

Matt Myers, "The Halted March of the European Left: The Working Class in Britain, France, and Italy, 1968-1989" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Sep 30, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Matt Myers, a Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Oxford and author of The Halted March of the European Left, delves into the vibrancy of the left in the 1970s. He challenges the dominant narrative around its decline, emphasizing strategic choices that marginalized newer worker groups. The conversation touches on the impact of automation, the ambivalent left response to immigrant-led strikes, and the transformation brought by educated activists. Myers also reflects on contemporary class politics and signs of renewal post-2008.
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1970s Were A Contested Moment
- The 1970s were far more open and dynamic for the European left than conventional decline narratives suggest.
- Archival evidence shows new entrants energized unions and parties, creating real chances for renewal.
Hobsbawm's Decline Thesis Revisited
- Eric Hobsbawm attributed left decline to structural shifts like deindustrialization and cultural fragmentation.
- Myers argues those forces didn't automatically produce decline and were contested by activists in the 1970s.
Strikes Led By Marginal Workers
- Migrant, female, and young workers led major strikes and often used class language to unify demands.
- Cases include Grunwick in Britain, Citroën in France, and Fiat in Italy.