Being a small group in the UK, it was best known for the Marxist magazine of the same name partially edited by
Keir Starmer from 1986 to 1987.[2] The magazine is believed to have been produced by the Pabloist International Revolutionary Marxist Tendency (IRMT)[3] and advertised its events and publications, although one of the authors identified it as being an outgrowth of the
Socialist Society connected with
Ralph Miliband and
Hilary Wainwright.[4]Paul Mason has called it a "Trotskyite front magazine",[5] although this is disputed.[4] The French Trotskyist journalist
Maurice Najman was also cited as a key supporter.[4]
Its politics were defined by one of its later authors Andrew Coates as being "aligned to the European ‘alternative’ movements of the time which stood for ecology, feminism and self-management. These were forerunners of later radical green-left groups, Los Indignados, Podemos, the left of Labour and similar currents within social democratic parties."[6]
It was described by the left wing magazine
Chartist as "the human face of the hard left".[7]Peter Hitchens described Socialist Alternative's "preoccupation with sexual politics and green issues" as presaging the politics of all today's major British politicians.[8]
The magazine included articles by
Michalis Raptis,[9][10][11] the leader of the International Revolutionary Marxist Tendency and the left wing Labour MP
Eric Heffer,
Peter Tatchell[6] as well as an interview with
Tony Benn.[12][13] There were also advertisements for Michael Raptis's "Self Management Lectures"[14] and IRMT publications.[15] Keir Starmer wrote articles on the
Wapping strike,[16][17] the 1986 TUC conference,[18] criticising Labour leader
Neil Kinnock's moves towards the market economy,[19] a book review of Eric Heffer's Labour's Future,[20] Trade Unions and pluralism,[21] an interview with Tony Benn[12] and left wing approaches to local government.[22]
The magazine was still publishing in 1989[23] and 1994.[24]