Sep 18, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Israeli tanks, bulldozers and ground troops have entered Gaza City 

Israeli ground troops, supported by relentless artillery and air power, have succeeded in penetrating the heart of Gaza City. Eyewitnesses have described the latest round of terror unleashed, with hundreds of tanks and armored vehicles methodically advancing through dense residential neighborhoods.

Video and photographic evidence obtained by Reuters, the New York Times, Al Jazeera and the BBC, shows columns of tanks and bulldozers entering Sheikh Radwan, a district that was once home to tens of thousands, now reduced to rubble and dust.

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Amid this systematic devastation, Israel announced the opening of a new temporary evacuation route out of Gaza City, offering a “window” of 48 hours purportedly to permit civilians to flee before what Israeli politicians call the “final occupation” of the city.

Another measure of the savage mass murder of Palestinians by Israel, the so-called “clear routes” and humanitarian corridors, are the bombings and gunfire along all major highways south, which are forcing desperate Gazans to navigate a gauntlet of tanks, snipers and unmapped minefields.

“We tried to leave when the leaflets were dropped, but the bombs followed us down the coastal road,” said one survivor. “If we turn back, we die. If we go forward, we may still die.” The Israeli military claims 350,000 people have already fled Gaza City, yet up to half a million remain trapped amid siege and bombardment, unable or unwilling to abandon their homes and relatives.

In the words of a Gaza schoolteacher to Al Jazeera: “I prefer to die here in my neighborhood than become a refugee again.”

The ground offensive is unprecedented in scale and firepower, featuring at least three armored formations operating “in the heart of Gaza City,” according to direct reporting by ABC News and multiple international outlets. Plumes of smoke and fire rise above entire districts, while drone and artillery strikes hit areas designated by Israel as “terror sites.”

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The massive crime by Israel, which has been clear to the world’s population for 23 months now, was finally recognized by US Senator Bernie Sanders on Wednesday, who declared for the first time on the Senate floor that Israel “is committing genocide in Gaza.”

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The imperialist plans of Israel and the US is for the forced expulsion of all Palestinians from Gaza, followed by privatization and reconstruction of the region for elite tourism and corporate development.

The proposal for a “Gaza Riviera,” detailed in leaked State Department documents and confirmed by media such as CNBC and CNN, envisages the relocation of over two million residents, digital “voluntary” resettlement exchanges, and the building of “AI-driven smart cities” to replace the ruins of Palestinian communities.

In a grotesque AI-generated promotional video, Donald Trump boasted of a beachfront resort to be built atop the devastation. The refusal to allow the return of refugees, the ongoing destruction of records, and the refusal to allow journalists or aid agencies into Gaza all point to a monstrous crime that points to the future that humanity faces in the twenty-first century under world capitalism.

2. US government attorneys admit Labor Department has still not complied with June 2024 court order in Will Lehman’s case

Will Lehman in 2023 

In a September 2 response to a lawsuit brought by Mack Trucks worker and socialist Will Lehman, the Trump administration formally admitted that the Department of Labor has still not produced the legally required explanation for its rejection of his complaint over massive voter suppression in the 2022–23 United Auto Workers (UAW) national elections. A court hearing in the case is scheduled for later this month.

On August 1, the Department of Labor rejected Lehman’s complaint over UAW election fraud for a second time, writing in a perfunctory letter that such a statement would be provided “at a future date.” 

The government’s ongoing efforts to maintain that the 2022-23 UAW elections were legitimate come amid an intensifying crisis facing the administration of UAW President Shawn Fain. While effectively coming to the rescue of Fain and the UAW apparatus, the Trump White House is simultaneously engaged in furious efforts to establish a dictatorship and overturn the Constitution, with its plans rapidly accelerating following the assassination of fascist Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.

The government’s September filing is the first substantive response by the government to Lehman’s suit. Lehman had sued the Department of Labor and US Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer in June of this year, after more than a year of stonewalling by the Department of Labor following a court ruling in his favor. 

In what Bloomberg Law termed a “rare rebuke” of the Labor Department, federal district court judge David Lawson ruled in favor of Lehman in June 2024, finding that the department under the Biden administration had acted illegally and in an “arbitrary and capricious” manner when it dismissed Lehman’s complaint on narrow procedural grounds. Lawson had sent the complaint back to the Labor Department “for further proceedings,” stating they “at a minimum, must consist of the production of a supplemental statement of reasons.”

Instead, first the Biden and now the Trump administration have, in essence, defied that order. The Department’s latest filing openly acknowledges that no “statement of reasons” has been issued to Lehman more than a year after Lawson ordered it.

“The Department of Labor under both the Democrats and Republicans continues to demonstrate that it has nothing to do with defending workers’ rights and interests,” Lehman told the WSWS. “It is propping up the UAW apparatus precisely because the union bureaucracy serves to suppress opposition by workers to corporate exploitation. But in doing so, they’re only exposing the pro-corporate, anti-working class role of both the union apparatus and the state even more.”

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Since Trump’s election, Fain and the UAW leadership have openly aligned the UAW with the fascistic president’s trade war agenda. Fain has repeatedly hailed the wartime economy of the 1940s, when the UAW enforced a no-strike pledge and speed-up, and has called for auto plants to be retooled for military production. The UAW apparatus, along with the union bureaucracies more broadly, have worked ever more feverishly to subordinate workers to the needs of US imperialism, including the ongoing efforts to sabotage the strike by 640 GE Aerospace workers in Ohio and Kentucky.

With American capitalism hurtling toward dictatorship and global war, the UAW and other union bureaucracies, integrated into the highest levels of government policy, are playing a central role in preparing the “home front.” The AFL-CIO functions as a “domestic NATO,” as Biden revealingly put it.

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Against this backdrop, Lehman’s struggle is of immense significance. In the 2022 UAW elections, he ran openly as a socialist, calling for the abolition of the union bureaucracy and the transfer of power and decision-making to rank-and-file workers. His campaign won broad support, winning nearly 5,000 votes, despite the efforts of the bureaucracy to keep workers in the dark.

“The implications of my lawsuit extend far beyond the UAW elections,” Lehman said, commenting on the latest developments in the case. “They expose the reality that the union, backed by both political parties and the state, is hostile to democratic rights and interests of rank-and-file workers and retirees.

“Throughout the 2022 elections and afterwards, my campaign stood for the interests of rank-and-file workers and retirees, and we challenged every violation of our rights. We followed all of the correct legal procedures, and in June of last year, we won a historic ruling against the Biden administration’s Secretary of Labor. But after three years, under Biden and under Trump, the government is still stubbornly refusing to follow the law and address the voter suppression that my campaign exposed. It is impossible for any fair-minded worker who has followed the progress of my complaints through the legal system not to conclude that the system is totally broken.”

“We need an entirely new framework to defend our interests, which is what the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees is fighting for. Workers must take matters into their own hands and build rank-and-file committees in every factory and workplace, independent of the union apparatus, to fight for our rights and link struggles across industries and borders.

“Workers need both fighting organizations and a new political perspective. The massive levels of inequality and concentration of wealth in the US are totally incompatible with democracy, whether in the UAW, in the workplace, or anywhere else. We need a political program and movement based on the interests of the international working class to stop the descent into dictatorship and world war under capitalism.”

3. Canada:  CUPW continues to demobilize Canada Post workers in face of management’s sweeping restructuring plan

Daniel Berkley, a leading member of the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee:

At a press conference last Friday, Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) National President Jan Simpson announced an ad flyer-delivery ban starting Monday, September 15. The prohibition on delivering commercial flyers, for which postal workers are not properly compensated, replaces a more than three-month overtime ban that CUPW initiated last May to block an all-out strike by the rank and file against Canada Post’s plan to radically restructure the postal service at workers’ expense.

The ad-flyer ban is popular among many postal workers, because it reduces the deliveries we perform for next to no pay and reduces the loads we have to carry. But from the standpoint of developing our struggle against Canada Post’s drive to destroy the postal service in its current form by eliminating the majority of fulltime workers and “Amazonifying” our working conditions, the ban must be understood as yet another desperate attempt by the CUPW bureaucracy to hold back our fight.

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CUPW is running our struggle into the ground. If its demobilizing strategy is not countermanded by the rank and file, it will inevitably result in a defeat that would set a precedent for the devastation of jobs in the public and private sectors, and for the destruction of public services as the government redirects all of society’s resources towards rearmament, handouts to the financial oligarchy, and war. 

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The struggle that postal workers find ourselves in is of vital importance to all workers in Canada, public and private sector alike. The legal right to strike has been effectively abolished, while working conditions deteriorate across the board. Fundamental questions about the role of new automation and AI technologies are being posed point-blank for postal workers, but they are relevant to workers in virtually every workplace. Will AI and technological change more generally be used for the benefit of working people, reducing workloads and raising living standards? Or will they be employed for the benefit of the capitalist ruling class, intensifying worker-exploitation to squeeze out more profit, build more lethal weapons, and swell the fortunes of the billionaires? 

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The union apparatus shudders at the prospect of a workers’ counteroffensive against corporate and government interests, which would inevitably develop as a rebellion against the bureaucracy and its corporatist perks. But conditions for the development of such a movement are rapidly developing. A strike by 10,000 Ontario community college workers began last week to fight against attacks on their job security and wages. Like postal workers, they too have a stake in defending the right to strike. But this right, along with working conditions and wages, cannot be defended under the discipline of the various union bureaucracies. 

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To fight Canada Post, and the Liberal government and corporate Canada, which both back management to the hilt, it is imperative that postal workers take the struggle into our own hands by building rank-and-file committees in every workplace, joined together in a network under the leadership of the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee. The tasks of these committees will be to advance demands based on what we need, not what the corporation claims is affordable, and to broaden our struggle to other sections of workers confronting the same threats to their jobs and living conditions.

Uniting with other sections of workers to defend the right to strike, public services, and working conditions for all is an urgent necessity. And the conditions to develop this movement are favorable. Workers everywhere are tired of worsening conditions, stagnant and declining wages, the growing gulf between rich and poor, the tens of billions stolen from public services to fund war, and the increasingly authoritarian methods used by the ruling class, its state, and union “partners” to impose attacks on us. This is why to secure our demands, we need to arm ourselves with a socialist and internationalist program that prioritizes the needs of workers, the vast majority of the population, over the accumulation of private profit by the oligarchs.

4. ABC/Disney joins fascist purge, suspends Jimmy Kimmel Live! indefinitely over Kirk remarks

After facing pressure from the Trump administration on Monday, ABC—owned by Disney—announced it would be suspending the late-night television show Jimmy Kimmel Live! “indefinitely,” after the host came under attack from fascists and Trump administration officials over his commentary on the assassination of Charlie Kirk.

While TV viewership is down across the board, Jimmy Kimmel Live! remains fairly popular. In addition to competing with Stephen Colbert for top late-night ratings on network television, the show has 20.7 million subscribers on YouTube—more than double the 10.2 million for CBS’s The Late Show with Stephen Colbert but less than the 32.8 million for NBC’s The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

During his monologue on Monday night, Kimmel correctly observed that in the wake of Kirk’s assassination “the MAGA gang” was “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.”

Kimmel’s remarks were neither inflammatory nor inaccurate. In the wake of Kirk’s killing, right-wing politicians and media figures demanded retribution from the “left” even though no evidence had emerged revealing the shooter’s motivations or politics.

At no point in his monologue did Kimmel assert that the shooter was right-wing, a Trump supporter, or affiliated with any party or organization. No evidence has emerged linking the shooter to any left-wing group or the Democratic Party; the only known personal details are that he despised Kirk’s “hatred” and reportedly had a relationship with a man. These facts have been weaponized by the Trump administration and its media allies to mount a reactionary campaign blaming “the left,” “LGBT ideology,” and “transgender radicals” for Kirk’s death.

Kimmel’s ouster is part of a widening purge of journalists and commentators accused of insufficient loyalty following Trump’s return to the White House. This political retaliation against Kimmel is part of a coordinated campaign to silence critics of the Trump administration across the corporate media, before and after the killing of Kirk.

5. France:  Build rank-and-file committees to wage the struggle against Macron and war!

Hundreds of thousands of workers will strike on today’s day of action in France, a week after the fall of the French government and mass “Block Everything” protests called on social media. As social anger mounts against President Emmanuel Macron and his new prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, France is not only in the throes of a parliamentary crisis. It is passing through a crisis of rule rooted in an international conflict between the working class and the capitalist oligarchy.

Workers reject the demands of the political establishment across Europe for deep social cuts to fund the sovereign debt and unpopular wars, while preserving the oligarchy’s obscene wealth. Replacing François Bayrou with Lecornu as French prime minister has not lessened this insoluble class conflict one iota. As Lecornu met with union leaders and the bourgeois Socialist Party (PS) to discuss new cuts and assemble another minority government, his poll ratings fell to 16 percent.

In the explosive class battles that lie ahead, the working class must take control of its own struggles. Militant organizations of the rank and file, built completely outside the framework of official politics, must take control of the class struggle out of the hands of the union bureaucracies and their “social dialog” with the capitalist state. This is the only way workers can organize resistance to and defeat the ruling oligarchy’s program of fascism, genocide and war.

Political lessons of the European strike wave of 2023, including the defeat of the struggle against Macron’s pension cuts, must be drawn. An overwhelming majority of French people opposed the cuts, millions of workers went on strike, and riots shook cities across France. Yet Macron was able to impose his cuts, because the union leaderships and parties in Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s New Popular Front (NFP) called off strikes and protests once Macron promulgated his illegitimate cuts as law.

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The policy of Mélenchon, for his part, is to lull the working class to sleep and keep subordinating it to the union bureaucracy. He has claimed “It is enough for us to let the situation ripen,” pointing to the fact that several union bureaucracies have called protests and claiming that “It is useless to tire oneself out trying to do more.” Peddling hopes that the union bureaucracies will call more protests and force Macron’s resignation, he says nothing to prepare workers and youth for a situation where the bourgeoisie would react to Macron’s fall by attacking workers even more aggressively.

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The PES calls for the transfer of power in all factories and workplaces from the union bureaucracies to the rank and file. To wage this struggle, workers need rank-and-file organizations to overcome the opposition of union bureaucracies whose “social dialog” ties workers to the diktat of the capitalist state. The Parti de l’égalité socialiste proposes the following demands, on which a political offensive can be waged in the working class to build support for the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC):

  • Expropriate the capitalist oligarchy!

  • Bring down Macron, abolish the Fifth Republic’s executive presidency!

  • No to imperialist war and NATO, build an anti-war movement in the working class!

  • Stop the Gaza genocide! No persecution of opponents of genocide!

  • Stop the persecution of immigrants! For the international unity of the working class!

  • For the United Socialist States of Europe! 

6. Perspective:  The social crisis fueling the collapse of democracy in America

What is happening in America outside of—and propelling—the frenzy within the political superstructure? Beneath the surface, the basic class contradictions of what Leon Trotsky called the “death agony of capitalism” are manifesting themselves.  

Inflation is sharply eroding living standards, while workers and families are burdened with record levels of debt. The first waves of massive cuts to social programs are being felt, alongside the accelerated dismantling of public education. At the same time, unsafe working conditions continue to claim lives every day, with thousands of workers killed on the job each year in what amounts to an industrial slaughterhouse.

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic—entirely ignored by the media and political establishment—continues to exact a deadly toll, even as the remnants of public health infrastructure are dismantled and the most basic protections, including vaccines, are eliminated.

One of the leading mouthpieces of big business, the Wall Street Journal, gave a glimpse of this deepening crisis in an article posted Wednesday on its website with the headline, “The Two-Speed Economy Is Back as Low-Income Americans Give Up Gains.” The article is published in the newspaper’s Thursday print edition under the headline, “Divergent American Economy Gets More Divided.”

“There are two economies in the U.S. right now, and they are moving in different directions,” the commentary begins, noting that higher-income Americans “are still spending like gangbusters,” while for most workers, wage growth “has petered out. Those workers are curbing their spending and in some cases are struggling to find jobs.” Unemployment is hitting African Americans and young people particularly hard, while home prices and rents are soaring.

“The divided fortunes of rich and poor in the U.S. may sound like an old story,” the Journal acknowledges, but “the gulf is widening again.”

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Overshadowing even this colossal and growing inequality is the specter of a default in the financial markets, with personal, corporate and government debt all hitting stratospheric levels and runaway speculation in opaque or worthless investment vehicles like cryptocurrencies. 

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Under these conditions, the policies of the Trump administration have assumed an increasingly reckless and incendiary character. Its tariff barriers, adopted and modified seemingly at random, are devastating global trade, the driving force of world economic growth. Its foreign policy promotes military conflicts across the globe that threaten to coalesce into a Third World War fought with nuclear weapons.

This is only a partial portrait of the social crisis in America. The conditions fueling the present breakdown were not created by Trump, but his government, acting on behalf of the corporate and financial oligarchy, is vastly accelerating processes that have been developing for decades under both Democrats and Republicans. These same processes are expressed, in different forms, in every country around the world.

It is impossible to understand the violent turn toward dictatorship in American politics outside of this social reality. And it is impossible to seriously oppose dictatorship apart from the development of a mass movement of the working class, directed against the wealth of the oligarchy and the capitalist system on which it rests.

7. United States:  Legionella outbreak at GM Tech Center in Detroit suburb

On September 10, 2025, two employees working at the Cole Engineering building at the General Motors technical center in Warren, Michigan, tested positive for Legionnaires’ disease, a severe and potentially fatal lung infection caused by Legionella bacteria. The Macomb County Health Department notified GM, and the Cole Engineering building was ordered closed “out of an abundance of caution” until at least September 22, when third-party test results become available. The company has not yet confirmed the engineering center as the source of exposure.

Legionnaires’ disease (legionellosis) is a severe type of pneumonia caused by Legionella bacteria. It is contracted through inhaling mist or aerosolized water contaminated with the bacteria. Common sources include cooling towers, HVAC systems, hot water plumbing, decorative fountains and other engineered water systems.

Symptoms typically appear 2–10 days after exposure and include fever, cough, shortness of breath, muscle aches, headaches, gastrointestinal symptoms or confusion in more severe cases. For high-risk populations, such as current or ex-smokers or people 50 or older, the disease can be fatal. One in 10 people who get infected with Legionnaires’ disease die from lung failure or other complications.

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Industrial workers are particularly at risk due to extensive, complex water systems at manufacturing plants. Cooling towers and industrial air conditioning systems are locations where Legionella bacteria are known to thrive and produce aerosolized contaminated water. With the constant drive to increase profit margins, companies are incentivized to reduce spending on maintenance and safety and cover up outbreaks to avoid loss of production.

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Even when corporations are caught engaging in criminal neglect of safety, they are fined at most a pittance compared to their operating profits. In 2023, a 61-year-old worker died from Legionnaires’ disease at Huron Inc., a Michigan auto supplier. Investigations showed that multiple workers were infected and hospitalized over several years, with internal tests detecting Legionella bacteria. The company was cited for failing to keep employees safe from a recognized hazard and fined just $10,300 for killing the worker.

Huron was acquired by Seven Mile Capital Partners in 2015, which then sold it to Adrian, an international private investment company with $62 billion in assets in 2017. For these giant investment firms, the penalty for killing a worker is a rounding error, the cost of doing business.

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Every day in the United States, an average of 385 workers die from hazardous working conditions. Legionnaires’ disease is only one expression of this ongoing social crime: workers forced into unsafe factories and offices, while companies and their financial backers profit. Without independent organization and struggle by workers themselves, outbreaks like those in Warren, Dearborn, and at Huron Inc. will continue—and more lives will be needlessly lost. 

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Autoworkers must take lessons from the COVID 19 pandemic, when the ruling class declared that “the cure can’t be worse than the disease” and presided over tens of millions of preventable deaths. At the beginning of the pandemic, while the auto companies and the UAW were covering up illnesses and deaths to keep production moving, autoworkers took matters into their own hands and walked off the job, forcing a temporary shutdown of the industry.

8. Mandelson-Epstein scandal undermines Starmer before Trump, the royals and his party

Revelations of Lord Peter Mandelson’s intimate connections with Jeffrey Epstein have created yet another crisis for Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, putting him in the doghouse with US President Donald Trump, the British royal family and his own MPs. 

Starmer was forced to sack Mandelson on September 11, less than a year after appointing him US ambassador last December. This was just five days before US President’s Donald Trump’s arrival this week for his second state visit to Britain.  

Trump would have liked the trip to serve as a distraction from persistent questions over his own relationship with Epstein, which have prompted him to sue the New York Times for $15 billion. But the Mandelson saga meant the scandal has followed him over the Atlantic with renewed force, helped by protesters unfurling an enormous picture of Trump and Epstein together across the law on Windsor Castle, and projecting the image on its walls. And it did so under conditions where Mandelson has not made any attempt to deny the veracity of his appearance in Epstein’s “birthday book” when Trump insists that his own is a forgery.

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Trump’s hosts, the British royal family, have their own reasons for ruing the timing of events given Prince Andrew’s close connections with Epstein, the exposure of which dealt a huge blow to the monarchy. A diplomatic source told the Daily Mail: “The Palace has been grumbling about how unhelpful it all is.”

As for the Labour Party, MPs totally loyal to Starmer’s right-wing agenda are increasingly restive over whether he is the person to lead it, after a series of screw ups of which the Mandelson appointment is only the latest. It has become a focus for complaints in the party that Starmer is a political liability.

9. United States:  IAM bureaucracy holds “pre-ratification” vote on nonexistent contract to shut down Boeing defense workers’ strike

The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) announced Tuesday that union members will vote Friday on a non-existent contract. The move represents a brazen attempt by the IAM bureaucracy to shut down the six-week strike by 3,200 defense workers in the St. Louis area.

What workers are being made to vote on is a proposal by the union that Boeing has not agreed to accept. The union did not share specific details of the new settlement in its news release.

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Also on Friday, the United Auto Workers is holding a vote on a new tentative agreement to shut down a strike at GE Aerospace. UAW President Shawn Fain is an advocate of a war economy, calling for the retooling of closed auto plants to make military vehicles and citing World War II as a model for today.

The World Socialist Web Site urges workers in both strikes to reject their contracts by the widest possible margin. The bargaining committees, which produced these deals, must be thrown out and replaced with new ones elected solely from the rank and file, not bureaucrats with intimate ties to management. They must make plans for an expansion of the struggle and to break out of the isolation being imposed by the union officials.

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Boeing has already begun hiring permanent scab workers in an attempt to break the morale of the rank and file. The company’s confidence in this provocative measure rests on the services of the IAM bureaucracy, which has worked from the beginning to isolate the strike and wear workers down.

Despite the union’s $300 million in net assets and $200 million in annual expenditures, the IAM has left strikers to survive on just $200 per week in strike pay. The national leadership has issued only perfunctory statements and has done nothing to mobilize the union’s estimated 600,000 members in support of the St. Louis workers.

The IAM bureaucrats are acting as enforcers for the government, not just Boeing. The Pentagon needs its fighter jets and missiles for Gaza, Ukraine and a future war against China.

Many of the same weapons being deployed halfway around the world are also being prepared against the American population. Trump has deployed the National Guard and other federal armed forces in Los Angeles and Washington D.C., threatening to do so in many other major cities, in an attempt to suppress opposition to the administration’s full-scale assault on immigrants and democratic rights.

The IAM officials have publicly asked for Trump to intervene which amounts to a request for the would-be dictator to crush the strike. Trump admitted over the weekend that he is working with corporate executives to work out where to send troops, with St. Louis singled out by Union Pacific CEO Jim Vena.

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The rail unions have also sought and obtained an intervention from Trump to prevent a strike on the Long Island Rail Road, New York City’s largest commuter rail system. New York Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul’s response was to attack Trump for not intervening against workers fast enough. The Democrats have refused to lift a finger against Trump because they are a party of the same ruling class that Trump represents. They are far more afraid of a mass movement in the working class than they are of a dictatorship.

It is urgent that Boeing workers take matters into their own hands. Without a new leadership and a new strategy, the strike will be betrayed. Rank-and-file committees must be formed, excluding union officials, to appeal throughout St. Louis and across Boeing for support.

10. Former Thai prime minister Thaksin jailed for a year

Thailand’s former prime minister and de facto leader of the Pheu Thai Party, Thaksin Shinawatra, was sentenced by the country’s Supreme Court last week to serve a one-year prison term. Ostensibly related to longstanding corruption charges, the ruling is a move by right-wing factions aligned with the military and monarchy to sideline Thaksin and his party. 

The trumped-up charges against Thaksin stem from his five years as prime minister which the military used as part of its pretext to oust him in the 2006 coup. He fled into a self-imposed exile for 15 years, during which time he was sentenced to eight years in prison in absentia.

Following the general election in 2023, Thaksin returned to Thailand as part of a sordid bargain between Pheu Thai on one hand and the military and monarchy on the other to prevent the Move Forward Party (MFP) from coming to power. The MFP, which had won the most seats, was later dissolved on bogus grounds and is now the People’s Party.

Pheu Thai, which once claimed to be the party of “democracy,” entered into a coalition with the military-backed parties to form a government while Thaksin received a royal pardon, reducing his prison sentence to one year. He ultimately served only six months, staying in a suite at the Police General Hospital in Bangkok on the basis of “life-threatening” health issues before being paroled. 

The traditional ruling elites centered on the military and monarchy have always been intensely hostile to Thaksin, himself a billionaire, and Pheu Thai, and have effectively reneged on the deal.

The court ruled on September 9 that Thaksin’s health concerns were in fact “non-urgent” and insufficient to override standard incarceration rules under the Corrections Act. This meant he still had to serve his one-year sentence in prison. Thaksin was immediately transferred to the elderly wing of the high security Khlong Prem Central Prison in Bangkok.

The jailing of Thaksin took place shortly after the Constitutional Court removed his daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra as prime minister in a judicial coup based on phoney ethics charges. Her Pheu Thai-led ruling coalition collapsed afterwards, allowing the pro-military and pro-monarchy Bhumjaithai Party (BJT) to take power with its leader Anutin Charnvirakul becoming prime minister. Paetongtarn was the second Pheu Thai prime minister removed in a year on spurious grounds.

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Thaksin and his party have accepted his imprisonment and the party’s removal from power. Whatever their economic and political disputes, the entire Thai ruling class is aware that it sits on a social powder keg. Its fears have no doubt been heightened by the recent mass protests in Indonesia and Nepal.

Thailand’s cost of living has grown rapidly. Food prices have surged by 106.5 percent over the past 13 years while the minimum wage has risen by only 33 percent in the same period, according to Thailand’s Agency for Real Estate Affairs. Household debt stands at approximately 87.4 percent of GDP. 

The economic situation has been exacerbated by geopolitical tensions driven by accelerating US-led preparations for war against China. Trump tariffs are negatively impacting Thailand’s export-driven economy. For 2025, the World Bank has forecast only 1.8 percent economic growth, down from 2.5 percent in 2024.

Significantly, while Thaksin has been jailed, no moves, at present, have been made in the courts against Pheu Thai. As it faces the prospect of further political upheaval and opposition, the ruling class may yet require its services to prop up increasingly unstable bourgeois rule.

11. Fed cuts interest rate as US economy weakens

The US Federal Reserve cut its interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point yesterday and indicated more cuts could come later this year, after a tense buildup to the meeting arising from efforts by US President Trump to change the composition of its governing body in support of his drive for a much lower rate.

On Monday, on the eve of the meeting, one of Trump’s leading economic advisers, Stephen Moore, took his place as Fed governor after his confirmation for the post had been rushed through the Senate and carried in a 48–47 vote.

But his efforts to remove Fed governor Lisa Cook failed—at least for the present—when an appeals court, also on Monday, upheld a lower court ruling against Trump’s efforts to sack her for “cause” over claims she had falsified a mortgage application for properties she bought before her appointment in 2022.

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But deliberations at the Fed’s next two meetings for the year—in October and December—could be more contentious, as indicated by the so-called dot plots in which all members of the FOMC indicate what they think the trajectory for rates will be.

A slim majority indicated two additional rate cuts this year while seven expected no further reductions and two projected one further cut.

In support of its decision, the FOMC said that unemployment had “edged up” and inflation had moved up and remained somewhat elevated, and that “in light of the shift in the balance of risks,” it had decided to make a rate cut—the first since December last year.

In his prepared remarks at the press conference following the meeting, Powell noted that job gains had slowed and downside risks to employment had risen, while at the same time inflation had risen and remained “somewhat elevated.”

“In the near term,” he said, “risks to inflation are tilted to the upside and risks to employment to the downside—a challenging situation.”

Both these phenomena are the result to a significant degree of the tariff hikes of the Trump administration.

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In a comment on the eve of the meeting, Financial Times (FT) columnist Robert Armstrong cited analysis that “tariff pass-through to prices appears to be picking up rather than subsiding.”

Coming down on the side of the “hawks,” he underscored the potential for major turbulence in financial markets as Wall Street continues to hit record highs.

“Resurgent inflation is the scariest risk right now,” he wrote, warning that “another bout of inflation could cause a market crash. Risk asset valuations are bubbly and the US fiscal position is precarious. Unmoored inflation expectations could lead to a spiral in long-term interest rates that would make the US debt burden unmanageable and crush risk markets.”

With US government debt at $37 trillion and rising, such fears are not misplaced.

While he referred to the effect of tariffs on inflation, Powell made no reference to their impact on jobs, which has been no less significant. Since the July meeting of the Fed, new data has shown that the number of jobs created in the US economy in the year to last March was more than 900,000 fewer than previously estimated.

Since then, job growth has slowed markedly, with Powell acknowledging that “labor demand has softened and the recent pace of job creation appears to be running below the ‘breakeven’ rate needed to hold the unemployment rate constant.”

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The Fed meeting was held under what the Wall Street Journal characterized as “unprecedented political pressure” as part of Trump’s drive to take control of its governing body and secure major interest rate cuts, repeatedly citing the need to cut the interest bill on the rising US government debt.

That pressure will intensify because yesterday’s reduction and even the indication that more cuts may be coming are nowhere near the reduction of three percentage points Trump has been demanding.

12. Algal bloom devastates marine life in South Australia

A significant and harmful algal bloom, centered near Adelaide, the state capital of South Australia (SA), is devastating marine life, impacting local communities, and causing financial losses in aquaculture and tourism. Since being detected in March, the bloom has grown to an estimated size of nearly 5,000 square kilometers, covering around 30 percent of the state’s coastline. Photographs show dead sea life and toxic yellow foam washing ashore. 

The Biodiversity Council, an independent group of scientists from 11 Australian universities, published a statement in July suggesting a combination of factors caused the bloom. It pointed to a marine heatwave beginning in September 2024 reaching temperatures 2.5 degrees Celsius above average. This has combined with two other factors: the flushing of excess nutrients from the heavily farmed Murray-Darling basin during 2022-2023 floods; and nutrient upwelling—a natural process by which nutrient dense sea water is brought from the sea floor to the surface.

A citizen-led database on iNaturalist has so far documented over 500 affected marine species and the deaths of over 40,000 sea creatures, indicating a far broader impact. Local communities have led the clean-up with reports that heavily affected beaches are virtually unvisitable due to the stench of rotting marine life washing ashore and a variety of aerosolised algal toxins that can cause eye, skin and respiratory irritation.

The bloom is dominated by Karenia mikimotoi, a species of photosynthetic microalgae documented by scientists for nearly a century, which has reportedly persisted in low numbers for years until this latest bloom. A previous bloom of the algae was recorded in South Australia in Coffin Bay in 2014. K. mikimotoi has caused increasing blooms worldwide in recent decades. A 2012 bloom in China's Fujian Province, for instance, inflicted significant financial losses on marine aquaculture. 

Unlike typical algal blooms that kill through oxygen depletion during mass die-offs, K. mikimotoi is toxic to marine life making it particularly devastating. This outbreak is especially concerning as it has persisted through winter. Scientists are unable to estimate when the bloom will subside and have warned of its potential growth as warmer conditions return.

*****

The algal bloom in South Australian waters highlights the growing impact of climate change that is taking many and varied forms. In this case, higher sea temperatures are interacting with the leaching of excessive agricultural fertilizers into the river systems. 

*****

Scientists are warning that toxic algal blooms are a growing international threat due to climate change and environmental degradation. Yet despite the mounting dangers associated with climate change, governments have proven incapable of taking the necessary measures to halt, let alone reverse, global warming. In the case of the United States, one of the world’s largest emitters of greenhouse gases, the Trump administration is actively dismantling climate legislation, boosting the fossil fuel industry and doing everything possible to undermine the science of climate change. 

*****

The failure over decades to take action to stem climate change is rooted in the capitalist system itself, in which corporate profit takes priority over all else, including mounting environmental disasters. The outmoded division of the world into rival capitalist states driven by narrow national economic and strategic interests has cut across any genuine international agreement to arrest greenhouse gas emission. 

What is necessary is a unified struggle by the international working class based on a socialist program to refashion society to meet the pressing needs of the majority of the world’s population, not the profits of the ultra-wealthy few.

13. Far-right Alternative for Germany wins in former SPD strongholds

In municipal elections in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany’s most populous state, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) was able to exploit the anger and frustration over the decades-long policies of the establishment parties and nearly triple its vote share. In parts of the former industrial heartlands of the Ruhr, it is now the strongest force. 

Sunday’s vote was the first major ballot since the federal elections in February and was therefore seen as a test of the political mood. Of the roughly 13.7 million eligible voters, 56.8 percent cast ballots. This is the highest turnout for North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) municipal elections since 1994, and at that time the federal election was held simultaneously.

The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) managed to remain the strongest party statewide with 33.3 percent, but only narrowly, slipping by 1 percent compared to the last municipal elections in 2020. The Social Democratic Party (SPD) lost another 2.2 percent from its already poor result five years ago. In its traditional heartland—often referred to as the SPD’s former “beating heart”—won only 22.1 percent. The AfD nearly tripled its share of the vote, winning 14.5 percent (plus 9.4 percent).

The two parties of the current federal government (CDU and SPD) saw their worst-ever municipal election results in NRW since the state was founded in 1946. The Greens also suffered heavy losses, winning just 13.5 percent (minus 6.5 percent), while the Liberal Democratic Party (FDP) sank into irrelevance with 3.7 percent (minus 1.9 percent).

This is the direct outcome of the social devastation wrought over the last three to four decades by these parties, especially in the Ruhr region, and which has been accelerated most recently. At the federal level, the previous government of the SPD–Greens–FDP under Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) had declared a “new era” in 2021, funneled €100 billion into rearmament and war, and made working people pay for it with welfare cuts, reductions in social infrastructure, layoffs and wage cuts. The current government under Friedrich Merz (CDU) and Lars Klingbeil (SPD) has resolved to respond to the deepening capitalist crisis and Donald Trump’s election as US president by escalating this redistribution of wealth upwards.

One trillion euros are to flow into war and rearmament. The corresponding social attacks will be immense, falling on terrain already laid waste in the Ruhr: closed swimming pools and libraries, lack of childcare places, hollowed-out healthcare, gutted cultural institutions, and reduced municipal services. The neglect of numerous cities, especially in the major conurbations along the Rhine and Ruhr, will intensify further.

The AfD exploits this policy and the frustration it has generated within parts of the working class. For decades, the dominance of the mining and steel industries in the Ruhr was synonymous with the dominance of the SPD. With the decline of coal and steel, the cities grew impoverished, and the SPD imposed massive cuts at the local level. Unemployment and poverty rates are the highest in the state. 

*****

The growth of the AfD has two main causes. First, it is being consciously fostered by the ruling class. The historic attacks on jobs, wages and welfare, preparing for trade war and military war, cannot be implemented by democratic means. Just as in the US, where the Trump administration is building a fascist dictatorship, in every country the foundations are being laid for authoritarian forms of rule. 

*****

The second main cause of the AfD’s rise is the SPD, which long ago severed all ties to the working class. The SPD is full of careerists, opportunists and apparatchiks who organise attacks on the population. They can do this only because they are closely bound to the trade unions. While the SPD ruthlessly enforces social cuts in Ruhr cities, every plant closure and every agreement cutting thousands of jobs in industry bears the signature of a union official—usually from IG Metall or the IG BCE (Mining, Chemicals, Energy). Over the last 50 years, since 1975, the remaining 200,000 coal jobs and 400,000 steel jobs have been wiped out in the Ruhr alone. Now nearly 10,000 more jobs at Thyssenkrupp and HKM (Hüttenwerke Krupp Mannesmann) are to go—already signed off by IG Metall.

By enforcing every assault on workers’ livelihoods and suppressing the class struggle, the unions create conditions in which the AfD can thrive.

14. United Kingdom:  Bus drivers at three Greater Manchester companies to take four days of strike action

More than 2,000 Greater Manchester bus drivers at three different private operators have voted to take co-ordinated strike action between September 19–22. They rejected insulting pay offers. Further strike action has been confirmed from September 30 to October 2.

The members of the Unite union work for bus companies who rank among the largest and most profitable in the UK—Stagecoach, Metroline and First Bus. The planned walkout will shut down two-thirds of the Greater Manchester network. This itself shows the operational grip of the private operators functioning collectively under the “Bee Network”, the franchised public transport system including the Metrolink tram/light rail service overseen by Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM). This is controlled by the 10 councils in the combined authority and led by Labour Mayor Andy Burnham.

At Stagecoach, 1,000 drivers across Oldham, Stockport and Middleton depots rejected a 3.5 percent offer. Another 1,000 drivers at Metroline Manchester threw out the same deal at Sharston, Hyde Road, Ashton and Wythenshawe depots. At First Bus in Rochdale, 110 turned down a 6 percent offer, as they are the lowest paid bus drivers in the region on £15 an hour.

FirstGroup’s operating profit for last year was £204 million and share dividends were increased by 45 percent on the previous year. Stagecoach’s reported pre-operating profits of £51 million for last year, up from £33 million the year before. Metroline’s parent company, Singapore-based ComfortDelGro, recorded a £60 million operating profit from its UK and European bus operations in the first half of 2025—boosted by new Greater Manchester contracts worth £422 million over five years.

This profit gauging exposes the companies’ claims that even a cost-of-living pay rise for bus drivers is unaffordable.

*****

The fight for a genuine pay rise and parity is not only a fight against the profiteers of Stagecoach, Metroline and First Bus, but also against the Labour authority and its entrenched relations with the private operators

*****

In 2023, Greater Manchester became the first English region outside London to introduce bus franchising since Margaret Thatcher’s deregulation in 1986. This has been promoted as bringing bus services back under “public control”, but franchising is a managed form of privatization: fares, timetables and routes are set by the local authority, while the buses remain in private hands. Operators continue to undercut one another in the bidding process, driving down pay and conditions to guarantee shareholder returns. 

*****

While Unite is boasting of “co-ordinated action” in Greater Manchester it continues its isolation tactics nationally to stymie and block a unified struggle of bus workers. From September 29 to October 5 and again October 13 to 19, 500 Stagecoach drivers in Birkenhead, Chorley and Preston are set to strike over pay disparities. Over 800 Arriva drivers, engineers and cleaners across five depots in Luton, Milton Keynes, Stevenage, Ware and Hemel Hempstead are striking for 16 days on September 23–26, and three staggered stoppages in October, rejecting a 65p per hour pay offer. 600 First West of England bus drivers in Bristol began strike action from this Tuesday to Friday after Unite suspended earlier action between September 4-8 to put a “full and final” offer from the company, which was rejected. An earlier two-year derisory deal based on an extra £1 an hour from now to March 26 and an hourly increase of 30 pence from April 2026 had already been voted down.

At Greater Manchester Metrolink tram and light rail service Unite is also using delaying tactics over a ballot for industrial action by its 200 members. Workers employed in ticketing, passenger assistance and information services already rejected a 3.2 percent offer from the private consortium Keolis/Amey which operates the system, but the ballot does not close until October 1.

Greater Manchester bus drivers at Stagecoach, Metroline and First Bus must establish a joint strike committee to take control of the dispute. They should demand complete oversight over further pay negotiations and not allow Unite officials to suspend the action prior to proper scrutiny of any revised offer at mass meetings before a vote is taken.

15. Australian PM fails to finalize neo-colonial defense treaty with Papua New Guinea

A push by the Australian Labor government to strengthen its neo-colonial dominance in the South West Pacific received a setback this week, when the government of Papua New Guinea (PNG) failed to endorse a wide-ranging defense treaty. 

Labor, acting in concert with Washington, is seeking to integrate the Pacific states into the aggressive US-led preparations for war with China. At the same time, it is attempting to shore up its control over a geopolitically vital and resource-rich region that has always been central to the strategy of Australian imperialism.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese traveled to PNG at the beginning of the week, to finalize the treaty. As late as yesterday morning, sections of the Australian press were reporting that the treaty would be signed later in the day and were crowing that it would help to “China-proof” PNG and the broader Pacific.

But, as it transpired, PNG Prime Minister James Marape was only prepared to sign a “communique” with Albanese, which, while it commits to the signing of the treaty in the future, provides no timeline. Albanese has nevertheless insisted that the treaty will be ratified sometime “in the coming weeks.”

*****

Australia formally took control of the British colony of Papua in 1906, shortly after the establishment of the Australian federation in 1901. After it seized the German colony of New Guinea at the outset of World War I, Australian imperialism looted the resources of PNG, particularly its minerals, repressed opposition and left a legacy of economic and social backwardness. Since 1975, Australia has repeatedly intervened in PNG to defend its economic and strategic interests.

The details of the defense treaty, as outlined by the communique, make clear that the Labor government was attempting to “celebrate” 50 years of PNG’s independence by effectively abolishing it and returning the largest Pacific Island country to the status of a neo-colony. 

*****

PNG has always been a central focus of Australian imperialism, because it is far and away the largest of the Pacific states, by landmass, population and resources. Its military facilities and strategic position could play a major role in any war in the Indo-Pacific.

The country has also been a focus of the US-led military build-up for war against China. As the Obama administration was preparing its “pivot to Asia,” then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited PNG in 2010, signalling its importance to the war drive.

In 2023, after years of diplomatic campaigning by Washington, Marape signed a far-reaching defense pact with the US, giving American forces “uninhibited access” to PNG’s military and related civilian facilities. The US and Australia are involved in an expansion of the Lombrum Naval Base on Manus island, which was first established as a facility for the US military during World War II.

While Marape acceded to the US treaty in 2023, his government, like many throughout the Pacific, has continued to attempt to balance between Washington and Beijing. China is now PNG’s second-largest trading partner and has provided substantial investments in infrastructure, mining and a major development in the capital Port Moresby. 

16. Political Genocide in the USSR (1936-1940): The Moscow Trials and the Dewey Commission

This is the first part of the lecture “Political Genocide in the USSR (1936-1940)” delivered by Fred Williams, Katja Rippert, and Alejandro Lopez to the 2025 Summer School of the Socialist Equality Party (US) on the history of the Security and the Fourth International investigation. 

17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk!

Bogdan Syrotiuk and Leon Trotsky 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.

Sep 17, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Greetings to the Founding Congress of the Sosyalist Eşitlik Partisi

These greetings from Socialist Equality Party (US) national chairman David North were sent to the founding congress of the Sosyalist Eşitlik Partisi, held on June 13–15, 2025.

2. Calling Palestinians “barbaric animals,” US Secretary of State hails Israeli assault on Gaza City

On Monday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio held a joint appearance with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to hail what Netanyahu called the “concluding moves” in the US-Israeli onslaught on Gaza: the conquest and destruction of Gaza City.

The Israeli onslaught against Gaza City will place the Gaza Strip under total military occupation, creating the conditions for the internment of the population in concentration camps for their extermination or forcible displacement.

“We’re going to take over and destroy the Hamas stronghold,” Netanyahu bellowed.

But the Israeli prime minister, who has a warrant for his arrest by the International Criminal Court, was outdone in genocidal bloodlust by the American secretary of state, who publicly repeated the notorious declaration by former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant that the Palestinians are “animals.”

Rubio ranted, “This happened because on October 7th these animals, these barbaric animals, conducted this operation ... against innocent people.”

He concluded, “It needs to end. And how does it end? It ends by eliminating the people who did it, by ending them as a threat.”

*****

The Gaza genocide is a warning: American imperialism, facing a social, economic and geopolitical crisis from which it can find no way out, is capable of any crime, whether against the peoples of the world or the working class inside the United States.

*****

The experience of Gaza, in nearly two years of mass murder and collective punishment, proves a decisive lesson: The genocide cannot be stopped by appeals to the capitalist powers that perpetrate and defend it. It can be halted only by the independent mobilization of the working class in every country, in a mass movement that takes aim at the root cause of war and oppression—the capitalist system itself.

3. Emmy award winner Hannah Einbinder denounces ICE and proclaims “Free Palestine”

The major awards ceremony September 14 took place a few days after the assassination of fascist political operative Charlie Kirk and in the midst of a Trump administration-led propaganda barrage against the “left” aimed at legitimizing police-state rule in America.

The aim of the producers of the Emmy broadcast was to prevent any commentary on the explosive events in the US or mass murder in the Middle East. Bargatze, a “clean,” Christian comedian, adhered to his earlier promise not to include any political references “at all,” while telling the media that the Kirk shooting was the “saddest thing in the world.”

The Emmy awards were intended, in other words, to take place in an air of utter unreality.

Fortunately, despite the efforts of the producers and Bargatze to chloroform the audience on hand and at home, supporting actress award winner Hannah Einbinder (for the comedy series Hacks) bravely exclaimed, upon receiving her honor, “F—- ICE and free Palestine!” The roar of applause from the audience was an indicator of the real state of public opinion in Hollywood and around the US.

*****

Spanish actor and Emmy nominee Javier Bardem appeared at the ceremony conspicuously wearing a keffiyeh, and declared his support for a boycott of Israeli cultural institutions. On the red carpet, speaking to a CNN reporter, Bardem indicted Israel for its massive crimes:

Here I am denouncing the genocide in Gaza, and talking about the IAGS, which is the International Association of Genocide Scholars, who study thoroughly genocide and have declared that it is a genocide. That’s why we ask for a commercial and diplomatic blockade, and also sanctions on Israel to stop the genocide and free Palestine.

*****

Putting the Einbinder-Bardem comments even more sharply into focus, one day earlier Israeli soldiers carried out an attack on the West Bank home of Basel Adra, one of the co-directors of the Academy Award-winning documentary film No Other Land, about Zionist violence on the West Bank.

Yuval Abraham, one of Adra’s fellow co-directors, posted on X

happening now: Israeli army raiding the house of Oscar winner Basel Adra after Israeli settlers attacked his village earlier and beat up his family member. Soldiers could try to abduct Basel into one of Israel’s prisons, which are effectively torture sites.

*****

The strongest and most subversive television series this year, Andor, won five prizes over the two weekends, but only one major award—outstanding writing for a drama series—for Dan Gilroy. The science fiction-political thriller set in the Star Wars universe, as the World Socialist Web Site wrote, encourages and reflects “anti-establishment, anti-authoritarian sentiment.” It is a serious effort

dealing with repression, totalitarianism and revolt. As a piece of popular entertainment, it emerges undeniably out of the same moods that have burst to the surface in the gigantic protests against Donald Trump and the recent New York City Democratic primary.

What makes Andor remarkable is not its visual effects or action sequences, but the extent to which it portrays the ravages of imperialist violence and encroachment. The scenes and characters in Andor are not allegorical, they speak to contemporary conditions and processes.

4. Trump administration initiates government crackdown on free speech in wake of assassination of fascist Charlie Kirk

The Trump administration is using the assassination last week of fascist mouthpiece Charlie Kirk as an opportunity to launch a far-reaching campaign targeting democratic rights. The US government is seizing on the killing of Kirk to arrogate to itself new powers aimed at silencing dissent and establishing police state rule.

On Tuesday, prosecutors in Utah unveiled multiple charges against 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, the suspect in Kirk’s killing. The charges include aggravated murder, which carries with it the possibility under state law of the death penalty by firing squad or lethal injection.

The documents do not assert that Robinson was part of a far left-wing network or a member of “antifa.” In the documents, prosecutors allege that Robinson, in front of family members, accused Kirk of “spreading hate.” They allege that following Kirk’s death, Robinson admitted to his roommate, “a biological male who was involved in a romantic relationship with Robinson,” that he killed Kirk.

Text messages produced in the charging documents do not point to a coherent political ideology or program. In interviews and in Discord messages shared by journalist Ken Klippenstein, Robinson’s friends indicate that he was heavily immersed in online video games and internet meme culture but not overtly political. One of Tyler’s friends told Klippenstein, “Obviously he’s okay with gay and trans people having a right to exist, but also believes in the Second Amendment.”

These facts have not prevented the Trump administration from using Kirk’s killing to wage war on its political enemies, using the power of the state and the mass media, and relying on the cowardly silence of the Democrats on Kirk’s fascist politics.

5. Victimization of teachers across the US for criticizing Charlie Kirk

School districts across the United States are firing and threatening educators for making critical comments about the late extreme-right provocateur Charlie Kirk. Since his assassination on September 10, at least 33 educators in K-12 schools and college campuses nationwide have been fired, suspended or placed on administrative leave for social media comments or classroom remarks about his death. Hundreds more are currently facing investigation or pending disciplinary action.

The glorification of Kirk, orchestrated by the Trump administration and its allies, is being used to escalate repression, censor critical voices and legitimize far-right ideology. This escalation aims to purge schools of opposition, enforce ideological conformity and prepare the way for dictatorship and imperialist war.

The World Socialist Web Site denounces this witch-hunt, which is aimed not only at silencing teachers but the working class. It is part of Trump’s plan for dictatorship, which also includes deploying the National Guard to major American cities, at the behest of corporate executives. It is also part of the nationwide attack on public education itself, with almost every major school district facing huge deficits and Trump threatening to close the Department of Education.

We call for a nationwide defense campaign, centered in the working class, to answer the attempt to ban all criticism of the extreme right.

*****

Within hours of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, far-right online networks launched a coordinated doxxing campaign targeting any educator, worker or student who failed to publicly mourn Kirk or who posted critical remarks. Trump loyalist and conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer threatened to destroy the careers of those “sick enough to celebrate his death,” while Republican activist Scott Presler mobilized his followers to hunt down and publicly shame teachers.

The anonymous website “Expose Charlie’s Murderers” contains reports on over 50,000 individuals making critical comments about Kirk. It includes their names, locations and their employers to encourage their firing or worse. The “Libs of TikTok” social media account is broadcasting personal information about educators, professors and healthcare workers, demanding mass firings and calling to “demolish” public education, with a message urging parents to homeschool in protest.

*****

At the national level, AFT President Randi Weingarten and NEA (National Education Association) President Becky Pringle have made no public defense of teachers and staff. Themselves high-ranking figures in the Democratic Party’s hierarchy, they are parroting its hypocritical denunciations of “political violence” and lending legitimacy to the crackdown. 

*****

The campaign of intimidation must be answered with the development of a movement in the working class in defense of democratic rights. Independent of both parties, the organizational form of such a campaign must be a nationwide and international network of rank-and-file committees. This is the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC). 

6. Trump’s state visit to Britain: All that glitters…

Donald Trump’s second state visit to the UK, the first afforded any second-term US president, will be a spectacle of political corruption, decay and delusion.

Behind the walls of a palace, or within the grounds of a country retreat, far from a population which despises him, the fascist would-be dictator Trump will be fêted with all the pageantry the British state has to offer.

7. Texas State University labor historian fired for political speech

On September 10, a Texas State University professor was fired after having been accused by a far-right provocateur of inciting violence in a video posted on social media of the professor speaking at a socialism conference.

Tom Alter, an associate professor in the History Department at Texas State University in San Marcos, was fired for his comments during an online political meeting that took place on September 7. Alter’s remarks at the Revolutionary Socialism Conference, a meeting organized by various socialist groups, were secretly recorded by an unknown attendee and subsequently uploaded to social media. 

Alter is a serious historian whose scholarly focus includes transnational approaches to race, labor, capitalism and protest movements. Some of his works include the essay “The Role of Independent Working-Class Political Action” and his recently published book Toward a Cooperative Commonwealth: The Transplanted Roots of Farmer-Labor Radicalism in Texas. In the latter, Alter reckons with the influence radical German migrants fleeing from the backlash of the 1848 revolutions had upon the burgeoning farmer-labor bloc in Texas, challenging the notion that Texas is a state home only to reactionary politics and history.

In a post on Elon Musk’s X by Karlyn Borysenko, a prolific peddler of fascist misinformation, Alter’s remarks are edited and misrepresented to suggest that the professor was calling for a violent “overthrow of the ‘bloodthirsty’ US Government.” According to the student newspaper at Texas State, Alter was soon fired without any chance to respond, give his version of events or defend himself against the accusations.

8. Echoes of Nazi eugenics: Fox News host calls for “lethal injection” of the homeless 

The prevalence of mental health disorders among the homeless is overwhelming. A systematic review and meta-analysis of 85 studies found that 67 percent of unhoused people have mental health disorders. Other research estimates the mean prevalence of any current mental disorder among homeless persons at 76.2 percent. Specifically, schizophrenia spectrum disorders affect a staggering 12.4 percent of homeless individuals, a rate significantly higher than in the general population. Homeless people face a 60 percent higher mortality rate and a life expectancy 26 years shorter than the general population, suffering from high rates of infectious disease and mental illness, and often being victims of violence themselves.

[“Fox & Friends” co-host Brian] Kilmeade’s call for “lethal injection” is an incitement to state violence against an already demonized and neglected segment of the population. It reveals the contempt of the ruling class for those cast aside by its brutal economic system, seeking to scapegoat the victims of systemic neglect, while deliberately failing to address the root causes of homelessness and mental illness: the capitalist system that places profit over human life. Rhetoric such as Kilmeade’s serves to prop up this barbaric system to pave the way for further violent attacks on democratic rights and the most vulnerable in society. 

9. UK children on free school meals blocked from accessing vital curriculum subjects

As the autumn school term begins in Britain, research reveals the devastating impact of inequality and poverty on the access to educational opportunities by children from poorer families.

A survey commissioned by the charity Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) reveals that children on Free School Meals (FSM) were less likely to take up costlier subjects at GCSE level than their better off counterparts. Many subjects incur costs to be shouldered by parents, such as fieldwork in geography, foreign language trips, ingredients in domestic science, and kit and equipment for PE (physical education).

General Certificates of Secondary Education (GCSEs) are subjects taken by 15-16-year-olds with exams at the end of year 11. While English, maths and science are compulsory, other subjects are optional. The outcome of GCSE’s determines the next step in a child’s education.

An online poll commissioned by CPAG conducted between April 17 and May 1, 2025, by Survation of 1,701 secondary school pupils, including 1,027 children in England found:

  • 23 percent of children on free school meals were deterred from selecting GCSE subjects of their choice because of fear of costs incurred, compared to 9 percent not on FSMs.
  • 29 percent on FSMs said the costs of a subject informed their choice, compared to 11 percent not on FSMs.
  • 30 percent of FSM pupils said homework costs were hard to afford, including laptops.

CPAG’s head of education policy Kate Anstey said, “Children in struggling families are going back to school only to be bounced out of some subjects and learning by costs—cut off from opportunities just as the foundations of their futures are being laid.”

*****

The statistics for child poverty in the UK are stark, in a country where the richest 50 families own more wealth than the poorest half of the population or 34 million people.

According to the Child Poverty Action Group, there are 4.5 million children in the UK living in relative poverty, defined as below 60 percent of the median income. This translates to 31 percent, or nine children in a classroom of 30, growing up in poverty. 7 out of 10 children in poor households have at least one parent in work, due to pitifully low wages. Among families where a member is disabled, 44 percent of children live in poverty.

Almost half (49 percent) of children from black and Asian families live in poverty, compared to 24 percent of children in white families. 49 percent of children from single-parent households also grow up in poverty.

The figure for child poverty has risen by 700,000 in the last 10 years, due to successive government austerity to pay for huge bank bailouts.

*****

Beneath the cynical pose of closing the attainment-gap, successive governments over the past 40 years, facilitated by the education unions, introduced major “reforms” to UK education—including the proscriptive National Curriculum, Academy schools and hated government inspectorate Ofsted to police the teaching workforce. But what is needed is a fully funded education system, informed by child psychology and pedagogy, not driven by tests and targets that squash inquiry and creativity.

On taking office Labour declared as one of its missions to “break down barriers to opportunity… to make sure there is no class ceiling on the ambitions of our young people”. Prime Minister Keir Starmer declared his government would “leave no stone unturned to give every child the very best start in life”. Such comments were pure electioneering, with the punitive two-child benefit cap introduced by the Tories that has reduced many families to penury and stunts the life chances of children kept in place.

Capitalist governments worldwide have concluded that historic average spending on health, education and pensions is no longer affordable. Labour’s misnamed Schools and Well Being bill making its way through the House of Lords makes no mention of education funding, which has been cut to the bone. The government is dedicated to defending not the well-being of children but the profits of the rich and increased military spending.

10. Residents in working-class districts of Johannesburg protest after two-week loss of water supply 

Johannesburg, South Africa’s most populous city and economic hub, has been rocked by protests in its working-class districts of Westbury and Coronationville after residents were left without water for more than two weeks.

The city has a population of 5.5 million, while the wider urban agglomeration exceeds 14.8 million, making it a global megacity and the richest in Africa by GDP and private wealth. It is the capital of Gauteng, the country’s wealthiest province, home to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and the Constitutional Court and stands at the center of the international gold and mineral trade.

Yet, in this city of vast wealth residents of Westbury and Coronationville have been forced to block off streets with bricks, stones and burning tyres to demand water.

Post-apocalyptic conditions have rapidly emerged. An elderly woman clutching medical papers made a heartbreaking plea to SNL24 reporters, stating, “These are my results from the doctor. I have cancer and I’m due for an operation. I’ve been turned away from the hospital three times because of water shortages.”

Diana Louw, a community activist, explained, “Children cannot stay at school because there is no water.”

The Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital in Westbury has a borehole on site, but staff report that it is insufficient to meet daily needs. One nurse told TimesLIVE, “Water is an issue, and it affects the hospital. We cannot operate as we should. Procedures are delayed because there is no running water.”

The African National Congress (ANC)-run city unleashed police, who attacked residents with stun grenades, tear gas, and rubber bullets, indiscriminately targeting children and the elderly. Journalists covering the demonstration were also fired upon. “They shot an 81-year-old with rubber bullets,” relayed one resident to News24. A 15-year-old boy was also hospitalized after being shot in the head.

*****

Westbury and Coronationville were classified as “colored” (mixed-race) neighborhoods under Apartheid, the white-minority capitalist regime that from 1948 to 1994 legally enforced racial segregation across every aspect of society.

The black majority was stripped of political rights, herded into segregated districts and barren “homelands,” and systematically denied access to quality education, health care, housing, and essential infrastructure such as water and electricity. These conditions were deliberately created to divide the working class along racial and tribal lines, while guaranteeing South African and international capital a vast pool of cheap labor for the mines, factories, and farms that generated enormous profits.

Three decades after the ANC came to power promising redress, this legacy of neglect continues. Residents endure years of intermittent water supply and repeated protests, while successive administrations under the ANC, the pro-business Democratic Alliance (DA), and the Islamist-leaning Al Jama-ah, have all failed to resolve the crisis.

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After more than three decades in power, the ANC has demonstrated that it is incapable of addressing even the most basic needs of the working class. Its record is one of crumbling infrastructure, mass unemployment, staggering inequality, and endless repression of social opposition. The experience underscores the incapacity of the national bourgeoisie to resolve the crisis of South African capitalism.

Technology, science, and resources exist to provide clean water, reliable electricity, and modern infrastructure for all. But under capitalism they are monopolized by a handful of corporations and subordinated to the profit system, not the needs of society. In South Africa, this has meant decades of austerity, privatization, and looting, overseen by the ANC and its political accomplices.

11. Pacific Islands Forum meets amid escalating US war drive against China

The 54th Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) met over five days from September 8 in Honiara, the capital of the Solomon Islands. It was attended by representatives from 18 member states: the regional imperialist powers Australia and New Zealand, and 16 small, impoverished colonial territories and semi-colonial countries.

The summit took place amid soaring geopolitical tensions in the Pacific, fueled by the advanced US preparations for war against China. The US and its allies Australia and NZ are militarizing the entire region and are pressuring the Pacific countries to cut economic and diplomatic ties with China.

A tense dispute erupted last month over Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele’s decision to bar all “dialogue partners”—21 governments from outside the Pacific region, including the US, China and Taiwan—from participating in the PIF summit.

A US State Department spokesperson told Reuters it was “disappointed” with the announcement and pointedly declared that all partners should attend “including Taiwan.” The US and its allies are seeking to provoke a conflict with China over Taiwan, which Beijing regards as a renegade province of China.

The Solomon Islands switched its diplomatic relations from Taiwan to China in 2019, and in 2022 signed a security and policing deal with Beijing. This prompted a hysterical outburst and threats of a US-Australia regime change operation if China moved to establish a military presence there.

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A frothing article in the Australian newspaper on September 12, headlined “China’s insidious grip on the Pacific,” claimed that Beijing was creating a “surveillance state” by collecting data on Solomon Islands citizens through its community policing initiative. Australia’s opposition foreign affairs spokeswoman Michaelia Cash called it “a very concerning development.”

All of this is thoroughly hypocritical and turns reality upside down. Australia, NZ and the US dominate military and policing operations across the Pacific including in the Solomon Islands, where Australia has dozens of police officers stationed and recently supplied the local police with a $5.2 million fleet of 61 security vehicles.

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At this year’s summit, Pacific leaders endorsed the so-called “Ocean of Peace Declaration,” purportedly committing the region to “peace, sovereignty, and climate justice.”

Recalling the bloody battles fought in the Pacific during World War II, Manele declared, “The Ocean of Peace Declaration is a reclamation of our sovereignty and our shared destiny. It is a solemn vow that our seas, air, and lands will never again be drawn into the vortex of great power rivalry.”

Such statements fly in the face of reality. Practically all the countries who signed the “peace” document are making far-reaching security and military deals with the imperialist powers.

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The “Ocean of Peace Declaration” also called for “bold, decisive and transformative action” to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The Pacific governments are well aware that the imperialist powers, even as they spend record sums of money on war, are taking no action to stop catastrophic climate change. Already this is leading to more frequent destructive events and threatens to completely wipe out low-lying islands like Tuvalu.

The intensifying confrontation with China and the militarization of the Pacific by the US and its allies must serve as a warning to the working class in Australia, New Zealand, and across the Pacific region. The only way to prevent a catastrophic third world war is through a unified struggle by workers throughout the Pacific and internationally based on socialism, to put an end to the capitalist system which is the root cause of imperialist war.

12. Trump boasts of sinking more Venezuelan boats as killer drones and fighter jets are deployed to Southern Caribbean 

Following the announcement Monday of a US military strike against a vessel in the Southern Caribbean allegedly killing three passengers accused of transporting drugs, US President Donald Trump told reporters Tuesday that the US had hit a third boat without providing any details.

The first attack against small boats accused of “narco-terrorism” took place on September 2 allegedly killing 11 people.

The latest massacres of unidentified people on speedboats near Venezuela mark a dangerous escalation in US preparations to attack Venezuela and overthrow President Nicolas Maduro, whom the Trump administration has accused of leading the inexistent “Cartel of the Suns.”

The attacks, crassly celebrated by the White House on social media, constitute premeditated mass killings. According to a detailed analysis by Just Security, the deliberate killing of people aboard these vessels—without evidence of an imminent threat—violates Section 1111(b) of Title 18 of the U.S. Code, which forbids “the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought” on the high seas. The administration has failed to produce any credible evidence of drug trafficking or self-defense claims, rendering these actions unlawful extrajudicial killings also under international law.

Trump further escalated the confrontation with a direct threat from the Oval Office that if Venezuelan military jets fly near US warships, they would be “shot down.” Standing beside a general, Trump told him he could “do anything you want” if the situation escalated, signaling a green light for potentially unchecked military aggression.

The claim that these military operations target drug cartels is preposterous. Ninety percent of drugs are trafficked through the Pacific. Venezuela is not a significant producer and accounts for barely 5 percent of cocaine transshipments.

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The US escalation against Venezuela serves a dual purpose. First, it advances efforts to recolonize Latin America and secure the region as a strategic base for any future conflict with China—aiming to reassert US imperial dominance across the Western Hemisphere.

About 85 percent of oil exports from Venezuela are destined for China, with the China Concord Resources Corp. installing a new offshore platform in Maracaibo Lake, Zulia only last week.

Seizing control of Venezuela’s oil reserves, the largest on the planet, has remained a key goal for US imperialism. US-based Chevron has gradually increased its operations in the country following Trump’s decision to renew a license exempting the company from US sanctions.

Second, the militarization and conflict narrative provide President Trump with a fabricated image as a “wartime president” against an external enemy, justifying the extraordinary powers he seeks in order to implement a fascistic police-state dictatorship at home.

As explained by Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Policy Research for Newsweek: “A war, for instance in Venezuela, could be used to justify more repression at home. Trump has already tried to do just that, invoking a fictional ‘invasion’ of the U.S. by a South American gang to deploy the Alien Enemies Act of 1798.” 

13. South Korean workers detail inhumane conditions in ICE custody following raid at Georgia Hyundai plant

On September 12, roughly 300 workers from South Korea landed in Seoul, more than a week after they were kidnapped and imprisoned by the US immigration Gestapo while laboring at the joint Hyundai-LG Energy Solutions battery plant in Ellabell, Georgia. Following their release, workers have begun speaking out on the deplorable conditions they suffered at the hands of federal immigration agents while imprisoned in the privately run Folkston ICE Processing Center.

“They tied our hands behind our backs like criminals. We had to bend down to drink water from the floor,” said Kim Ji-hoon, a 38-year-old Korean electrician, describing his detention by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). “They took our phones, our wallets, everything,” said Park Min-seo, another detained worker, in an interview with Donga News, a South Korean publication. He added, “We were kept in a room with almost no light. The bathroom had no doors—just a sheet. We were treated like animals.”

Over 450 workers were shackled and imprisoned, in the largest ICE operation of Trump’s second term, with many reporting degrading treatment, physical restraints and psychological trauma during their detention. While some 300 have returned to South Korea, many of the non-Korean immigrants kidnapped in the September 4 raid remain imprisoned or unaccounted for.

It is believed that the many of the 175 workers, predominantly Latino, remain detained in Georgia’s Folkston ICE Processing Center, a facility with a history of inhumane conditions. A July 2022 report by the US Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General found “numerous violations that compromised the health, safety and rights of detainees.”

In unannounced surprise visits in November 2021, inspectors described “unsanitary and dilapidated” facilities, including “torn mattresses, water leaks and standing water, mold growth and water damage, rundown showers, mold and debris in the ventilation system, insect infestations, lack of access to hot showers, inoperable toilets, an inoperable thermometer display on a kitchen freezer, and an absence of hot meals.”

In justifying the raid earlier this month, the US government claimed that workers at the facility had violated the terms of their visa or were in the country illegally. As of this writing, the US government has brought zero charges against any of the workers or businesses operating at the Georgia plant. 

14. Australian state Labor governments deepen assault on cultural institutions

Scores of workers at publicly funded museums and galleries in Australia are under attack as state Labor governments in Victoria and New South Wales (NSW) impose major job cuts and other destructive measures.

On August 11, Art Gallery of NSW (AGNSW) management revealed that the state Labor government’s “Change Management Plan” will eliminate 51 jobs—or 10 percent of full-time positions. That is part of a $7.5 million budget reduction imposed by the administration of Premier Chris Minns on the historic facility. The latest cuts followed a June announcement that 91 jobs—or 25 percent of the total workforce—would be slashed at Create NSW, the state’s principal arts funding agency.

Two weeks later, it was disclosed that Museums Victoria—the largest public museum organization in Australia—plans to cut 55 full-time roles as part of a four-year, $56 million budget reduction mandated by the Labor government of Premier Jacinta Allan.

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Despite widespread public opposition to the government’s attack on museum workers, the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) has opposed any mobilisation of its members to resist this destruction.

The “left” leadership of the CPSU—recently elected on a platform of defending public sector jobs and conditions—has yet to even acknowledge the job cuts on its website or social media, let alone express opposition or call a stop-work meeting.

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The cuts to arts funding by the Victorian and NSW state Labor governments are taking place amid growing opposition from public sector workers across the country—including nurses, doctors, teachers, rail drivers, and others—over attacks on jobs, wages and understaffing. In every case, these workers confront government austerity programs enforced by the trade union apparatus.

To fight the attacks on state-funded cultural institutions, museum and gallery workers must reach out to other public sector workers and form rank-and-file workplace committees for unified statewide and national action. These committees must be independent of the trade union bureaucracies, which are inseparably tied to the Labor Party and enforce its pro-business agenda.

Free access to arts and history must not be a privilege reserved for the wealthy. Like public healthcare, education, and housing, it must be fully funded and available to all. This requires a socialist perspective and a direct challenge to the capitalist system, which demands private ownership and profit from every aspect of art and culture.

15. United States:  Hampton Roads, Virginia teachers face school closures, health care premium hike, measles crisis

Public educators in the Hampton Roads, Virginia area are reeling under the combined impact of austerity and attacks on public health. Norfolk is closing nine schools in predominantly working class neighborhoods. In Virginia Beach, teachers are facing a 110 percent health insurance premium hike. The city is also experiencing a measles outbreak as schools open for the year.

These crises are symptoms of a nationwide assault on public education and the social rights of the working class. The Trump administration’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” is slashing federal education aid while expanding voucher schemes to funnel public money into private hands. At the same time, anti-vaccination policies championed by figures like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are eroding public health safeguards, allowing preventable diseases like measles to resurface in schools. 

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Neither the teachers’ unions nor the Democratic Party are mounting serious opposition to the latest threats to public education and health systems. Teachers, parents and students must draw the necessary conclusions. The closure of nine Norfolk schools, the effective pay cut in Virginia Beach, and the public health crisis sparked by the measles outbreak are part of the accelerating assault on the working class by the ruling elite.

The struggle to defend education is inseparable from the broader fight of the working class against austerity, inequality, and war. Teachers must link their struggle with that of workers in logistics, health care, and other sectors to secure the resources needed for a truly high-quality, public education system for all.

16. Divisions deepen in Australia’s Liberal-National Coalition

The May 2025 election saw the Coalition reduced to a parliamentary rump, especially in urban areas, holding just two out of 43 inner metropolitan seats and only seven out of 45 outer metro seats. The Liberals lost a record number of formerly blue-ribbon city seats in some of the country’s most affluent areas to “green” industry-backed “Teal” independents. 

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The political crisis in the Liberal Party reflects the disintegration of its social base among layers of the middle classes amid ever-deeper social polarization. Now professionals, including doctors and teachers, are being proletarianized, and small businesses are under intense financial pressure, while billionaires’ fortunes soar.

In ruling circles, there is considerable nervousness about the potential break-up of the big-business Liberal Party and perplexity about what to do about it. Since the end of World War II, the ruling class has relied on the two-party system—the Coalition and Labor—as the means for implementing its agenda. 

Even among the Murdoch media’s right-wing commentators, there is concern about the adoption of openly fascistic Trump-like policies, given their clear rejection at the May election. Chris Kenny, for instance, urged the Liberal Party to “recast a conservative agenda built on Australian values and avoiding the Trumpian themes that bedeviled the federal election campaign.” 

Moreover, previous efforts to establish openly far-right parties, including by making immigrants the scapegoat for worsening social crises, have failed to gain substantial votes. These bids included Senator Cory Bernardi’s short-lived Australian Conservatives of 2017 to 2019, and billionaire Clive Palmer’s two recent operations, the United Australia Party and the overtly-Trump-style Trumpet of Patriots.

An editorial in the Australian last week surveyed the dire state of the Liberal Party at the federal and state levels before concluding: “The only hope is to rise above internal divisions and present a better alternative for voters.” However, it gave no indication of what a “better alternative” might be, amid deepening hostility to the big-business, pro-war policies of the entire political establishment.  

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The rightward plunge of the entire Australian political establishment mirrors political processes internationally that have led to the installation of the fascistic Trump administration in the United States and far-right governments in Europe. It can be answered only by building a socialist movement of the working class, in Australia and internationally.

17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk!

Bogdan Syrotiuk 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.