Unison director of organising KEVIN LUCAS explains the Organising to Win strategy, its successes to date and key tests on the union’s horizon
The RMT has long been one of the favoured groups to shackle in the tabloid stocks and throw rotten vegetables at.
The London Evening Standard, for example, has for years loved to run "commuter misery because of the hard left"-style reports, even if there is no basis in fact.
The RMT in some senses filled the role the National Union of Mineworkers played for the press in the 1980s. For Arthur Scargill, read Bob Crow.
JOHN LANG recalls how Murdoch used scabbing electricians and even devised a fake newspaper to force a confrontation with printers – then sacked them all
The once beating heart of British journalism was undone by technological change, union battles and Murdoch’s 1986 Wapping coup – leaving London the only major capital without a press club, says TIM GOPSILL
A chance find when clearing out our old office led us to renew a friendship across 5,000 miles and almost nine decades of history, explains ROGER McKENZIE
A just transition to Great British Railways and a clean and safe railway for all is not only desirable but also necessary. MARYAM ESLAMDOUST explains


