ON February 26, 2026, a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court led by Chief Justice Surya Kant launched a scathing reprimand over portions of a Class 8 social science textbook. “Deep-rooted conspiracy”, “very, very calculated move”, “reckless, irresponsible, motivated, contemptuous conduct and manner” were some of the phrases used by the CJI. “They fired the gun and the judiciary is bleeding today,” he said, and declared that “heads must roll.”
IT is now clear that Prime Minister Modi’s visit to Israel was most ill-advised, ill timed. It is not merely a moral question but goes far beyond, into the realm of geopolitics and national strategy. The monstrosity of the Gaza genocide has not ended in the complete extinguishing of the embers and ruins that struck Palestinian people and the Gaza strip. Further, the rapidity of expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank systematically undermines the possibility of a two-state solution.
THE way 30,000 contract workers at the Panipat Refinery of Indian Oil Corporation Ltd (IOCL) expressed their anger on February 23, is proof that when oppression reaches its peak, rebellion is inevitable.
THE two-day meeting of the Odisha State Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) was held at Koida in Sundargarh district on February 25–26, 2026. The meeting began with a massive procession and public rally at Koida, reflecting the strong participation and enthusiasm of workers, peasants, youth, and women. The rally was presided over by Comrade Laxman Munda, MLA (Bonai). Central and state leaders of the Party addressed the mammoth gathering.
ON March 24, 2026, the Jan Akrosh Rally in Delhi will become the united roar of India’s workers, peasants, agricultural workers, women, youth, students and oppressed, led by CPI(M) cadres from the Hindi heartland and across the country. It will be a culmination of the state level Jathas that are being organised in the north Indian states from Jammu & Kashmir to Jharkhand, building a tide of resistance in every district, tehsil and basti.
FOR quite some time there was a sharp criticism about the Modi government’s use of central agencies like CBI and ED to defame important leaders of the opposition and often imprison them. The process of such weaponisation of the agencies became increasingly pronounced after amendments carried out to the PMLA (Prevention of Money Laundering Act) enabling the ED to arrest and imprison the accused and keeping them behind bars by making the securing of bail more difficult than other criminal laws.
THOUSANDS of farmers and scheme workers marched over 60 Km from February 24, 2026 for three days until the state government finally conceded their main demands on February 27. The Long March by farmers and scheme workers was jointly led under the banners of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) and Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) in Ahilyanagar district.
‘A play can communicate with the people directly, without jargon, in an idiom that people understand, and by touching their heart. In that sense, what you might take one hour to explain in a speech, a play can convey that in twenty minutes,’ said R. Arunkumar, inaugurating a two-day cultural workshop in New Delhi on February 1, 2026. This workshop was held to create street plays and songs for the state-level jathas that will take place as a build up to the Jan Akrosh Rally in New Delhi on March 24.
ANY budget is a statement of estimates of income receipts and expenditure of the government for the coming fiscal year. The Kerala Budget of 2026-27 goes much beyond into a political statement of a state government commitment to people, in the context of erosion of fiscal federalism and neoliberal straitjacketing.