In 1977 Jacques was chosen to succeed
James Klugmann as editor of
Marxism Today, the theoretical magazine of the Communist Party, to which he had contributed for a number of years. He remained editor until its closure in 1991. As editor of
Marxism Today, Jacques presided over the golden age of the magazine, when its articles received national attention and helped to shape many debates on politics. In a long feature article in the
Financial Times in November 1982, its chief political commentator Malcolm Rutherford reported that 'One of the most interesting developments in current British politics is taking place in the Communist Party or, more particularly, in the pages of
Marxism Today .... The issue at stake is whether the British Left will continue to disintegrate or whether, partly through
Marxism Today, it can re-establish itself on a new basis'. The well-known right-wing columnist
Peregrine Worsthorne commented in
The Sunday Telegraph seven years later that Jacques had 'transformed
Marxism Today into a publication which has appeal outside the narrow, coffin-like, confines of the party': he increased the readership from 3,500 to 15,600, at the same time as the membership of the Communist Party declined from 26,000 to 7,500.
Neal Ascherson described the magazine as 'the most serious single focus for political discussion' in the late 1970s and 1980s, adding that 'Few read it, but a whole generation chewed over its ideas'. Kevin Halpin, another senior party figure, declared that 'The conclusion that I draw is that Martin Jacques is not a fit person to be the editor (of
Marxism Today) and I shall so move'. Jacques survived censure by the party's executive committee but many have seen this episode as triggering the process which led to the eventual split in the Communist Party between hardliners and reformists. The enmity lasted, and in 1987 Tony Chater, editor of the, by then struggling,
Morning Star, dismissed
Marxism Today as 'pure, revisionist, right-wing gimmickry', adding that 'Real Communists can't stomach
Marxism Today'. Two of Jacques's closest collaborators were
Eric Hobsbawm and
Stuart Hall. It was in
Marxism Today that Hobsbawm published his article on 'The Forward March of Labour Halted' (
Marxism Today, September 1978, pp. 279–286) and that Hall published his on 'The Great Moving Right Show' (
Marxism Today, January 1979, pp. 14–20). Through these and other articles, including his own editorials, Jacques and
Marxism Today were influential voices in critiquing the failures of the Labour Party and of postwar UK corporatist politics, and in understanding the rise of '
Thatcherism', a term which
Marxism Today defined and helped to shape – though it did not coin the term – at a time when most analysts regarded Thatcher as no different from previous Conservative prime ministers. In 1981, with
Francis Mulhern, Jacques edited
The Forward March of Labour Halted?, a collection of essays analysing the crisis on the left, and in 1983 Jacques extended the analysis in a book co-edited with Stuart Hall,
The Politics of Thatcherism (1983). In the same year, Jacques conceived the idea of a '
People's March for Jobs', Under Jacques's editorship,
Marxism Today organised a series of influential events and conferences including three weekend-long conferences in London, 'The Great Moving Right Show' (October 1982), 'Left Alive' (November 1984), and 'Left Unlimited' (October 1986), attended by 1700, 2500, and nearly 4000 participants respectively.
Marxism Today became known for its innovative designs and marketing strategies, which included the introduction of advertisements, and even a line of branded goods such as mugs, t-shirts, and boxer shorts. In 1982 Malcolm Rutherford noted that 'you can buy it at W.H. Smith .... It is well-written, well-edited and brightly presented', and characterised by an 'attractive lay-out'. This again resulted in a book co-edited with Stuart Hall,
New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s (1989). Jacques moved the authorship as well as the readership of
Marxism Today way beyond the shrinking confines of the Communist Party, and among those who wrote for the magazine were
Gordon Brown, and
Tony Blair, and it even featured interviews with
Conservative Party politicians
Chris Patten,
Michael Heseltine and
Edwina Currie. Regarding Blair, Jacques recalled, 'He rang me one day ... He said, "I'd like to write for Marxism Today – would that be possible?" I worked on what he wrote with him; it went through several drafts. What's the lightest boxing division? Featherweight, It was lighter than that'. The article was entitled 'Forging a New Agenda', and published in
Marxism Today in October 1991. Among the journalists who cut their teeth at the magazine were
Bea Campbell and
Suzanne Moore. In April 1997, Jacques and Stuart Hall analysed the Blair phenomenon, of which they were deeply critical, arguing that the 'fundamental point of departure [of New Labour] is that the last 18 years of Conservative government constitute the new natural law'. A subsequent article for the
New Statesman further underlined the extent to which Blair had merely accepted rather than challenged the Thatcherite response to post-Fordism and globalisation. In November 1998,
Marxism Today returned for a one-off special issue edited by Jacques which extended this critique, with contributions by
Eric Hobsbawm,
Stuart Hall,
Will Hutton,
Richard Wilkinson,
Suzie Orbach,
Tom Nairn,
Suzanne Moore,
Anatole Kaletsky and others. Its cover featured a picture of Tony Blair, with the single headline, 'Wrong'. With sales of over 30,000, it proved to be the best-selling issue ever. == Demos ==