 6,000 copies every day), and the termination of this order, with only a week's notice, was the cause of "huge financial disruption".[27]

In the 1990s, the publication's circulation fell to 7,000, following the end of the Soviet bulk sales. There were tensions between different CPB factions over control of the paper, and in particular over the successor of Tony Chater as editor. Chief Executive Mary Rosser favoured the news editor, Paul Corry (also her son-in-law); the staff and by the unions favoured Chater's deputy, John Haylett, who was installed in February 1995.[45] In 1998 many of its workers – then earning £10,500 a year and with no raise for 11 years – went on strike.[27] These strikes were provoked by the sacking by Rosser of Haylett for "gross misconduct".[57][58] During the protest a breakaway from the Morning Star, the Workers' Morning Star was formed, and published by a small group of journalists who worked for the Morning Star at the same time.[59] This paper was discontinued before the end of the decade. Haylett was eventually reinstated as editor and the protests stopped, as the circulation saw a moderate increase. "Our political relationship is still with the Communist Party of Britain", he said in 2005, pointing out that only about 10% of readers were members of the party, "but now we represent a broad movement".[27]

Although the paper is normally published from Monday to Saturday, an issue of the Morning Star was published on 13 September 2015, its first ever Sunday edition, to cover the election of Jeremy Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party.[60]

In December 2016, the newspaper was criticised by Labour MPs led by John Woodcock ("one of the fiercest critics of British government inaction over aid to the region", according to The Huffington Post) for its description of the imminent fall of Aleppo to Syrian government forces in a front-page headline as a "liberation". Labour MP Tom Blenkinsop tweeted: "Hard left joining with far right in welcoming dictators "liberating" Aleppo. Absolute disgrace".[61] Other Labour MPs joining in the criticism were Stephen Doughty, Angela Smith, Ian Austin, Mike Gapes, Jess Phillips,[61] Toby Perkins and Wes Streeting. Conservative MP George Osborne and Guardian writer Owen Jones also attacked the paper's headline.[62] However, the paper rejected the criticism,[63][64][65] stating that "from a purely technical point of view, when a sovereign government reclaims territory previously held by enemy forces, that's called "liberation" whether we like the outcome or not".[66] Stop the War Coalition convener Lindsey German,[62] and political commentator Peter Oborne[67] defended the Star's reporting of the issue, and questioned the dominant media narrative, respectively. Jeremy Corbyn said he "disagreed" with the headline, emphasising that he always advocated a ceasefire and "a political settlement in Syria". However, he refused to say he would never buy or read the paper again, saying; "Listen, I buy lots of newspapers. I frequently disagree profoundly with headlines, even in The Guardian, the Telegraph, the Mail, and so on. Does it mean I won't buy them, or read them? Of course not."[68]

During the late 2010s the Morning Star played a key role in helping historians uncover facts about pioneering black civil rights activist Billy Strachan.[69][original research?]

In June 2022, the paper published a statement by the Communist Party of Britain on the 'situation in Ukraine' that stated "the war between Russia and Ukraine is part of a wider conflict between capitalist powers, between Russia on one side and Ukraine and the expansionist NATO powers on the other." It went on to call NATO "an alliance of imperialist powers". It declared the Russian military actions unjustified and called for an immediate ceasefire, but opposed sanctions. [70][non-primary source needed]

Editorial line and contents edit

The newspaper describes itself as "a reader-owned co-operative and unique as a lone socialist voice in a sea of corporate media".[71] The paper attempts to speak to the working class a group its editor described in 2015 as around 80% to 90% of the British population who work for a wage rather than living off investments or assets.[30] Successive annual general meetings of the People's Press Printing Society have agreed that the policy of the paper is founded on Britain's Road to Socialism, the programme of the Communist Party of Britain.[72] A profile of the paper which was published in the centre-left New Statesman magazine in 2015 commented on its contents that:[30]

it covers industrial disputes, anti-austerity protests and international affairs in a brisk, populist tabloid style. Recently, it has earned praise for its coverage of women's sport and corruption in sport. Jeremy Corbyn, the candidate for the Labour Party leadership and Morning Star contributor, has called it "the most precious and only voice we have in the daily media", and Frances O'Grady, the TUC general secretary, says it is "essential reading for many union activists".

On international issues, the paper was historically sympathetic to the Soviet Union and its allies during the Cold War.[27] Commentators have suggested that it maintains a fairly anti-Western worldview into the 21st century.[30] Its attitude to the wider world has been criticised by others on the British left with Paul Anderson former editor of the democratic socialist Tribune magazine commenting that "It runs articles extolling the virtues of single-party 'socialist' states on a regular basis – North Korea, Cuba, China, Vietnam. Its default position on just about everything happening in the world is that anything any western power supports – but particularly the United States – must be opposed, which has led to it cheering on Putin, Hamas, Assad and a lot of other real nasties."[30] The paper is sympathetic to Irish republicanism categorising reporting about Northern Ireland as foreign.[73]

On its masthead, the paper states that it supports peace and socialism, and it is also Eurosceptic. The Morning Star and The Spectator were the only publications to campaign for an Exit vote in the 1975 referendum.[74] Tony Benn (described as "the de facto leader of the "Out" campaign"[74]) campaigned alongside the paper.[75] Over thirty years later the Morning Star supported the No2EU platform in the 2009 European Parliament election. The paper was also supportive of Britain's vote in 2016 to leave the EU,[76] saying that "Anybody who supports the election of a Corbyn government with a mandate to end austerity, extend public ownership, redistribute wealth and restructure our economy in the interests of working people needs to explain how this agenda can be implemented in the framework of an EU that bans so much of it" but criticised the referendum campaign as being headed by "reactionary zealots" such as Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson and Michael Gove.[75]

The paper advocates a vote for the Labour Party in most seats, except for the handful in which the Communist Party of Britain has a candidate. During Jeremy Corbyn's term as Labour leader, the Communist Party of Britain did not stand any candidates against Labour in the 2017 or 2019 general elections, and the Morning Star became wholly pro-Labour in this period.[77][78] The paper has also received contributions from representatives of the Green movement, religious organisations as well as Scottish and Welsh nationalists.[3]

Contributors and staff edit

 
Contributor Jeremy Corbyn

In the first years of the twenty-first century, the paper has carried contributions from Uri Avnery, John Pilger, Green activist Derek Wall, ex-Mayor of London Ken Livingstone, Labour Members of Parliament (MPs) Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell, Green MP Caroline Lucas, former MP George Galloway (Respect), the cartoonist Martin Rowson, and many trade union general secretaries. Features are contributed by writers from a range of socialist, social democratic, green and religious perspectives. Despite this, according to then editor John Haylett in 2005: "things that happened in the Soviet Union 70 years ago are still being used as a stick to beat the Morning Star."[3]

On 1 January 2009, Bill Benfield took over as editor of the Morning Star.[79] John Haylett, who had been editor since 1995, took up the post of political editor. Benfield had previously been deputy editor and head of production, but experienced ill health.[80]

In May 2012, Richard Bagley became editor of the Morning Star,[81][82] having already worked at the paper in various positions since 2001. In July 2014, he stepped down as editor,[83] with Ben Chacko becoming acting editor,[84] a position in which Chacko was confirmed in May 2015.[85][86] The newspaper "is the most precious and only voice we have in the daily media", said (then backbencher Labour MP) Jeremy Corbyn at the time of Chacko's formal appointment in May 2015. "I look forward to working with Ben in promoting socialism and progress".[86]

Finances and circulation edit

 
Morning Star readers and supporters banner

The Morning Star carries little commercial advertising, with low advertising rates,[87] and the cover price does not pay for print and distribution. Consequently, the paper has always been dependent on donations from activists, readers, and trade unions. The paper relies on its "Star Fund" appeal (monthly target £18,000).[88] In its past, the paper received a subsidy from the Soviet Union in the form of bulk orders. In 1981, its circulation was about 36,000, down from the Daily Worker's post-war peak.

In March 2005, BBC News Magazine reported the Morning Star's circulation as between 13,000 and 14,000, quoting Haylett's comment "perhaps only one in 10 of these readers would label themselves as Communists".[3][89] The circulation was thought to be around 10,000 when Ben Chacko took over as editor in mid-2015.[90]

The Morning Star has also taken a much higher profile at trade union gatherings and within the UK trade union movement, particularly with unions such as Unite, GMB, UCATT, FBU, Community, CWU, NUM, Durham Miners, Prison Officers and RMT. Since 2008, the Morning Star has hired exhibition space at the Trades Union Congress, with sponsored copies being handed out to delegates at the TUC, Labour Party Conference, at union conferences and high-profile events such as the Tolpuddle Martyrs' Festival and the Durham Miners Gala. The newspaper is also available at independent newsagents and shops such as RS McColl, in local supermarkets such as Budgens, at railway stations and on motorway service areas. In addition, it is stocked by the Co-op Food chain of stores.[citation needed]

During the early morning of 28 July 2008, the offices of the newspaper were damaged by fire,[91] and the edition of 29 July took a reduced form. A similar incident occurred on 20 October 2014 when a fire broke out near the offices and a small number of staff had to relocate to the sports editor's house in order to finish the paper.[92]

On 1 June 2009, the Morning Star was re-launched. The re-launch included a 16-page edition during the week, and a 24-page weekend edition priced at £1.20 after a rise in its prices in September 2014. This rose to 1.50 in 2020[93] There is no Sunday edition of the newspaper. There was also an expanded use of colour pictures and graphics, plus a redesign and a modern layout of the pages. The Morning Star also redesigned its website. In addition, a number of new and experienced journalists were engaged and the positions of full-time Industrial Correspondent and Lobby Correspondent in the House of Commons were reintroduced.

In November 2011, the Morning Star launched an urgent appeal to raise £75,000 in order to address a number of funding issues which meant the paper might have gone under by the end of the year.[94]

On Monday 18 June 2012, the Morning Star moved to printing at two Trinity Mirror print sites in Watford and Oldham, which improved distribution of the Morning Star to all parts of the country, particularly Scotland.

In November 2021, The Canary revealed that the UK Foreign Office had tried, unsuccessfully, to discover the source of the Morning Star's funding during the 1970s. A report by the Information Research Department stated: "While watertight evidence is no doubt lacking, it might be possible for a skilled propagandist to present a convincing case which the CPGB [Communist Party of Great Britain] would find extremely difficult to refute. The project would require some detailed research which IRD could no doubt undertake in conjunction with the Security Service". Commenting on these revelations, Ben Chacko, the editor of the Morning Star, told The Canary:

Given what we know of the secret state's extensive surveillance and sabotage of entirely legal protest movements and trade unions, it is no surprise that British spooks also wanted to undermine the Morning Star.

Trying to discredit the newspaper with claims it must have had access to secret foreign funding run up against the fact that the Morning Star was not just the most authoritative source on industrial relations in the British press – prime ministers from Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher made sure to obtain their copy – but a daily newspaper whose integrity and professionalism was respected by other journalists, as the spooks evidently found to their dismay!

This is a cautionary tale about the state's willingness to play dirty to discredit critical media. It is absolutely relevant today, given the calls we hear from both main parties in Parliament for tighter censorship, bans on foreign-owned media like China Central Television or Russia Today, and for state regulation of so-called "fake news" that conveniently ignores the barrage of fake news pumped out by Establishment media day in, day out.

We must acknowledge the importance of defending free speech and the right to "publish and be damned!" as our government connives at efforts to intimidate and jail journalists such as Julian Assange.[95]

Online version edit

An online version of the paper was launched on 1 April 2004. Initially only some parts of the site were free, including a PDF of the paper's front page, the editorial "Star Comment" and all the articles from the culture and sports pages, while features and the current affairs were subscription-only. On 1 January 2009 this policy was changed, and all content was made freely available online.[96] In April 2012, the paper launched a daily e-edition of the full newspaper, which readers can subscribe to for a charge.[97] As of 2020, the number of articles non-subscribers can read for free is limited.

Editors edit

As the Daily Worker:

1930: William Rust[98]
1933: Jimmy Shields[98]
1935: Idris Cox[98]
1936: Rajani Palme Dutt[98]
1938: Dave Springhall[98]
1939: John Ross Campbell[98]
1939: William Rust[98]
1949: John Ross Campbell
1959: George Matthews

Chairs of the editorial board have included Hewlett Johnson (clergyman known as 'the Red Dean' of Canterbury), although he was not a member of the CPGB.[99]

As the Morning Star:

1966: George Matthews
1974: Tony Chater[49]
1995: John Haylett
2009: Bill Benfield
2012: Richard Bagley
2014: Ben Chacko

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Issued by Topic Records, two disc release were made in 1950 and 1951. A copy of the 1950 label can be seen on Harringay Online. It is not known if Robeson continued to send recorded messages after 1951.

References edit

  1. ^ "Morning Star". Directory of Co-operatives. Co-operatives UK. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Dispatches". The Guardian. Retrieved on 5 December 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d Coughlan 2005.
  4. ^ "Britain's Road to Socialism, the Communist Party of Britain programme ... underlies our paper's editorial stance." People's Press Printing Society Annual Report 2009.
  5. ^ a b Howe, Mark (2001). Is That Damned Paper Still Coming Out? The Very Best of the Daily Worker Morning Star. London: People's Press Printing Society.
  6. ^ a b Newsinger, John (2015). British Counterinsurgency (2nd ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 50. ISBN 9781137316868.
  7. ^ Shaw, Tony (1 April 1999). "The Information Research Department of the British Foreign Office and the Korean War, 1950–53". Journal of Contemporary History. 34 (2): 269. doi:10.1177/002200949903400206. S2CID 159855506 – via Sage Journals.
  8. ^ Woolf, Virginia (14 December 1936). "Why art to-day follows politics". Daily Worker.
  9. ^ Davis, Angela (19 July 1977). "Racism dictates the level of women's oppression". The Morning Star.
  10. ^ Horsley, David (2019). Billy Strachan 1921-1988 RAF Officer, Communist, Civil Rights Pioneer, Legal Administrator, Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man. London: Caribbean Labour Solidarity. p. 27. ISSN 2055-7035.
  11. ^ a b c d Meddick, Simon; Payne, Liz; Katz, Phil (2020). Red Lives: Communists and the Struggle for Socialism. UK: Manifesto Press Cooperative Limited. ISBN 978-1-907464-45-4.
  12. ^ Burchett, Wilfred (31 March 1954). "A great disaster for the French army". Daily Worker.
  13. ^ Pollitt, Harry (7 September 1938). "The real Britain is on the Ebro". Daily Worker.
  14. ^ a b Jenks, John (2006). British Propaganda and News Media in the Cold War. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 14, 55. doi:10.1515/9780748626755. ISBN 9780748626755.
  15. ^ "The Papers of the Communist Party of Great Britain", The Archive hub, University of Manchester
  16. ^ "Help for Researchers: Concise History of the British Newspaper in the Twentieth Century", British Library website
  17. ^ James Eaton and David Renton, The Communist Party of Great Britain since 1920, Basingstoke: Pallgrave, 2002, pp.69–70
  18. ^ a b Bill Jones, The Russia complex: the British Labour Party and the Soviet Union. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1977, p.38 ISBN 0719006961.
  19. ^ (PDF). worldsocialism.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  20. ^ a b . TIME. 13 May 1940. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  21. ^ Editorial "The 'Daily Worker", Manchester Guardian, 22 January 1941, reprint on The Guardian's website.
  22. ^ Taylor, Philip M. (2003). Munitions of the Mind: A History of Propaganda, Third Edition. Manchester University Press. p. 214. ISBN 9780719067679.
  23. ^ Andrew Thorpe, The British Communist Party and Moscow, 1920–43, Manchester University Press, 2000. ISBN 0719053129, p.268.
  24. ^ a b Lawrence S. Wittner, The Struggle Against The Bomb: Volume One, One World Or None. Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, p.172 ISBN 0804721416
  25. ^ David Widgery, The Left in Britain, 1956–68, Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1976, p.100. ISBN 0140550992
  26. ^ Rosser, Mary (September 1995). "A Star That Never Sets: the Early Years of the Morning Star". Information for Social Change (2): 14–15. doi:10.5281/zenodo.4609282. ISSN 1756-901X.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Deeson, Martin (23 May 2005). "Still flying the red flag". The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved 16 September 2017.
  28. ^ Tomlinson J. Left Right, London: John Calder, 1981.
  29. ^ Obituary: Mary Rosser-Hicks, Daily Telegraph 10 January 2011
  30. ^ a b c d e f Platt 2015.
  31. ^ Keith Laybourn Marxism in Britain: Dissent, Decline and Re-emergence 1945-c.2000, Abingdon: Routledge, 2006, p.43
  32. ^ Winnington, Alan (1950). I Saw the Truth in Korea. 75 Farringdon Road, London: People's Press Printing Society Ltd.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  33. ^ Winnington, Alan (24 May 1952). "How we dropped the germ bombs". Daily Worker.
  34. ^ Miller, Owen (25 June 2020). "Uncovering the Hidden History of the Korean War". Jacobin. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  35. ^ Phillip, Knightley (2000). The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth-Maker from the Crimea to Kosovo. London: Pion. p. 338.
  36. ^ Hack, Karl (2022). The Malayan Emergency: Revolution and Counterinsurgency at the End of Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 315.
  37. ^ "This is the War in Malaya". The Daily Worker. 28 April 1952.
  38. ^ Peng, Chin; Ward, Ian; Miraflor, Norma (2003). Alias Chin Peng: My Side of History. Singapore: Media Masters. p. 302. ISBN 981-04-8693-6.
  39. ^ Ngoei, Wen-Qing (2019). Arc of Containment: Britain, the United States, and Anticommunism in Southeast Asia. New York: Cornell University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-1501716409.
  40. ^ "This Horror Must End". Daily Worker (Morning Star). 10 May 1952. p. 1.
  41. ^ Brotherstone, Terry (3 November 2006). "Peter Fryer". The Guardian.
  42. ^ Apor, Péter (2015). Fabricating Authenticity in Soviet Hungary: The Afterlife of the First Hungarian Soviet Republic in the Age of State Socialism. Anthem Press. ISBN 978-1-78308-419-7.
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  44. ^ "Liberation Hero and Ex-Star Worker Sarah Carneson Dies" 2 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine People's Daily Morning Star (6 November 2015).
  45. ^ a b "Mary Rosser-Hicks". 21 May 2018 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  46. ^ Christine F. Collette and Keith Laybourn Modern Britain Since 1979: A Reader, London: I.B. Tauris, 2003, p.185
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  51. ^ a b John Callaghan The Far Left in British Politics, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987
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  58. ^ 'Official communist' opposition Weekly Worker 11 October 2000
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  60. ^ "Morning Star marks Labour result with first Sunday edition". BBC News. 13 September 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  61. ^ a b Demianyk, Graeme (13 December 2016). "Morning Star Newspaper Condemned By Labour MPs For Calling Fall Of Aleppo In Syria A 'Liberation'". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
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  64. ^ "Aleppo: the untold story". Morning Star.
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  66. ^ Society, People's Printing Press. "Headline hysteria proves the power of propaganda". Morning Star.
  67. ^ "It's time to judge Assad's Aleppo campaign by the standards that we set ourselves in Mosul". Coffee House. The Spectator. 14 December 2016.
  68. ^ Coates, Sam (16 December 2016). "Corbyn stands by Morning Star after Syria row". The Times. Retrieved 16 December 2016. (subscription required)
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  93. ^ "Morning Star :: Changes to your weekend Morning Star". Retrieved on 5 December 2015.
  94. ^ Sunny Hundal Following the covid_19 lockdown of March 2020, the paper appealed again to its to its readers & supporters to raise £90,000, It successfully achieved this. "Morning Star could go under by Christmas", Liberal Conspiracy, 16 November 2011
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Sources edit

  • Coughlan, Sean (21 March 2005). "Pressing on". BBC News Magazine. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  • Platt, Edward (4 August 2015). "Inside the Morning Star, Britain's last communist newspaper". New Statesman. Retrieved 13 December 2016.

External links edit

  • Official website  

morning, star, british, newspaper, confused, with, british, tabloid, daily, star, united, kingdom, 19th, century, newspaper, morning, star, london, newspaper, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, m. Not to be confused with The British tabloid The Daily Star United Kingdom For the 19th century newspaper see Morning Star London newspaper The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Morning Star is a left wing British daily newspaper with a focus on social political and trade union issues 3 Originally founded in 1930 as the Daily Worker by the Communist Party of Great Britain CPGB ownership was transferred from the CPGB to an independent readers co operative the People s Press Printing Society in 1945 and later renamed the Morning Star in 1966 The paper describes its editorial stance as in line with Britain s Road to Socialism the programme of the Communist Party of Britain 4 Morning StarFront page of the Morning Star from 27 June 2020TypeDaily newspaperFormatTabloidOwner s People s Press Printing Society 1 EditorBen ChackoFounded1 January 1930 94 years ago 1930 01 01 as Daily Worker 25 April 1966 57 years ago 1966 04 25 as Morning Star Political alignmentSocialism Trade unionism Britain s Road to SocialismHeadquartersWilliam Rust House 52 Beachy Road Bow London E3 2NSCirculation10 000 as of 2008 2 ISSN0307 1758Websitemorningstaronline wbr co wbr ukThe Daily Worker initially opposed the Second World War and its London edition was banned in Britain between 1941 and 1942 5 After the Soviet Union joined the Allies the paper enthusiastically backed the war effort During the Cold War the paper provided a platform for critics of the US and its allies This included whistleblowers who provided evidence that the British military were allowing their forces to collect decapitated heads during the Malayan Emergency 6 and exposing the mass graves of civilians killed by the South Korean government 7 The paper prints contributions by writers from a variety of left wing political perspectives Contributors include Jeremy Corbyn Virginia Woolf 8 Angela Davis 9 Billy Strachan 10 Len Johnson 11 102 Wilfred Burchett 12 Claudia Jones Jean Ross and Harry Pollitt 13 Correspondent Alan Winnington had his British passport revoked in 1954 for his reporting on massacres in the Korean War and favourable representation of North Korean prisoner of war camps 14 Some non political topics covered by the paper have included arts reviews sports gardening book reviews and cooking Contents 1 The Daily Worker 1930 1966 1 1 Early years 1 2 Second World War 1 3 Postwar 2 Morning Star 1966 present 2 1 History 2 2 Editorial line and contents 2 3 Contributors and staff 2 4 Finances and circulation 2 5 Online version 3 Editors 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksThe Daily Worker 1930 1966 editEarly years edit nbsp Daily Worker delivery bagThe Morning Star was founded in 1930 as the Daily Worker the paper representing the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain CPGB and was immediately preceded by and grew out of the Weekly Worker 10 Feb 1923 21 Jan 1927 and Workers Life 28 Jan 1927 20 Dec 1929 newspapers 15 The first edition was produced on 1 January 1930 16 from the offices of the newspaper in Tabernacle Street London after a meeting the day before by nine British communists including Willie Gallacher Kay Beauchamp Tom Wintringham Walter Holmes and Robert Page Arnot 5 12 In the first few decades of its existence the Daily Worker contained cartoons for children The Daily Worker s first issue contained a children s cartoon titled Micky Mongrel the Class Conscious Cur drawn by artist Gladys Keable which would become a staple of the early paper 11 117 The paper s first editor was journalist William Rust while the paper s assistant editor and manager was Tom Wintringham and was printed at Wintringham s Unity Press In January 1934 the Daily Worker s offices moved to Cayton Street off City Road The first eight page Daily Worker was produced on 1 October 1935 Second World War edit On 3 September 1939 Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain spoke to the nation on the BBC at which time he announced the formal declaration of war between Britain and Nazi Germany Daily Worker editor J R Campbell backed by his political ally Party General Secretary Harry Pollitt sought to portray the conflict against Hitler as a continuation of the anti fascist fight 17 This contradicted the position of the Comintern in the aftermath of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact which became CPGB policy on 3 October that the war was a struggle between rival imperialist powers and Campbell was removed as editor as a result being replaced by William Rust 18 The paper accused the British government s policies of being not to rescue Europe from fascism but to impose British imperialist peace on Germany before attacking the Soviet Union 18 The newspaper responded to the assassination of Leon Trotsky by a Soviet agent with an article on 23 August 1940 entitled A Counter Revolutionary Gangster Passes written by former editor Campbell 19 The paper criticised Sir Walter Citrine after his meeting in Paris with French Labour Minister Charles Pomaret in December 1939 Time said of the events following the meeting Minister Pomaret clamped down on French labour with a set of drastic wage amp hour decrees and Sir Walter Citrine agreed to a proposal by Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir John Simon that pay rises in Britain be stopped 20 Citrine sued the Daily Worker for libel after it accused him and his associates of plotting with the French Citrines to bring millions of Anglo French Trade Unionists behind the Anglo French imperialist war machine the publisher pleaded the British press equivalent of fair comment clarification needed Citrine alleged in response to his lawyer s questioning that the Daily Worker received 2 000 per month from Moscow and that Moscow directed the paper to print anti war stories 20 During this period when the Soviet Union had a non aggression pact with Germany the Daily Worker ceased to attack Nazi Germany 21 On 21 January 1941 publication of the newspaper was suppressed by the Home Secretary in the wartime coalition Herbert Morrison a Labour Party MP 14 It had repeatedly ignored a July 1940 warning that its pacifist line contravened Defence Regulation 2D which made it an offence to systematically to publish matter calculated to foment opposition to the prosecution of the war A Scottish edition of the Daily Worker was produced from its plant in Glasgow from 11 November 1940 On 16 April 1941 the Daily Worker offices at Cayton Street were totally destroyed by fire during the Blitz The paper moved temporarily in 1942 to the former Caledonian Press offices in Swinton Street whence the old Communist Party Sunday Worker edited by William Paul and Tom Wintringham had been published from 15 March 1925 until 1929 New offices were acquired in 1945 at a former brush makers warehouse at 75 Farringdon Road for the sum of 48 000 When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 the situation changed British Communists became fervent supporters of the war 22 For the rest of the war the paper was a strong supporter of the British war effort and campaigned to organise a Second Front in Europe to assist the Soviet Union 23 The government s ban on the Daily Worker was lifted in September 1942 following a campaign supported by Hewlett Johnson the Dean of Canterbury and Professor J B S Haldane A Lift the ban conference at Central Hall Westminster on 21 March 1942 was attended by over 2 000 delegates A key part of the campaign was to secure Labour Party support Herbert Morrison was a fierce opponent of the Daily Worker On 26 May 1942 after a heated debate the Labour Party carried a resolution declaring the government must lift the ban on the Daily Worker The Daily Worker welcomed the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima editorialising The employment of the new weapon on a substantial scale should expedite the surrender of Japan 24 25 The paper also applauded the bombing of Nagasaki and called for the use of additional atomic bombs against the Japanese 24 The People s Press Printing Society was formed just after the war in 1945 The society s purpose was to raise money for the paper under a co operative ownership model and it quickly attracted support from the labour movement By January 1946 it had 10 000 individual members as well as organisational membership from 186 trade union bodies and 17 other co operatives 26 One month later in February 1946 a large rally was organised at the Royal Albert Hall the Daily Worker which was then owned by Keable Press Ltd on behalf of the Communist Party of Great Britain was sold to the People s Press Printing Society for a single shilling 11 118 Postwar edit The Daily Worker reached its peak circulation after the war although precise circulation figures are disputed from 100 000 27 to 122 000 28 to 140 000 29 and even 500 000 30 The Daily Worker s campaigns against the colour bar in Britain inspired British middleweight champion boxer Len Johnson to join the Communist Party of Great Britain and write a boxing column for the Daily Worker 11 102 The Daily Worker was fully supportive of the show trials in Hungary Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria in the late 1940s as well as the split with Tito and Yugoslavia in 1948 31 nbsp Photographic proof of British war crimes during the Malayan Emergency published by the Daily Worker 10 May 1952 In 1950 Daily Worker foreign correspondent Alan Winnington published I Saw the Truth in Korea which provided evidence of mass graves containing thousands of corpses belonging to civilians executed by South Korean government during the Korean War 32 The paper published alleged evidence of the America s use of biological weapons during the Korean War 33 non primary source needed In response to Winnington s Korea reporting Clement Attlee s cabinet discussed having Winnington executed by charging him with treason However it was instead decided to make him stateless by refusing to renew his passport 34 failed verification Phillip Knightley described Winnington as one of the most trustworthy voices of the war 35 In April 1952 the Daily Worker published photographs of a Royal Marine commando in the middle of a British military base posing with the decapitated human head believed to have belonged to a member of the Malayan National Liberation Army MNLA 36 The article also included eyewitness testimonies from British personnel in Malaya alleging that it was common for British troops to behead people 37 6 An Admiralty spokesman accused the photographs of being forgeries and a communist trick though Colonial Secretary Oliver Lyttelton later confirmed to Parliament that the images were genuine Lyttleton noted the decapitations were conducted by Iban headhunters by the British clarification needed 38 39 The Daily Worker then published several more photographs of MNLA guerrillas decapitated by Ibans including photographs of an Iban wearing a Royal Marine beret while preparing a scalp above a basket of human limbs 40 In 1956 the Daily Worker suppressed correspondent Peter Fryer s reports from the Hungarian revolution which were favourable to the uprising 41 The paper denounced the attempted revolution as a white terror invoking the Horthy regime and earlier 1919 1921 period 42 By the late 1950s the paper was down to just one sheet of four pages The last edition of the Daily Worker was published on Saturday 23 April 1966 An editorial in that final issue declared On Monday this newspaper takes its greatest step forward for many years It will be larger it will be better and it will have a new name During its 36 years of life our paper has stood for all that is best in British working class and Socialist journalism It has established a reputation for honesty courage and integrity It has defended trade unionists tenants pensioners It has consistently stood for peace It has always shown the need for Socialism Let all Britain see the Morning Star the inheritor of a great tradition and the herald of a greater future In February every year between 1950 and 1954 the Daily Worker held a rally at Harringay Arena in Harringay north London 43 attended by about 10 000 people Guests were entertained by tableaux set to music Paul Robeson also sent recorded messages which were played during the rallies a Morning Star 1966 present editHistory edit The first edition of the Morning Star appeared on Monday 25 April 1966 South African exile Sarah Carneson worked for the newspaper in the late 1960s 44 Until 1974 the paper was subsidised by the Soviet government with direct cash contributions and from 1974 onwards was indirectly supported by daily bulk orders from Moscow 27 Its chief executive from 1975 was Mary Rosser 45 By the late 1970s the paper and the CPGB were beginning to come into conflict with one another as the Eurocommunist trend in the CPGB grew while the Morning Star at the time retained a pro Soviet stance and opposed Eurocommunism 46 An editorial in The Guardian however reported in 1977 that the paper was giving coverage to dissidents in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere in the Soviet bloc to the consternation of about a third of CPGB members who wanted a reversal to a strictly pro Kremlin line The Morning Star is open for genuine debate about the future of the Left it asserted 47 A demonstration outside the East German embassy against the imprisonment of reformist Communist Rudolf Bahro was organised by the Morning Star that year 48 Also in 1977 editor Tony Chater persuaded the Labour government to begin running advertisements in the newspaper previously absent because of a lack of audited circulation figures 49 In December 1981 when the Polish Solidarity trade union movement was suppressed and martial law declared the paper criticised the executive committee of the party for condemning the acts of the then Communist Polish government 50 In 1982 the Morning Star attacked the attitudes of Marxism Today the party s monthly journal which was controlled by the Eurocommunists 51 186 The newspaper attracted some wider media attention in September 1981 when the BBC paid to place six advertisements for its Russian language service in the Morning Star which was one of the few English language newspapers that the USSR government allowed to be circulated in the country Four of these advertisements were printed as agreed but the last two of the six were not printed A spokesman for the newspaper said that the advertising department had not properly consulted with other teams before making the agreement and that the BBC s broadcasts were part of Cold War propaganda 52 The paper supported the National Union of Mineworkers NUM during the miners strike of 1984 1985 but the party had become critical of NUM leader Arthur Scargill s strategy towards the end of the strike 53 Meanwhile in March 1984 the CPGB Executive Committee EC issued a seven page document which was heavily critical of editor Tony Chater in particular because he had refused to print an article which commemorated the sixtieth anniversary of the death of Lenin 49 The EC put forward candidates to challenge those loyal to Chater at the 1984 AGM of the PPPS and called for Chater s replacement He was expelled from the CPGB in January 1985 along with the assistant editor David Whitfield reportedly because the attempts to remove him as editor had failed A statement by the party s EC asserted that the paper was being systematically used to attack and undermine congress policy support factional activities in the party and help sectarian minority groupings in their opposition to the party majority 49 54 55 In June 1985 however AGMs of the PPPS held in Glasgow Manchester and London voted by about 60 to 40 for candidates backed by the management committee of the Morning Star 51 187 Chater remained editor of the paper until 1995 when he retired 56 Control of the newspaper passed from the Eurocommunist leadership of the CPGB to the newly established pro Soviet Communist Party of Britain CPB On the day before the Berlin Wall began to be demolished in 1989 under a headline reading GDR unveils reforms package the newspaper commented that The German Democratic Republic is awakening and quoting material supplied by East Germany s ruling Socialist Unity Party A revolutionary people s movement has set in motion a process of serious upheaval The aim is dynamically to give socialism more democracy 30 Soviet bulk orders ended abruptly in 1989 the Communist Party of the Soviet Union had still been buying 6 000 copies every day and the termination of this order with only a week s notice was the cause of huge financial disruption 27 In the 1990s the publication s circulation fell to 7 000 following the end of the Soviet bulk sales There were tensions between different CPB factions over control of the paper and in particular over the successor of Tony Chater as editor Chief Executive Mary Rosser favoured the news editor Paul Corry also her son in law the staff and by the unions favoured Chater s deputy John Haylett who was installed in February 1995 45 In 1998 many of its workers then earning 10 500 a year and with no raise for 11 years went on strike 27 These strikes were provoked by the sacking by Rosser of Haylett for gross misconduct 57 58 During the protest a breakaway from the Morning Star the Workers Morning Star was formed and published by a small group of journalists who worked for the Morning Star at the same time 59 This paper was discontinued before the end of the decade Haylett was eventually reinstated as editor and the protests stopped as the circulation saw a moderate increase Our political relationship is still with the Communist Party of Britain he said in 2005 pointing out that only about 10 of readers were members of the party but now we represent a broad movement 27 Although the paper is normally published from Monday to Saturday an issue of the Morning Star was published on 13 September 2015 its first ever Sunday edition to cover the election of Jeremy Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party 60 In December 2016 the newspaper was criticised by Labour MPs led by John Woodcock one of the fiercest critics of British government inaction over aid to the region according to The Huffington Post for its description of the imminent fall of Aleppo to Syrian government forces in a front page headline as a liberation Labour MP Tom Blenkinsop tweeted Hard left joining with far right in welcoming dictators liberating Aleppo Absolute disgrace 61 Other Labour MPs joining in the criticism were Stephen Doughty Angela Smith Ian Austin Mike Gapes Jess Phillips 61 Toby Perkins and Wes Streeting Conservative MP George Osborne and Guardian writer Owen Jones also attacked the paper s headline 62 However the paper rejected the criticism 63 64 65 stating that from a purely technical point of view when a sovereign government reclaims territory previously held by enemy forces that s called liberation whether we like the outcome or not 66 Stop the War Coalition convener Lindsey German 62 and political commentator Peter Oborne 67 defended the Star s reporting of the issue and questioned the dominant media narrative respectively Jeremy Corbyn said he disagreed with the headline emphasising that he always advocated a ceasefire and a political settlement in Syria However he refused to say he would never buy or read the paper again saying Listen I buy lots of newspapers I frequently disagree profoundly with headlines even in The Guardian the Telegraph the Mail and so on Does it mean I won t buy them or read them Of course not 68 During the late 2010s the Morning Star played a key role in helping historians uncover facts about pioneering black civil rights activist Billy Strachan 69 original research In June 2022 the paper published a statement by the Communist Party of Britain on the situation in Ukraine that stated the war between Russia and Ukraine is part of a wider conflict between capitalist powers between Russia on one side and Ukraine and the expansionist NATO powers on the other It went on to call NATO an alliance of imperialist powers It declared the Russian military actions unjustified and called for an immediate ceasefire but opposed sanctions 70 non primary source needed Editorial line and contents edit The newspaper describes itself as a reader owned co operative and unique as a lone socialist voice in a sea of corporate media 71 The paper attempts to speak to the working class a group its editor described in 2015 as around 80 to 90 of the British population who work for a wage rather than living off investments or assets 30 Successive annual general meetings of the People s Press Printing Society have agreed that the policy of the paper is founded on Britain s Road to Socialism the programme of the Communist Party of Britain 72 A profile of the paper which was published in the centre left New Statesman magazine in 2015 commented on its contents that 30 it covers industrial disputes anti austerity protests and international affairs in a brisk populist tabloid style Recently it has earned praise for its coverage of women s sport and corruption in sport Jeremy Corbyn the candidate for the Labour Party leadership and Morning Star contributor has called it the most precious and only voice we have in the daily media and Frances O Grady the TUC general secretary says it is essential reading for many union activists On international issues the paper was historically sympathetic to the Soviet Union and its allies during the Cold War 27 Commentators have suggested that it maintains a fairly anti Western worldview into the 21st century 30 Its attitude to the wider world has been criticised by others on the British left with Paul Anderson former editor of the democratic socialist Tribune magazine commenting that It runs articles extolling the virtues of single party socialist states on a regular basis North Korea Cuba China Vietnam Its default position on just about everything happening in the world is that anything any western power supports but particularly the United States must be opposed which has led to it cheering on Putin Hamas Assad and a lot of other real nasties 30 The paper is sympathetic to Irish republicanism categorising reporting about Northern Ireland as foreign 73 On its masthead the paper states that it supports peace and socialism and it is also Eurosceptic The Morning Star and The Spectator were the only publications to campaign for an Exit vote in the 1975 referendum 74 Tony Benn described as the de facto leader of the Out campaign 74 campaigned alongside the paper 75 Over thirty years later the Morning Star supported the No2EU platform in the 2009 European Parliament election The paper was also supportive of Britain s vote in 2016 to leave the EU 76 saying that Anybody who supports the election of a Corbyn government with a mandate to end austerity extend public ownership redistribute wealth and restructure our economy in the interests of working people needs to explain how this agenda can be implemented in the framework of an EU that bans so much of it but criticised the referendum campaign as being headed by reactionary zealots such as Nigel Farage Boris Johnson and Michael Gove 75 The paper advocates a vote for the Labour Party in most seats except for the handful in which the Communist Party of Britain has a candidate During Jeremy Corbyn s term as Labour leader the Communist Party of Britain did not stand any candidates against Labour in the 2017 or 2019 general elections and the Morning Star became wholly pro Labour in this period 77 78 The paper has also received contributions from representatives of the Green movement religious organisations as well as Scottish and Welsh nationalists 3 Contributors and staff edit nbsp Contributor Jeremy CorbynIn the first years of the twenty first century the paper has carried contributions from Uri Avnery John Pilger Green activist Derek Wall ex Mayor of London Ken Livingstone Labour Members of Parliament MPs Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell Green MP Caroline Lucas former MP George Galloway Respect the cartoonist Martin Rowson and many trade union general secretaries Features are contributed by writers from a range of socialist social democratic green and religious perspectives Despite this according to then editor John Haylett in 2005 things that happened in the Soviet Union 70 years ago are still being used as a stick to beat the Morning Star 3 On 1 January 2009 Bill Benfield took over as editor of the Morning Star 79 John Haylett who had been editor since 1995 took up the post of political editor Benfield had previously been deputy editor and head of production but experienced ill health 80 In May 2012 Richard Bagley became editor of the Morning Star 81 82 having already worked at the paper in various positions since 2001 In July 2014 he stepped down as editor 83 with Ben Chacko becoming acting editor 84 a position in which Chacko was confirmed in May 2015 85 86 The newspaper is the most precious and only voice we have in the daily media said then backbencher Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn at the time of Chacko s formal appointment in May 2015 I look forward to working with Ben in promoting socialism and progress 86 Finances and circulation edit nbsp Morning Star readers and supporters bannerThe Morning Star carries little commercial advertising with low advertising rates 87 and the cover price does not pay for print and distribution Consequently the paper has always been dependent on donations from activists readers and trade unions The paper relies on its Star Fund appeal monthly target 18 000 88 In its past the paper received a subsidy from the Soviet Union in the form of bulk orders In 1981 its circulation was about 36 000 down from the Daily Worker s post war peak In March 2005 BBC News Magazine reported the Morning Star s circulation as between 13 000 and 14 000 quoting Haylett s comment perhaps only one in 10 of these readers would label themselves as Communists 3 89 The circulation was thought to be around 10 000 when Ben Chacko took over as editor in mid 2015 90 The Morning Star has also taken a much higher profile at trade union gatherings and within the UK trade union movement particularly with unions such as Unite GMB UCATT FBU Community CWU NUM Durham Miners Prison Officers and RMT Since 2008 the Morning Star has hired exhibition space at the Trades Union Congress with sponsored copies being handed out to delegates at the TUC Labour Party Conference at union conferences and high profile events such as the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival and the Durham Miners Gala The newspaper is also available at independent newsagents and shops such as RS McColl in local supermarkets such as Budgens at railway stations and on motorway service areas In addition it is stocked by the Co op Food chain of stores citation needed During the early morning of 28 July 2008 the offices of the newspaper were damaged by fire 91 and the edition of 29 July took a reduced form A similar incident occurred on 20 October 2014 when a fire broke out near the offices and a small number of staff had to relocate to the sports editor s house in order to finish the paper 92 On 1 June 2009 the Morning Star was re launched The re launch included a 16 page edition during the week and a 24 page weekend edition priced at 1 20 after a rise in its prices in September 2014 This rose to 1 50 in 2020 93 There is no Sunday edition of the newspaper There was also an expanded use of colour pictures and graphics plus a redesign and a modern layout of the pages The Morning Star also redesigned its website In addition a number of new and experienced journalists were engaged and the positions of full time Industrial Correspondent and Lobby Correspondent in the House of Commons were reintroduced In November 2011 the Morning Star launched an urgent appeal to raise 75 000 in order to address a number of funding issues which meant the paper might have gone under by the end of the year 94 On Monday 18 June 2012 the Morning Star moved to printing at two Trinity Mirror print sites in Watford and Oldham which improved distribution of the Morning Star to all parts of the country particularly Scotland In November 2021 The Canary revealed that the UK Foreign Office had tried unsuccessfully to discover the source of the Morning Star s funding during the 1970s A report by the Information Research Department stated While watertight evidence is no doubt lacking it might be possible for a skilled propagandist to present a convincing case which the CPGB Communist Party of Great Britain would find extremely difficult to refute The project would require some detailed research which IRD could no doubt undertake in conjunction with the Security Service Commenting on these revelations Ben Chacko the editor of the Morning Star told The Canary Given what we know of the secret state s extensive surveillance and sabotage of entirely legal protest movements and trade unions it is no surprise that British spooks also wanted to undermine the Morning Star Trying to discredit the newspaper with claims it must have had access to secret foreign funding run up against the fact that the Morning Star was not just the most authoritative source on industrial relations in the British press prime ministers from Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher made sure to obtain their copy but a daily newspaper whose integrity and professionalism was respected by other journalists as the spooks evidently found to their dismay This is a cautionary tale about the state s willingness to play dirty to discredit critical media It is absolutely relevant today given the calls we hear from both main parties in Parliament for tighter censorship bans on foreign owned media like China Central Television or Russia Today and for state regulation of so called fake news that conveniently ignores the barrage of fake news pumped out by Establishment media day in day out We must acknowledge the importance of defending free speech and the right to publish and be damned as our government connives at efforts to intimidate and jail journalists such as Julian Assange 95 Online version edit An online version of the paper was launched on 1 April 2004 Initially only some parts of the site were free including a PDF of the paper s front page the editorial Star Comment and all the articles from the culture and sports pages while features and the current affairs were subscription only On 1 January 2009 this policy was changed and all content was made freely available online 96 In April 2012 the paper launched a daily e edition of the full newspaper which readers can subscribe to for a charge 97 As of 2020 the number of articles non subscribers can read for free is limited Editors editAs the Daily Worker 1930 William Rust 98 1933 Jimmy Shields 98 1935 Idris Cox 98 1936 Rajani Palme Dutt 98 1938 Dave Springhall 98 1939 John Ross Campbell 98 1939 William Rust 98 1949 John Ross Campbell 1959 George MatthewsChairs of the editorial board have included Hewlett Johnson clergyman known as the Red Dean of Canterbury although he was not a member of the CPGB 99 As the Morning Star 1966 George Matthews 1974 Tony Chater 49 1995 John Haylett 2009 Bill Benfield 2012 Richard Bagley 2014 Ben ChackoSee also editCaribbean News West Indian Gazette The Red Republican History Workshop JournalNotes edit Issued by Topic Records two disc release were made in 1950 and 1951 A copy of the 1950 label can be seen on Harringay Online It is not known if Robeson continued to send recorded messages after 1951 References edit Morning Star Directory of Co operatives Co operatives UK Retrieved 25 May 2021 Dispatches The Guardian Retrieved on 5 December 2015 a b c d Coughlan 2005 Britain s Road to Socialism the Communist Party of Britain programme underlies our paper s editorial stance People s Press Printing Society Annual Report 2009 a b Howe Mark 2001 Is That Damned Paper Still Coming Out The Very Best of the Daily Worker Morning Star London People s Press Printing Society a b Newsinger John 2015 British Counterinsurgency 2nd ed Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 50 ISBN 9781137316868 Shaw Tony 1 April 1999 The Information Research Department of the British Foreign Office and the Korean War 1950 53 Journal of Contemporary History 34 2 269 doi 10 1177 002200949903400206 S2CID 159855506 via Sage Journals Woolf Virginia 14 December 1936 Why art to day follows politics Daily Worker Davis Angela 19 July 1977 Racism dictates the level of women s oppression The Morning Star Horsley David 2019 Billy Strachan 1921 1988 RAF Officer Communist Civil Rights Pioneer Legal Administrator Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man London Caribbean Labour Solidarity p 27 ISSN 2055 7035 a b c d Meddick Simon Payne Liz Katz Phil 2020 Red Lives Communists and the Struggle for Socialism UK Manifesto Press Cooperative Limited ISBN 978 1 907464 45 4 Burchett Wilfred 31 March 1954 A great disaster for the French army Daily Worker Pollitt Harry 7 September 1938 The real Britain is on the Ebro Daily Worker a b Jenks John 2006 British Propaganda and News Media in the Cold War Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 14 55 doi 10 1515 9780748626755 ISBN 9780748626755 The Papers of the Communist Party of Great Britain The Archive hub University of Manchester Help for Researchers Concise History of the British Newspaper in the Twentieth Century British Library website James Eaton and David Renton The Communist Party of Great Britain since 1920 Basingstoke Pallgrave 2002 pp 69 70 a b Bill Jones The Russia complex the British Labour Party and the Soviet Union Manchester Manchester University Press 1977 p 38 ISBN 0719006961 The death of Trotsky PDF worldsocialism org Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2015 a b Reds Labor and the War TIME 13 May 1940 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 14 July 2009 Editorial The Daily Worker Manchester Guardian 22 January 1941 reprint on The Guardian s website Taylor Philip M 2003 Munitions of the Mind A History of Propaganda Third Edition Manchester University Press p 214 ISBN 9780719067679 Andrew Thorpe The British Communist Party and Moscow 1920 43 Manchester University Press 2000 ISBN 0719053129 p 268 a b Lawrence S Wittner The Struggle Against The Bomb Volume One One World Or None Stanford California Stanford University Press p 172 ISBN 0804721416 David Widgery The Left in Britain 1956 68 Harmondsworth Penguin 1976 p 100 ISBN 0140550992 Rosser Mary September 1995 A Star That Never Sets the Early Years of the Morning Star Information for Social Change 2 14 15 doi 10 5281 zenodo 4609282 ISSN 1756 901X a b c d e f Deeson Martin 23 May 2005 Still flying the red flag The Independent on Sunday Retrieved 16 September 2017 Tomlinson J Left Right London John Calder 1981 Obituary Mary Rosser Hicks Daily Telegraph 10 January 2011 a b c d e f Platt 2015 Keith Laybourn Marxism in Britain Dissent Decline and Re emergence 1945 c 2000 Abingdon Routledge 2006 p 43 Winnington Alan 1950 I Saw the Truth in Korea 75 Farringdon Road London People s Press Printing Society Ltd a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Winnington Alan 24 May 1952 How we dropped the germ bombs Daily Worker Miller Owen 25 June 2020 Uncovering the Hidden History of the Korean War Jacobin Retrieved 17 January 2021 Phillip Knightley 2000 The First Casualty The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth Maker from the Crimea to Kosovo London Pion p 338 Hack Karl 2022 The Malayan Emergency Revolution and Counterinsurgency at the End of Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 315 This is the War in Malaya The Daily Worker 28 April 1952 Peng Chin Ward Ian Miraflor Norma 2003 Alias Chin Peng My Side of History Singapore Media Masters p 302 ISBN 981 04 8693 6 Ngoei Wen Qing 2019 Arc of Containment Britain the United States and Anticommunism in Southeast Asia New York Cornell University Press p 89 ISBN 978 1501716409 This Horror Must End Daily Worker Morning Star 10 May 1952 p 1 Brotherstone Terry 3 November 2006 Peter Fryer The Guardian Apor Peter 2015 Fabricating Authenticity in Soviet Hungary The Afterlife of the First Hungarian Soviet Republic in the Age of State Socialism Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 78308 419 7 Archive of the Communist Party of Great Britain CPGB Retrieved on 5 December 2015 Liberation Hero and Ex Star Worker Sarah Carneson Dies Archived 2 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine People s Daily Morning Star 6 November 2015 a b Mary Rosser Hicks 21 May 2018 via www telegraph co uk Christine F Collette and Keith Laybourn Modern Britain Since 1979 A Reader London I B Tauris 2003 p 185 Editorial The battle for the Communist Party archive The Guardian 11 June 1977 Retrieved 11 June 2016 Berger Stefan Laporte Norman 2010 Friendly Enemies Britain and the GDR 1949 1990 New York amp Oxford Berghahn Books p 190 ISBN 9781845456979 a b c d Tony Chater editor of the Morning Star obituary The Daily Telegraph 14 August 2016 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2016 Laybourn Marxism in Britain p 116 a b John Callaghan The Far Left in British Politics Oxford Basil Blackwell 1987 BBC World Service Britain s Daily Papers The Morning Star broadcast on 26 November 1981 retrieved 23 July 2016 Laybourn Marxism in Britain p 122 Communists Expel Hardline Editor The Times 14 January 1985 p 2 Retrieved 13 December 2016 subscription required Collette and Laybourn Modern Britain Since 1945 p 190 Laybourn Marxism in Britain p 160 Morning Star Strike Channel 4 News 28 October 2006 Retrieved on 5 December 2015 via YouTube Official communist opposition Weekly Worker 11 October 2000 Morning Star strike BBC World 27 October 2006 Retrieved on 5 December 2015 via YouTube Morning Star marks Labour result with first Sunday edition BBC News 13 September 2015 Retrieved 13 September 2015 a b Demianyk Graeme 13 December 2016 Morning Star Newspaper Condemned By Labour MPs For Calling Fall Of Aleppo In Syria A Liberation The Huffington Post Retrieved 13 December 2016 a b Sabin Lamiat 14 December 2016 We should ve invaded Syria Morning Star pp 1 3 Archived from the original on 14 December 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Morning Star statement on the situation in Aleppo Morning Star Aleppo the untold story Morning Star Recycled propaganda Morning Star Society People s Printing Press Headline hysteria proves the power of propaganda Morning Star It s time to judge Assad s Aleppo campaign by the standards that we set ourselves in Mosul Coffee House The Spectator 14 December 2016 Coates Sam 16 December 2016 Corbyn stands by Morning Star after Syria row The Times Retrieved 16 December 2016 subscription required Horsley David 2019 Billy Strachan 1921 1988 RAF Officer Communist Civil Rights Pioneer Legal Administrator Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man London Caribbean Labour Solidarity p 4 ISSN 2055 7035 Stop the war start the peace 25 February 2022 Retrieved 11 June 2022 Support Us Morning Star 13 December 2017 Retrieved 8 June 2020 The Morning Star is a reader owned co operative and unique as a lone socialist voice in a sea of corporate media People s Press Printing Society Limited 61st Annual Report for Annual General Meeting June 2006 p 4 Gawthorpe Andrew 27 January 2016 Left and Gone Foreign Affairs ISSN 0015 7120 Retrieved 9 July 2022 a b The Brexit lies New Statesman 29 June 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 a b Left wants Out for the right reasons Morning Star 13 April 2016 p 8 Brexit Morning Star says time to leave BlakkPepper com 23 June 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 We will stand no rival candidates all votes must go to Labour Morning Star Retrieved 20 December 2020 Cowburn Ashley 24 April 2017 General election British Communist party will not field any candidates and throws support behind Jeremy Corbyn The Independent Retrieved 20 December 2020 Benfield Bill 31 December 2008 New year old struggles Morning Star p 18 Haylett John 29 April 2016 Obituary Bill Benfield Morning Star Archived from the original on 17 September 2017 Bagley Richard 22 May 2012 What s next for the Daily Miracle Morning Star p 16 Bagley Richard 25 May 2012 New Editor Richard Bagley on the future of the Morning Star Communist Party UK Archived from the original on 17 September 2017 Morning Star Nothing to see here Weekly Worker weeklyworker co uk Tributes paid to departing Star stalwarts Morning Star website 28 July 2014 New editor hailed by leading lefties Morning Star website 23 May 2015 a b Greenslade Roy 26 May 2015 Morning Star opts for youth by appointing Ben Chacko as editor The Guardian Retrieved 13 December 2016 Contact Us Morningstaronline co uk Retrieved 24 July 2011 Home Morning Star Morningstaronline co uk Retrieved 24 July 2011 See also Deeson Martin 23 May 2005 Still flying the red flag The Independent on Sunday Retrieved 16 September 2017 In its 75th year and selling around 14 000 copies a day down from the high of 100 000 when it was still called The Daily Worker the paper calls itself the one that s different Rising in the east The Economist 6 June 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2016 Morning Star offices go up in smoke Metro 28 July 2008 M Star Online 20 October 2014 Morning Star production team produce the paper from KadeemSimmonds front room after a fire in our street Tweet via Twitter Morning Star Changes to your weekend Morning Star Retrieved on 5 December 2015 Sunny Hundal Following the covid 19 lockdown of March 2020 the paper appealed again to its to its readers amp supporters to raise 90 000 It successfully achieved this Morning Star could go under by Christmas Liberal Conspiracy 16 November 2011 Exclusive Foreign Office secretly targeted leading British news outlets 3 November 2021 Richard Bagley Morning Star Online to go free in 2009 Morning Star website c 11 November 2008 Morning Star Online subscriptions page Morning Star website June 2012 a b c d e f g James Klugmann March 1985 History of the Communist Party of Great Britain 1927 1941 London Lawrence amp Wishart p 57 ISBN 978 0853156123 Watson Natalie E Hewlett Johnson Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 34202 Subscription or UK public library membership required Sources editCoughlan Sean 21 March 2005 Pressing on BBC News Magazine Retrieved 14 December 2016 Platt Edward 4 August 2015 Inside the Morning Star Britain s last communist newspaper New Statesman Retrieved 13 December 2016 External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morning Star British newspaper amp oldid 1199329323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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