Jul 9, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. ICE Gestapo kills man during traffic stop in Houston

In the latest episode of terror unleashed upon America’s working class population by Trump’s Gestapo-like immigration police, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer shot and killed an immigrant worker from Mexico Tuesday morning in Houston. A spokesperson with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claimed the man who died attempted to evade arrest, but local witnesses and civil rights organizations have already challenged ICE’s version of events.

The shooting happened in Magnolia Park, a historic Mexican-American and Latino immigrant neighborhood known for its annual Día de Los Muertos celebrations and multiple community events commemorating the neighborhood’s and city’s multicultural heritage. 

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Salgado Araujo was shot in the abdomen and transported to a local hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. ICE has not reported any injuries to federal agents involved in the operation.

Tuesday’s tragedy is the first fatal shooting involving federal immigration agents since DHS thugs murdered Renée Good and Alex Pretti in separate incidents in Minneapolis in January amid Trump’s escalating deployment of federal police to terrorize immigrants and intimidate citizens opposed to his assault on democratic rights.

Although both killings sparked massive backlash and a general strike movement among Minnesota workers, Tuesday’s shooting makes it clear that the Trump administration has not abandoned the use of deadly force against the American population.

And it comes only two days after the killing of 20-year-old Tyrin Johnson by National Guard troops in Memphis, Tennessee, on July 5. As in the cases of killings by federal agents, the National Guard claimed the soldiers fired on Johnson in self-defense, although there is no indication that Johnson himself fired at them. 

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As is par for the course, ICE did not provide a shred of evidence corroborating its account of events, echoing numerous fabrications put forward to justify deadly incidents involving Trump’s Department of Homeland Security. In fact, the DHS account of Salgado Araujo’s killing mirrors many of the statements the agency issued following multiple fatalities or injuries to undocumented immigrants and US citizens. This includes the murder of Renee Good in Minneapolis, who was also accused of trying to ram ICE agents with her vehicle, and the shooting of two Venezuelan men in Oregon earlier this year.

In both cases, as well as other shootings, the official accounts of the incidents were contradicted by video evidence and testimony from witnesses, establishing that the officers involved were not in danger and even acted as the aggressors sometimes. This includes an April incident where the federal government said a California man whom they fired upon during a traffic stop “weaponized his vehicle,” though footage of the interaction proved no officers were hit by his car. 

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Salgado Araujo’s son Ronaldo told Telemundo Houston that his father had been out that morning picking up fellow construction workers while on the way to a job. In a statement, Ronaldo Salgado said his father was a hard worker who had been going through the process to obtain his legal residency for years.

“My father has been in this country for nearly 35 years,” he said, “working in construction to provide for myself, my two brothers, and my mother. … My father did not deserve this.”

Family members pointed to the fact that the ICE vehicles were unmarked, likely leading Salgado Araujo to believe he was being carjacked and faced the danger of losing his van, vital for his livelihood, and giving him a reason to flee. 

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Tuesday’s shooting has caused outrage in the nation’s fourth largest city, whose greater metropolitan area is home to an estimated 1.7 million immigrants, with a population that is 44.5 percent Latino or Hispanic. Local elected officials and civil rights organizations, including the Texas Civil Rights Project and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), have issued calls for transparency and an independent investigation. 

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The Trump administration’s deployment of ICE as a paramilitary force carrying out mass roundups, renditions and even cold-blooded killings in American streets is not a departure from the normal functioning of American capitalism; it is the political expression of its deepening crisis. ICE’s transformation into the “Amazon of deportations” serves to divide the working class by scapegoating immigrant workers, and it provides the legal and political framework for expanding police-state powers that will ultimately be deployed against the entire working class, regardless of immigration status.

The struggle against ICE is therefore not only the defense of one particularly exploited section of the working class, it is the central front in the defense of democratic rights for all workers. For the American working class, the defense of immigrants is inseparable from the class struggle that pits them against the capitalist oligarchy.

What is unfolding and being planned at the highest stage of the government, with the complicity of the Democratic Party and its pseudo-left satellites, is a grand conspiracy to counter the growing disillusionment with the capitalist system with the establishment of a military-police dictatorship. The independent mobilization of the working class—through independent rank-and-file committees in workplaces and neighborhoods—to utilize its massive social power is the only way forward in combating the assault being prepared. 

2. Trump launches new phase of US imperialism’s criminal war on Iran

US President Donald Trump has relaunched American imperialism’s illegal war of aggression against Iran, after repeatedly making Hitlerite threats in recent days to destroy the country’s basic infrastructure and rain death and destruction on its people.

Speaking Wednesday on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Ankara, Trump effectively repudiated the 60-day truce reached between Washington and Tehran last month. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s over,” he declared. He went on to vow that the US will continue the campaign of air strikes launched on Iran in the early hours of Wednesday morning. “We’re going to hit them ‌hard tonight,” boasted the fascist would-be dictator president. 

This was coupled with a flurry of other threats, including the possible resumption of the US blockade of Iranian ports and the “takeover” of Kharg Island, Iran’s principal Persian Gulf oil export hub.

On Tuesday, Washington canceled the oil export sanctions “waiver” that it had granted Tehran as part of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that underpins the truce. Hours later, the US mounted air strikes on more than 80 targets in southern Iran, killing, according to Iranian authorities, eight military personnel.

In his characteristic gangster-style fashion, Trump denounced Iran’s leaders in his Wednesday remarks, reveling in his capacity as the head of the US imperialist war machine to order execution air strikes like that which killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei at the war’s outset. “I do not want to deal with them any more, they are scum. They are sick people,” he snorted.

Tehran, for its part, has warned that the US is in breach of the MoU. An Iranian Foreign Ministry statement issued Wednesday said America’s “repeated illegal attacks against Iran,” the re-imposition of sanctions on Iranian oil and Israel’s continuing aggression against Lebanon “have rendered important and fundamental parts” of the truce agreement “ineffective.”

Iran has responded to the Pentagon’s Tuesday night attack with counter-strikes on US military bases in Kuwait and Bahrain and by warning the region’s other oil sheikdoms that they will be similarly targeted if they continue to facilitate US aggression.  

The truce has been hanging by a thread since it was formally signed by Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on June 17.   

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Trump’s relaunching of the war on Iran unfolded against the background of a NATO summit dominated by the imperialist powers’ competing agendas in what is a developing global war for the control of resources, markets, production networks and strategic territories akin to the imperialist world wars of the last century—only on a far greater and more lethal scale.

The European powers, joined by Canada, used the summit to escalate the war on Russia, boasting of their accelerating rearmament drive and role in providing their Ukrainian proxy with the capabilities of striking deep inside nuclear-armed Russia. Trump, meanwhile, denounced them for not being more supportive of the US-Israeli war on Iran, demanded Greenland be ceded by Denmark to the US, reiterated his support for a US-Russia deal to end the Ukraine war at the expense of America’s NATO “allies” and threatened to cut off all US trade with Spain.

The imperialist powers and the capitalist system they lead are dragging humanity to the abyss. The only progressive answer to their rival predatory agendas for rearmament and war, austerity, and the evisceration of democratic rights is the revolutionary mobilization of the international working class. The World Socialist Web Site has long insisted that the same crisis of global capitalism that is fueling global war is intensifying class conflict, creating the objective conditions for the emergence of a mass movement of the working class for socialism.

3. Trump-Erdoğan meeting: A deepening war alliance between Washington and Ankara

US President Donald Trump met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Tuesday on the sidelines of the 36th NATO Summit in Ankara. The meeting took place under conditions in which hundreds of anti-war protesters have been detained, demonstrations banned and the capital turned into a fortress by some 70,000 security personnel.

It points to the deepening of relations between Washington and Ankara based on the escalation of imperialist war.

4. United Kingdom: SOAS graduate Sarah Cotte defends free speech during trial on terrorism charges

A jury has been discharged following a trial at the Old Bailey in London in the case of Sarah Cotte, a 22-year-old School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) graduate charged under Section 12(1A) of the Terrorism Act (2000). Prosecutors allege that her support for the Palestinian resistance equates to support for Hamas, banned by the UK government under the Terrorism Act.

Cotte’s “crime,” according to the prosecution, was a speech she delivered at SOAS on October 9, 2023, just two days after Operation Al-Aqsa Flood was launched from Gaza and amidst massive retaliatory bombardment by Israel, in which she defended the Palestinian people’s right to resist occupation. Cotte was secretary of the college’s Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! (FRFI) society.

For her speech, she was arrested in a dawn raid on January 31, 2024, interrogated, doxxed, and subjected to a two-year ordeal culminating in an eight-day trial, and now, a retrial. The date for retrial has been set for September 14, 2026.

Not a single mainstream journalist reported on the court proceedings. A week-long trial of a student charged with terrorism for speech on campus against genocide has unfolded in near-total silence. 

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Speaking outside the Old Bailey on Wednesday, Sarah Cotte told supporters she was seeking to establish “why it is right for the Palestinian people, for occupied people to resist their occupation, to fight back against their oppressors and to reiterate that this is a basic principle of international law.”

Whatever the outcome, the trial itself stands as an indictment of the British state’s use of counter-terrorism legislation to criminalize solidarity with the Palestinian people and to suppress fundamental democratic rights of speech and protest. 

5. Keiko Fujimori declared Peru's president: imperialism, institutional collapse, and the tasks of the working class (Part two)

Fujimori's rise to power unfolds against a backdrop of open US imperialist intervention, a decade of accelerating institutional collapse and intense social crisis.

6. The death of Alejandro Águila exploited to militarize Chile

The tragic killing of 12-year-old Alejandro Águila on June 23 has been seized upon by the entire Chilean political establishment to advance a pre-existing agenda: the expansion of the police state, the criminalization of youth, the militarization of public security and the granting of sweeping impunity to the forces of repression. The cynicism is staggering, but it is not new. It follows a well-worn script in which the ruling class utilizes a shocking crime to push through measures that have nothing to do with public safety and everything to do with preparing the state for social counterrevolution.

The facts of the case are harrowing. Alejandro's family was returning from the Santiago airport in the early hours of June 23 when they were intercepted by a gang at an intersection in the municipality of San Bernardo. The five assailants, including two 17-year-olds, stole the family’s car with Alejandro unable to escape, his seatbelt still fastened. The father and aunt screamed that the boy was being dragged as the car sped away. Alejandro was dead by the time the vehicle was abandoned nearly three kilometers later.

What followed was a coordinated political offensive. The Pinochetist UDI caucus immediately demanded urgency on a bill to lower the age of criminal responsibility from 14 to 13 and apply adult penalties to 16 and 17-year-old repeat offenders. The Chamber of Deputies approved a non-binding resolution to that effect by 77 votes to 40 on June 24. President José Antonio Kast, who had called for the perpetrators to be imprisoned “for the rest of their lives,” endorsed the grieving family’s demand for prison sentences without parole regardless of age.

But the most significant demand to emerge from the political establishment was not about juvenile sentencing at all. It was the call, led by figures from across the governing coalition and the so-called opposition, to deploy the Armed Forces onto the streets of Santiago. 

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Kast is a populist who appeals to the basest sentiments: fear of crime, xenophobic hatred, the longing for an iron fist. His posture on military deployment has evolved in ways that reveal a calculated, Caesarist logic: he is waiting for the popular mandate to do what he has been planning all along. 

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The San Bernardo tragedy has been seized upon with such urgency because the Kast government is in political trouble. The Haitian children scandal, in which the government and media spent ten days alleging trafficking networks and organ harvesting based on a Comptroller’s report that exposed no such things, collapsed on June 23 when the PDI confirmed all 64 “missing” children had been located with their families. The lurid allegations of child smuggling, child prostitution and organ trafficking were fabrications designed to justify the administration’s anti-immigrant offensive of border walls, mass expulsions and the stripping of healthcare and education from undocumented migrants.

Kast’s approval rating has fallen dramatically. The Pulso Ciudadano poll released June 29 showed that 56 percent rate his handling of crime as “bad or very bad.” The economic crisis is deepening with unemployment now at 9.4 percent and rising living costs, while the structural deficit of 3.7 percent of GDP is being used to justify deeply unpopular cuts to education, healthcare and pensions.

The push for military deployment and punitive sentencing is the political response to this crisis. It is an attempt to redirect social anger away from extreme inequality, mass unemployment, the destruction of public services, the conditions that produce crime, and toward the most politically convenient targets such as adolescents, immigrants and the specter of “disorder” that justifies the expansion of the repressive state.

The demand for troops on the streets, the legal architecture of immunity for the forces of repression, the lowering of the age of criminal responsibility, the registry of “vandals” that will strip protesters of social benefits are not responses to the death of a 12-year-old boy. They are the components of a social counterrevolution that has been under construction since the 2019 uprising shook the Chilean ruling class to its foundations. Every party that has participated in this construction, from the PS to the PC to the FA, bears responsibility. The defense of the working class against the coming crackdown cannot be entrusted to any of them. It requires the building of a genuinely revolutionary leadership, grounded in the international unity of workers across all national and ethnic lines, against the capitalist state and its fascistic government. 

7. Under guise of relief, Pentagon deploys 2,000 troops to Venezuela, securing semicolonial foothold

Two weeks after twin earthquakes of magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5 struck northern Venezuela on June 24—the strongest to hit the country in over a century—more than 3,600 people have been confirmed dead, 16,700 injured, and tens of thousands remain missing.

Dozens of bodies are being thrown into mass graves after briefly passing through an improvised morgue at La Guaira port. International search and rescue teams have left, and local agencies have all but abandoned their already limited efforts. Those still searching for the missing amid the rubble have been forced to rely on their own means—collecting thousands of dollars to rent a crane, digging with their hands, shovels and ropes.

“There is no support,” one man whose sister was buried in a collapsed Caracas apartment building told the Christian Science Monitor. “The effort is being made by us, the families.” These actions have relied on WhatsApp groups and Instagram accounts.

The government of acting President Delcy Rodríguez has dispatched police not to dig but to intimidate, rifles in hand, filming survivors. Volunteer rescuer Wilmer Cruz was arrested for denouncing the government's response and released only after public pressure.

The New York Times cited a man who spent ten days searching for survivors between slabs of concrete, who said he was no longer afraid to speak out. “Why would I be afraid, if I was born to die?” he told the paper. The Times then noted nervously:

The public outrage could also complicate the Trump administration's strategy of supporting Ms. Rodríguez so the United States can benefit from Venezuela's resources… this public outcry could also spur a crackdown, leading to questions about how the United States would respond to any repression.  

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US Southern Command Commander General Francis Donovan announced this Wednesday that “the US military, the Department of War, has roughly 2,000 teammates in the area on land, air, and sea around Venezuela.” The day before, Donovan had told Reuters that 900 US servicemen and women were on Venezuelan territory. The rapid escalation in force numbers, alongside Donovan's expressed hope that the mission would build stronger “military-to-military” relations with Venezuela, makes clear that the humanitarian framing is a Trojan Horse. 

The operational footprint is that of a military occupation. After carrying out repair works on a runway, the US Air Force's Contingency Response Element has been conducting “airfield management, air traffic coordination, communications, and security” at the Simón Bolívar International Airport. SOUTHCOM press releases have documented the arrival of multiple military transport aircraft, while MQ-9 Reaper drones and combat helicopters have conducted intelligence reconnaissance over Caracas and other affected areas.

US forces have also taken a position at La Guaira port with the docking of the amphibious warship USS Fort Lauderdale. The USS Billings remains positioned in Venezuelan territorial waters. A Marine Corps combat logistics company, with transport trucks, off-road vehicles and ambulance support, has been deployed. The deployment and larger official response is being directed by Marine Maj. Gen. Kevin Jarrard.

US chargé d'affaires John Barrett declared the Venezuelan government “fully compliant” with all US requests, adding: “We will continue to work with the Venezuelan people to adjust these needs, including sanitation, water, energy generation, and we will continue along that path as long as it takes.”

The US government, in other words, is framing its indefinite military presence in the broadest possible terms. The precedent is Haiti: Washington responded to the 2010 earthquake there with a large military deployment that became a prolonged neocolonial intervention. 

But the cynicism is even more glaring in Venezuela’s case. The same power that spent two decades imposing sanctions that gutted the country’s oil revenues, collapsed its public health system, drove more than 8 million people into exile and left the housing stock in the state of disrepair that turned the earthquake into a mass casualty event now presents itself as Venezuela's savior.

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Even as it claims purely humanitarian intent, Washington has maintained the sanctions that freeze Venezuelan government assets in US jurisdiction—including 31 tonnes of gold deposited at the Bank of England—while a special license permits only a narrow band of relief-related transactions.

The arrival of an Israeli military delegation further exposed the true character of the operation. Brig. Gen. Elad Edri, chief of staff of the IDF Home Front Command, arrived with “expert teams” for reconstruction, according to the Israeli government. Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil welcomed Israel’s “support for the Venezuelan people”—the same Gil who, as recently as Christmas, wrote on social media condemning the “extermination” of the Palestinian people by what he called a “genocidal actor.” Those responsible are now welcomed with open arms.

The presence of the White Helmets, presented as “Syria's first overseas humanitarian search-and-rescue deployment in modern history,” is further proof of relief efforts being used to further regime change operations. This group was created by British intelligence with US and European funding in 2013 as a propaganda tool to promote the forces seeking to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad. 

8. Massachusetts nurses strike Mass General Brigham in largest healthcare walkout in state history

More than 4,500 nurses and clinicians walked off the job Wednesday morning at Mass General Brigham (MGB), the biggest private hospital system in Massachusetts, in the largest strike of healthcare workers in the state’s history and the first by nurses at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH). The walkout includes more than 4,000 registered nurses at BWH in Boston and roughly 450 MGB Home Care clinicians—registered nurses, occupational and physical therapists, speech-language pathologists, social workers and dietitians—across Greater Boston.

Thousands of nurses in red shirts ringed the hospital in the Longwood Medical Area beginning at 7 a.m., chanting and carrying signs reading “Boston Strikes” and “Nurses do the labor, MGB gave no delivery.” The Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) only called a 24-hour strike at BWH, while the much smaller Home Care unit began a seven-day walkout.

MGB has seized on the limited character of the action at BWH to impose a lockout. Although nurses had planned to return to work Thursday morning, management is barring them from the hospital until 7 a.m. Monday, July 13, claiming the nearly 1,300 traveling nurses it has imported as strikebreakers require five-day minimum contracts. The one-day strike called by the MNA has thus been converted into a five-day work stoppage on management’s terms.

 

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The sentiments of these workers—for a broader, longer and unified struggle—stand in sharp contrast to the strategy of the MNA bureaucracy. The union knew that MGB would answer a 24-hour strike with a lockout, but it proceeded with the token action anyway, giving management ample time to recruit replacement staff and wait out the walkout. The MNA has kept the Brigham nurses and Home Care clinicians on separate timetables and has done nothing to mobilize the tens of thousands of workers across the MGB system, where nurses at system’s other flagship facility, Massachusetts General Hospital, are nonunion and are not on strike.

MGB’s cries of financial hardship are obscene. The system holds $35.8 billion in assets and reported $2.4 billion in net income for fiscal year 2025, even as it shuttered the Brigham Burn Unit, the Weiner Center preoperative clinic and other patient services. Its 14 highest-paid executives took home a combined $35.9 million in fiscal 2024, including $8.4 million for CEO Dr. Anne Klibanski—nearly 100 times the $86,700 starting salary of a Brigham nurse. 

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To prevent a similar sellout, Brigham nurses and Home Care clinicians should form rank-and-file committees, independent of the MNA apparatus and the Democratic Party, to demand open bargaining, the publication of all contract proposals and the extension and unification of the strikes. Above all, they should appeal directly to healthcare workers throughout MGB, UMass Memorial and across the state to transform these limited actions into a unified fight against the corporate looting of healthcare and for the establishment of genuine socialized medicine. 

9. Italy’s summer of struggles: Workers confront Meloni’s austerity, war and police state

The Italian working class is in open conflict with the Meloni government. A wave of strikes concentrated into July, before the legal summer strike ban (franchigia estiva) takes effect, and set to resume with greater force in September signals that class tensions in Europe’s third-largest economy have reached a breaking point.

Workers in aviation, rail, logistics, maritime transport, local transit and the public sector are fighting falling living standards, the government’s military spending and the harshest anti-strike laws introduced in postwar Italy. The struggle is not merely economic. It poses directly the question of political power.

The strike wave continues a year-long cycle of working class resistance. National strike actions on September 22 and November 28–29 last year and  May 18 and May 29 this year repeatedly brought large sections of the country to a standstill. Each has taken on a more political character, connecting wage demands with opposition to the Israeli genocide in Gaza, NATO’s war drive and the government’s authoritarian policies. 

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What sets this strike wave apart from the sector-by-sector stoppages of previous decades is its openly political character. Workers are demanding more than higher wages. USB calls for a legal minimum wage of €2,000 a month, restoration of the scala mobile wage-indexing system, a windfall tax on energy and banking corporations, and the defense of healthcare, education and pensions against a budget that shifts billions to military spending.

Under the slogan “Nemmeno un chiodo per guerre e genocidio” (”Not even a nail for wars and genocide”), the May 18 national strike linked Italy’s plan to raise military spending to 5 percent of GDP with cuts to social programs. USB demanded that the government sever all diplomatic, economic and military ties with Israel and condemned US attacks on Iran. Dockworkers in Genoa, Livorno and Ancona refused to load weapons bound for Israel.

At the May 29 strike in Rome, a SI Cobas logistics worker told the WSWS: “With rising military spending, healthcare, pensions, hospitals and schools are cut. So workers must organise and oppose wars waged by bosses for the bosses’ profits.” Bereket, a worker from Eritrea, told the WSWS: “We, as workers ... fight internationally. I am not Italian, but I stand alongside Italians, alongside workers from other countries.”

Yet the strike movement exposes a deep divide within Italy’s labor movement—and the political limitations of the forces leading it. The confederal unions CGIL, CISL and UIL have repeatedly refused to join the mobilizations called by the base unions. When USB and CUB organized a national strike against the “war budget” on November 28, 2025, the CGIL scheduled a separate action two weeks later, splitting the movement. The same occurred in May 2026. 

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The base unions—USB, SI Cobas, CUB, SGB and Unicobas—emerged because many workers concluded the confederal unions imposed concessions rather than fought them. They have built support among logistics workers, dockworkers, educators, subcontracted employees and immigrant workers. Their militancy and opposition to war have attracted workers seeking a fighting alternative to the CGIL. 

But the base unions remain within a reformist framework, and this is not a secondary limitation—it is their defining feature. While denouncing the Meloni government as authoritarian and calling its budget a “war financial law,” they continue appealing to government ministers for reforms such as a higher minimum wage, labor negotiations and policy changes. 

The anarcho-syndicalist traditions represented by the USI offer no strategy for winning political power. Refusing to handle weapons shipments is a principled act of solidarity. But refusing to build a political party capable of replacing the government that orders those shipments leaves workers without a means of ending war and austerity. Isolated actions, however courageous, must be developed into a coordinated political movement.

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Meanwhile, the Meloni government has strengthened the state’s powers of repression. Law No. 80/2025, adopted in June 2025, is the broadest expansion of criminal penalties in postwar Italy. Its key provision restores criminal penalties for roadblocks. Since 1999, blocking a road with one’s body had been treated as a civil offense. The new law makes it punishable by prison and imposes sentences of six months to two years when carried out by groups.

The measure directly targets strike pickets, especially in logistics and transport, by treating workers peacefully blocking a workplace as participants in an aggravated criminal offense. It also increases penalties for protests affecting energy, transport and telecommunications infrastructure and creates a new offense of “mutiny” in prisons and immigration detention centers that includes nonviolent resistance.

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The crisis facing Italian workers is part of a global crisis. The same capitalist system that funds Israel’s war, finances Italy’s military buildup and imposed austerity measures such as the abolition of the scala mobile and the Jobs Act cannot be overcome within national borders. Workers in Italy and internationally confront the same system. Both the CGIL’s class-collaborationist leadership and the base unions’ left-syndicalist approach accept the framework of the capitalist nation-state. They limit the struggle to economic reforms rather than the fight for political power.

The alternative is for workers to break with all pro-capitalist parties and union bureaucracies and build rank-and-file committees in every workplace, democratically controlled by workers and linked internationally through the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC). Dockworkers’ refusal to load weapons for Israel demonstrates the potential of international working class action, but such actions must be subordinated to the building of a revolutionary party.

To this end, the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), founded by Leon Trotsky, is building its Italian section. It advocates the international unity of the working class based on a socialist program, including public ownership of the banks and major corporations, the establishment of a workers’ government and the creation of a United States of Europe as part of a world socialist federation. It calls on workers dissatisfied with the existing unions and parties to join the IWA-RFC and help build a revolutionary party.

10. H5N1 “Bird Flu” spreads to Australia

Concerns have been raised for the health of the Australian public and wildlife following the discovery of multiple birds infected by the H5N1 strain of Avian Influenza (“bird flu”) last month. The first cases were two migratory seabirds found near Esperance in Western Australia.

Confirmation of H5N1 bird flu in a migratory giant petrel found near Hawks Nest, New South Wales, in recent days extends the virus’s known presence to Australia’s east coast and brings the total to six cases. Numbers are expected to rise as more birds are investigated. Australia had been the last continent to have proven local cases of H5N1.

Classified as a “high pathogenicity avian influenza” (HPAI) virus because of its high fatality rate, H5N1 has been responsible for the deaths of millions of farm livestock and wildlife globally since 2020. H5N1 has infected nearly 1,000 people this century and has a historical death rate of about 50 percent. Farm workers who handle infected animals are especially at risk.

The virus is contagious, and spreads both by direct contact with infected body fluids and airborne transmission. It can also spread through untreated meat and dairy products, like raw poultry or unpasteurised milk. In humans and most animals, H5N1 attacks the respiratory tract, causing respiratory failure in the most severe cases. Vaccines and anti-viral treatments exist for some strains of H5N1 but are of limited effectiveness. Infected animals are usually culled in order to prevent spread, where quarantine is not practical.

Migratory seabirds are recognized as major carriers for H5N1, and in recent years have been responsible for bringing the virus to South America, Antarctica and various islands in the Indian Ocean, devastating local wildlife. It is likely that the birds that brought H5N1 to Australia came from the sub-Antarctic region, a route predicted by scientists based on known migration patterns. 

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Coverage in the corporate media and the response of federal and state governments have focused mainly on the economic impact on the agricultural industry, should H5N1 spread into local poultry. Already, in response to the initial bird flu cases, Papua New Guinea, a major customer for Australian poultry, has suspended imports of chicken and eggs.

In the US, mass cullings from bird flu resulted in at least $1.4 billion of additional costs for the American poultry industry between 2021 and 2024, and caused estimated price increases for eggs of up to 300 percent in parts of the country. Similar impacts are feared in Australia, under conditions of an escalating cost-of-living crisis.

While these are serious concerns, what is being downplayed are the threats to humans, with only those who interact directly with infected animals considered at risk of infection.

Human-to-human transmission has not yet been observed. However, there has been an ever-widening number of species infected by H5N1, and repeated instances of animals infecting humans. This highlights the risk that with subsequent mutations, the virus will develop the ability to more easily infect and then to spread among humans. This process, a natural phenomenon known as zoonotic spillover, has a long history and was responsible for the COVID pandemic and Ebola. 

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Current and recent experiences with COVID, Ebola and other diseases and the dangers posed by H5N1 require an international response. Man-made climate change, the globalisation of production, and disruptions to wildlife habitats all pose ever increasing risks of existing and new diseases emerging and spreading, which cannot be solved by any one country.

The starting point of any scientific response is an emergency expansion of healthcare infrastructure, including millions of dollars for public hospitals, universal free testing and the shutdown, with full pay for all workers, of the most dangerous industries. That requires a political struggle by the working class based on a socialist perspective that makes basic social needs, not corporate profits, the priority. 

11. Fiji military commander publicly denounces budget cut

Fiji’s military commander Major General Jone Kalouniwai has responded to budget cuts to the Republic of Fiji Military Forces (RFMF) with an extraordinary campaign in the Pacific country’s newspapers and on social media. Kalouniwai took out full-page advertisements opposing the government’s measures with a message entitled “Beyond the Budget—and Into the Grey Zone.” 

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Kalouniwai said critics of defense spending should consider the military’s “contribution” to society, including its role in responding to natural disasters and the military training programs operating in 70 schools. 

Kalouniwai portrayed the RFMF as the only force capable of dealing with drug trafficking and organized crime. He stated that the country’s other “institutions are being hollowed out by corruption,” including the police, border agencies and the judicial system. The military, he said, was fighting a “grey zone war” against “the systemic rot” afflicting “the very mechanisms of governance and law enforcement” which enabled the drugs trade.

This depiction of the military as the only uncorrupted institution is ominous. The RFMF has a history and ingrained culture of torture and brutality, and has carried out several coups (1987, 2000 and 2006), including first led by Rabuka.

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Fiji is gripped by a worsening economic and social crisis: soaring prices, entrenched poverty, a drug abuse epidemic and the highest rate of HIV infection in the world. As is the case internationally, the turn towards militarism and authoritarian forms of rule reflects deep fears in the ruling class that popular anger will explode.  

12. El-Sayed—Stevens debate in Michigan: Neither “progressive” nor establishment Democrats offer anything for the working class

The televised debate between Senate candidates Abdul El-Sayed and Haley Stevens on Tuesday evening in Grand Rapids, Michigan exposed both the sharpening factional crisis within the Democratic Party and the narrow pro-capitalist political limits within which the conflict is being waged.

The Democratic Party winner in the August 4 primary in Michigan will face the unopposed Republican, former Representative Mike Rogers. Rogers, who served 14 years as the Representative from Michigan’s 8th Congressional District, is a Trump-backed candidate for the Senate seat being vacated by Democrat Gary Peters.

The debate on Tuesday followed a sudden shift in the primary field. WOOD-TV8 and CBS News Detroit had planned a three-way event featuring El-Sayed, Stevens and state Senator Mallory McMorrow. However, after polls showed her running a distant third, at between 5 and 6 percent, McMorrow suspended her campaign and abruptly left the race two days before the debate.

The event moderators framed the contest as a pivotal primary in a “closely watched” battleground state, stressing that control of the Senate might hinge on the outcome. This fact has intensified the drive by the Democratic Party establishment and its corporate backers to close ranks around Stevens. 

*****

Both candidates advanced economic nationalism as the solution to the problems facing the industrial working class in the US, thus demonstrating their fundamental agreement with the Trump administration, despite their pretense of unbending opposition to the fascist president.

El-Sayed denounced Trump’s war of choice against Iran, claiming the US president was carrying out the policies of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In this way, he sought to avoid any discussion of the historical role of US imperialism in the Middle East, in which Israel is an instrument of Washington, not the other way around.

The moderators pressed both candidates on the administration’s unrelenting military support for Israel as it continues mass killings and destruction in Gaza, as well as on Washington’s confrontation with Iran, which has included escalating air and missile strikes and preparations for a wider regional war.

Stevens reiterated standard pro-Zionist talking points about Israel’s “right to defend itself” and supported continued military aid, and never used the word “genocide,” while mentioning humanitarian aid and the need to “protect civilians.”

*****

The debate exposed the efforts by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) to present El-Sayed as a “left” and even a “socialist” candidate. Despite his endorsement by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, El-Sayed has never called himself a socialist, avoiding even the pretense that he opposes the capitalist system.

Whatever the ultimate outcome on August 4, the Democratic Party, in Michigan as across the US, offers no alternative to war, dictatorship and capitalist exploitation. The essential task for workers remains not choosing between rival factions of the two parties of the military-industrial-information complex and the financial oligarchy on Wall Street but building an independent political movement of the working class, based on a socialist program and dedicated to putting an end to capitalism in the US and on a world scale. 

13. Israel continues Gaza onslaught, after Hamas announces plan to hand power over to UN committee

Israel is continuing its criminal genocide and violation of the Gaza cease-fire, killing as many as 16 Palestinians, including a child, in the two days since Hamas announced it was preparing to transfer power to a technical committee backed by the United Nations as part of a US-brokered peace deal. 

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The deaths over 48 hours in Gaza are part of the continuing lethal attacks that violate the US‑mediated cease-fire announced eight months ago. And beyond Gaza, UN human rights and humanitarian agencies have reported deadly incidents in the occupied West Bank in recent days. 

*****

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza was captured in a recent CNN report describing bodies lying unclaimed and rats running rampant in areas where families are living amid ruins. In Deir al‑Balah, central Gaza, journalists found a patch of sandy ground where makeshift graves and partially decomposed bodies remain in the open because relatives have been displaced or killed and authorities lack the capacity to recover and rebury the dead.

As temperatures rise, the report describes how the smell of decomposition hangs over nearby tented areas, and residents fear disease outbreaks. CNN also recounted scenes of rats “running rampant” through these areas, entering tents and informal shelters at night and biting children as they sleep.

One local resident told the network that parents are forced to stay awake to try to swat away rats and other vermin, turning nights into desperate vigils rather than rest. Humanitarian workers described these conditions as a “public health nightmare,” with limited pest control, scarce clean water and a health system already gutted by months of war.

Against this backdrop, Hamas has moved to dismantle its governing structures in Gaza in line with cease-fire arrangements brokered with international mediation. On Monday, the group announced that it had dissolved its government in Gaza and was preparing to transfer power to a technical committee backed by the United Nations as part of a US‑brokered ceasefire deal.

A Hamas spokesman, Hazem Qassem, described the decision as a “clear” move to end “all governmental entities overseeing affairs in Gaza and transfer their duties to an independent technocratic committee.”

Hamas has governed Gaza for nearly two decades, since it assumed power of the strip in 2007. An Islamist Palestinian movement founded in 1987, Hamas won a majority of seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council in the elections of January 2006. Factions of the Zionist state, including Netanyahu, encouraged Islamist Palestinians and stoked the conflict between Hamas and the Fatah faction of the secular Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), which had ruled Gaza for the previous 13 years following the establishment of the Palestinian Authority.

According to sources within Hamas, a delegation is due in Cairo to discuss the second phase of the ceasefire agreement with Israel and finalize consensus on the members of the administrative committee. That second phase reportedly includes a complete military withdrawal from Gaza by Israeli forces, the disarmament of Hamas, large‑scale reconstruction, and the formation of a transitional governing body to administer the enclave.

The nearly defunct “Board of Peace,” the US‑backed body created by the Trump administration to oversee elements of the cease-fire and reconstruction framework, acknowledged the announcement but stressed it would judge Hamas “on actions, not promises.”

*****

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded to the Hamas announcement by insisting Israel will not withdraw from Gaza in the near term. On the ground, Israeli troops continue to control more than 60 percent of Gaza, patrolling what Netanyahu has described as a buffer zone to deter renewed attacks, and carrying out periodic strikes they say are aimed at remaining militants.

Netanyahu’s broader regional perspective was spelled out in a recent speech at a graduation ceremony for combat officers in southern Israel. In that address, he stated that Israeli forces would “remain in southern Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza for as long as required.” His comment came amid ongoing Israeli operations in southern Lebanon and reported strikes on targets in Syria.

The prime minister’s insistence that Israel will not withdraw from Gaza aligns with previous statements that the IDF will remain in neighboring territories “as long as required.” This shows that any transition of power in Gaza’s civil administration under a UN‑backed committee is unlikely to be accompanied by a complete end to Israeli military presence. 

14. “Work more for the same money”—33,000 Mercedes-Benz employees protest in Germany

Protesters in Sindelfingen 
On Friday, 3 July, more than 33,000 Mercedes employees protested nationwide against the company’s cost-cutting drive. The vehicle manufacturer had previously announced longer working hours and pay cuts in a letter and a video message—tantamount to a declaration of war on the workforce. The “Next Level Performance” savings program agreed to by the union-led works council at the end of 2024 is now being further intensified. In Sindelfingen, the group’s largest production site, more than 20,000 employees gathered. Further protests took place at the Mercedes-Benz plants and subsidiaries in Stuttgart (company headquarters) and Untertürkheim, Bremen, Rastatt and Kuppenheim, Berlin/Marienfelde, Düsseldorf, Hamburg and Germersheim.

The protests were directed against the company leadership, but indirectly also against the IG Metall union and its works council reps, who have repeatedly pushed through cost-cutting measures and plant closures. The high level of participation surprised even IG Metall, which had organised the protest. According to the Stuttgarter Zeitung, the chairman of the group works council, Ergun Lümali, was “overwhelmed by this enormous willingness to protest” in Sindelfingen: “Even the protest-hardened Ergun Lümali did not expect this,” the paper wrote. Lümali’s speech was aimed at breaking the fighting spirit of the assembled workforce.  

*****

The Mercedes group sold 2,160,000 vehicles in 2025, 229,000 fewer than in 2024. For the 2025 financial year, shareholders were awarded a total dividend of €3.3 billion at the annual general meeting in April 2026. Mercedes CEO Ola Källenius received €8.8 million.

The high level of participation in Friday’s protest action is an expression of growing opposition among workers to IG Metall’s collaboration with management. Employees at Mercedes, Volkswagen, Bosch, Mahle and throughout the automotive and supplier industries have had enough of the constant sell-offs.

The shop stewards at Mercedes Untertürkheim recently adopted a resolution calling for resistance against the government and the corporations. “We are active in our union and demand that demonstrations against the greed of the bosses, against the government and for a better future be organized as soon as possible. Up to and including strike action. And if the union leadership drags its feet, then we’ll do it ourselves,” it states. However, the resolution calls on employees to wait and see whether the “union leadership” will side with the workers and organize strikes. This is either naive or a calculated maneuver. The entire trade union apparatus, rooted in nationalism, supports “social partnership” and the German government’s multi-billion rearmament policies.

The struggle to defend jobs and against the government’s massive rearmament and war policy cannot be waged within the prevailing trade union framework. The immediate task of Mercedes workers is to form independent rank-and-file action committees and build a network with employees at Volkswagen, Bosch and internationally. 

15. UK Labour government rams through authoritarian National Security Bill

The Labour government’s National Security (State Threats) Bill passed all its stages in the House of Commons on July 6, becoming law two days later. It represents one of the most far-reaching attacks on democratic rights and press freedom in modern British history.

The Bill is a weapon against political protest, journalism and humanitarian work, and gives the state the means to prosecute those who oppose its wars. Its purpose is to intimidate and suppress political dissent and critical journalism by depicting this as a threat to national security.

The Commons passed the Bill unopposed after agreeing to six amendments proposed by the House of Lords supposedly meant to safeguard against its extraordinary attacks on press freedoms and the activities of NGOs, without addressing the equally chilling impact on anti-war and anti-genocide protests. 

Security Minister Angela Eagle spun the government’s false narrative that it was aimed at tackling threats “predominantly, though not exclusively, from three countries: Russia, China and Iran”. 

*****

The speed with which the measure was forced through is confirmation of the break with democratic norms in ruling circles. The legislation completed its entire passage—from its official announcement in the King's Speech on May 13 to becoming law—in less than two months.  

Such was the frenzy of the government to get it through that the Bill cleared every one of its Commons stages in just a single day—on June 17—including its second reading, committee and report stages and third reading. A 'guillotine' procedure was deployed to limit debate to just six hours, ensuring that legislation carrying 14-year sentences received a fraction of the scrutiny given to routine measures.

The Bill expands a battery of existing repressive legislation, primarily the National Security Act 2023, and operates in tandem with the Crime and Policing Act 2026; it incorporates the draconian Section 12 provisions of the Terrorism Act 2000 already wielded against journalists and demonstrators.

Large parts of the Crime and Policing Act came into force on June 29, and the list of protest actions now criminalized is staggering. Climbing on any of two dozen specified memorials can now bring three months in jail under the Act's new Schedule 17 offense. Protesting outside the home of any elected official or candidate now attracts up to six months' imprisonment.

Separately, under the National Security Act 2023, many sites across the country are designated 'prohibited places,' where unauthorized entry, approach, or even photography can carry a six-month sentence—rising to 14 years if prosecutors allege a purpose prejudicial to the 'safety or interests of the United Kingdom.'

*****

It is also now an offense to conceal one's identity—including with a face mask, even by using medical masks—in a designated area controlled by police restrictions, punishable by up to a month's imprisonment. Possessing a flare or firework on a demonstration carries a £1,000 fine.  

*****

Throughout the Bill’s passage, the government ignored every protest and legal objection raised. The Society of Editors called for explicit statutory protection for public-interest journalism. Index on Censorship, Tribune and The Guardian warned that vague drafting around 'material benefits' would result in self-censorship and endanger reporters working from Iran, Lebanon and Palestine.

Human rights groups warned that the National Security Act 2023 “prohibited places’” regime could risk disproportionately interfering with Article 10 (freedom of expression) and Article 11 (freedom of assembly) of the European Convention on Human Rights--creating a 'chilling effect' on lawful dissent. 

*****

This week’s final vote laid bare the spinelessness of the few dozen Labour MPs who call themselves 'left.' Not once, at any stage, did those in Labour’s Socialist Campaign Group (SCG) caucus vote No to the Bill in its entirety. Instead, they confined themselves to abstentions on the final vote and making a few critical comments posted on social media.

The SCG’s main concern was to avoid losing the whip, and to retain their cozy political careers. When the House of Lords amendments were returned, the “left” accepted these as good coin--notwithstanding the warnings from human rights groups that the executive’s dictatorial powers remained wholly intact and that the promised protections for NGOs and journalists amounted to hollow “defenses” rather than strict legal exemptions.

The rotten Labour Party which rammed the legislation through will shortly be led by Andy Burnham, who has not uttered a single word on this major offensive against democratic rights. His silence is the consent of someone who will continue backing British imperialism’s wars and global aggression and intensify the offensive against the working class. 

16. European imperialists seek access to markets, cheap labor and critical raw materials amid deepening great-power rivalries—Part One

Europe’s imperialist powers have for the past several years concluded a series of far-reaching trade agreements and raw materials partnerships spanning Latin America, Africa, and the Indo-Pacific.

17. European imperialists seek access to markets, cheap labor and critical raw materials amid deepening great-power rivalries--Part Two

The intensification of inter-imperialist antagonisms and open reemergence of conflicting blocs resembles the competing trade blocs of the 1930s that preceded and fueled World War II.

18. WSWS begins posting highlight clips from webinar on the American Revolution

On June 25, the World Socialist Web Site hosted an extraordinary panel of eminent historians at a webinar to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the American Revolution.

The full webinar, “The American Revolution and Its Place in History: From the War Against Monarchy to ‘No Kings,’” can be accessed at wsws.org/1776.

Here is another clip:

17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, 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.

Jul 8, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Israel’s war on Gaza continues, deliberately targeting children

Nine months after the Sharm el‑Sheikh peace agreement, signed with the Middle East regimes and major powers in attendance, Gaza lies in ruins, the Palestinians again face famine, and Israel has expanded its military control across most of the Strip.

The agreement was designed to secure the return of Israeli hostages while preserving Israel’s freedom to wage a war of annihilation against the Palestinians. Israel was merely asked to withdraw some troops, suspend military operations and allow the entry of 600 aid trucks per day into Gaza, coordinated by international organizations, including the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Crescent. Later phases would focus on assembling an International Stabilization Force to disarm Hamas.

Israel has been free to violate conditions without consequence since the agreement contained no enforcement mechanism. It was “guaranteed” by the Trump administration, Israel’s chief backer. Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, Israel’s allies, signed on as “monitors” to provide diplomatic cover while Tel Aviv continued with its declared aim of driving out the Palestinians.  

Israel violated every term of Phase I. Verified reporting shows thousands of ceasefire breaches: airstrikes, raids, shelling, demolitions, shootings. More than 1,041 Palestinians were killed after the ceasefire began, with 3,372 others injured, bringing the total number killed since the start of the war to more than 73,000, with 173,480 people injured.

The most devastating evidence comes from the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry, which concluded that Israel’s campaign includes the deliberate targeting of Palestinian children. Israeli forces “deliberately carried out acts inflicting death and severe bodily and mental harm on hundreds of thousands of Palestinian children, irreparably destroying the sanctity of childhood, including family ties, identity, innocence, safety and future,” the report states.

Children accounted for roughly 30 percent of the more than 73,000 people killed—an even higher proportion than in Israel’s 2008–2009 and 2014 assaults. Since the ceasefire, at least 265 children have been killed, many shot or shelled near the ill‑defined “Yellow Line”: a boundary Israel uses to justify lethal force.

Israel’s actions demonstrate an intent “to destroy the existence of the Palestinians in Gaza as a group,” the report explains, noting that children “embody the biological and social continuity of the group.” By attacking children, Israel is “eroding the foundational structure of Palestinian society, weakening the demographic vitality and overall capacity of the Palestinian people to sustain and exercise its right to determine its future.”

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Meanwhile, Israel has cut humanitarian aid to a fraction of survival needs. The agreement required 600 trucks per day; Israel immediately cut that to 300, and in practice has allowed far fewer. UN agencies have reported that about 77 percent of Gaza’s population were experiencing acute food insecurity, inadequate water supplies, repeated displacement, damaged infrastructure, and continuing constraints on humanitarian operations, while civilians, including aid workers, remained exposed to Israeli airstrikes, shelling and gunfire despite the ceasefire.

Gaza authorities report that only 25 percent of minimum food needs are entering the Strip, with UNICEF confirming that famine thresholds have been breached and children are dying from malnutrition. 

*****

Even as the IDF violated the ceasefire, Türkiye’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ensured that the flow of strategic goods to Israel continued uninterrupted, particularly energy. Türkiye remains the central transit route, via the pipeline to Ceyhan, for Azerbaijani oil, Israel’s single most important external fuel source. 

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In May, Minister of Defense Israel Katz made clear his commitment to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza through large-scale migration of Palestinians, saying the government would implement a plan for them to leave Gaza “at the right time and in the right manner”. It follows Israel’s establishment of a bureau for “voluntary emigration” and the easing of travel restrictions for Palestinians who leave Gaza on a one-way ticket. 

Israeli human rights organizations and lawyers have warned that Israel has created such horrific conditions in Gaza that no departure can be considered voluntary.

*****

According to a recent report in the Times of Israel citing an Associated Press investigation, the right-wing group Ad Kan secretly organized several flights taking Palestinians from Gaza to South Africa and Indonesia between May and November last year. It hid behind a company called Al-Majd, which claims to be a humanitarian Muslim charity supporting Palestinian lives. 

2. Kenya and Tanzania deploy security forces against Gen-Z-led Saba Saba protests

Security forces were mobilized across Kenya and Tanzania on Tuesday July 7 to suppress Gen-Z-led Saba Saba Day protests.

Saba Saba—“seven seven” in Kiswahili—has a distinct history in each country, but in both it has become synonymous with confrontation between the state and the working class.

Both regimes have reacted with the same police terror tactics.

*****

Kenya and Tanzania’s youth opposition are part of a single continental and global process, driven by the same underlying conditions: crushing IMF-dictated austerity, a debt spiral that consumes more than half of many national budgets, youth unemployment that reaches into the tens of millions, and a ruling class whose fortunes depend on maintaining and deepening exactly the conditions young people are rising against.

In both countries the youth have shown they can transcend the ethnic divisions long exploited by the ruling class; in both, they confront a political establishment—from pro-business Chadema in Tanzania to Kenya’s discredited opposition figures, several of whom share responsibility for killings carried out while they themselves held state power—that offers no alternative to the capitalist order driving the crisis.

The events of Saba Saba 2026 make clear that the defense of democratic rights in East Africa depends on the independent mobilization of the working class across national borders, against austerity, police violence and the deepening authoritarianism of the region’s ruling elites.

For a fuller analysis underlying the Kenya’s Gen-Z insurgency in 2024 and those of Tanzania in 2025, readers are encouraged to read “Kenya’s Gen Z insurgency, the strike wave and the struggle for Permanent Revolution“ and “The December 9 protest in Tanzania, Nyerere’s ‘African Socialism’ and the struggle for Permanent Revolution”.

3. Keiko Fujimori declared Peru’s president: The historical roots of fujimorism and the bankruptcy of the pseudo-left (Part One)

Three weeks after Peruvian voters went to the polls, Keiko Fujimori was declared the winner of the presidential election. The National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE) announced it had concluded counting 100 percent of the ballots, with Fujimori receiving 50.13 percent against 49.86 percent for her rival, Congressman Roberto Sánchez Palomino of the Together for Peru (JP) party. The margin was less than 50,000 votes out of nearly 20 million cast.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio congratulated Fujimori within hours of the ONPE announcement, hailing “her important electoral victory.” The speed and warmth of the US response came after Ambassador Bernie Navarro had declared during the count that the US Embassy was “monitoring the electoral process”—when Peruvian law does not allow any such official capacity to foreign diplomatic missions.

Despite Sánchez’s record as a faithful administrator of bourgeois interests—as trade minister under Pedro Castillo, he never challenged the Central Bank, the mining concessions, or Peru’s IMF commitments—Peru’s ruling class calculated that even the ambiguity of a “left” nationalist government, arriving wrapped in the expectations generated by the Castillo experience, was a risk it could not afford. Squeezed between mounting US imperialist pressure from above and a combative working class from below, the bourgeoisie could not leave even an inch of space for illusions in social reform that could fuel the class struggle. Fujimori offers no such ambiguity. 

4. Graham Platner and the fraud of “working-class” Democratic Party politics

The campaign of Graham Platner, the Democratic nominee for US Senate in Maine, is collapsing under the weight of a new sexual assault allegation, exposing not merely the personal degradation of the candidate but the political forces that manufactured and promoted him as a “working-class” tribune.

On Monday, Politico published an interview with Jenny Racicot, who accused Platner of raping her in 2021. Racicot repeated the allegation later that night in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper. Platner has denied the allegation. Within hours, leading Democrats who had tolerated or excused months of earlier revelations, including his Nazi-linked Totenkopf tattoo and history as a soldier and mercenary for US imperialism, rushed to call for him to withdraw. 

*****

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who had been Platner’s most prominent national booster and appeared with him under the fraudulent “Fighting Oligarchy” banner, waited longer than others, but by Tuesday he posted on social media that he “recommended that he step aside.”

Under Maine election law, if Platner withdraws by July 13 the Democrats can select a replacement by July 27, a procedure that is now clearly being prepared.

The debacle confirms what the World Socialist Web Site explained from the beginning. After Platner won the June primary, the WSWS wrote that while the vote expressed real anger over inequality, “Platner’s promoters—large sections of the Democratic Party and the trade union apparatus, most avidly its so-called ‘progressive’ wing—present him as a genuine representative of the working class. He is nothing of the sort.”

Platner’s “working-class” identity was from the beginning a political marketing product. His supposed credentials for this position were the fact that he was a veteran, “oysterman,” and rural Mainer, combined with his vulgarity, tattoos, profanity and anti-billionaire demagogy. But this had nothing to do with the working class as a social force.

In fact, Platner is a small businessman, a former Marine, Army soldier and Blackwater/Constellis contractor, and a loyal Democrat. His social background and career belong not to the proletariat but to the upper-middle-class layers around the Democratic Party.

However, Platner’s manufactured persona was politically useful to Democratic-aligned consultants, the trade-union apparatus, Sanders/DSA operatives, and liberal media figures searching for a way to repackage the Democratic Party after its catastrophic loss of support within the working class. 

*****

The most important question is not why Platner collapsed, but why he was promoted in the first place, and by what social forces. Sanders held events with him under the “Fighting Oligarchy” banner. Ro Khanna defended him after the Nazi tattoo revelation. Jacobin, the unofficial press organ of the DSA, published repeated defenses, including one by David Sirota that stated that the debate over whether Platner was sufficiently “working class” had ignored that he “enlisted in the military for multiple combat tours for his country.”

“Progressive” commentator Krystal Ball declared herself more “ride or die” for him after the Nazi tattoo revelation. The United Auto Workers bureaucracy, led by DSA darling Shawn Fain, likewise waved away Platner’s record and Nazi tattoo and presented him as someone who had “chosen to stand with the working class.”

Joining the UAW, DSA and “progressives” in boosting Platner’s campaign were Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times and David Remnick in the New Yorker. Goldberg wrote that Platner was “nothing like the edgelord caricature” she encountered online, called him “largely convincing” in person, and compared his campaign energy to Obama. In another column for the Times she favorably compared Platner to a “Democratic version of the Tea Party,” writing that voters were seeking “to upend a system that they believe has failed them.”

The WSWS proceeded on an entirely different basis. It began from the class character of the Democratic Party, the AFL-CIO bureaucracy, the Sanders operation and the imperialist state. In several articles, it exposed the character of the Platner campaign and warned of the debacle it would produce. 

*****

Ten years ago, Hillary Clinton referred to Trump voters as the “basket of deplorables.” Now the ruling class manufactures “deplorable” personas to market to workers. Both express the same contempt for the working class. 

*****

The responsibility for this political fraud rests above all with Sanders and those around him, including Khanna, Jacobin, the DSA milieu and the AFL-CIO bureaucracy. It is an important political lesson for workers and young people in Maine and across the country.

5. UAW white paper “Trade and the American Dream”: A brief for economic nationalism and imperialist war

On July 1, the Trump administration refused to renew the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) at the pact’s six-year joint review. The agreement remains in force, but Washington’s refusal converts every subsequent annual review into an instrument of extortion, allowing the United States to extract fresh concessions from Canada and Mexico.

Trump is using the threat of withdrawal, tariffs and restricted access to the US market to discipline Canada and Mexico, force them to line up behind Washington’s trade war, and subordinate the continent to the requirements of American “national security.” The same strategy underlies his threats to annex Canada, militarize the border, attack Mexico under the pretext of fighting drugs, and use executive power to tear up existing legal and constitutional restraints.

The Trump administration wants to transform North America into a closed economic and military bloc—a Fortress North America—as it escalates trade war against China and launches military aggression around the world.

The United Auto Workers bureaucracy supports this imperialist project and is offering its services. Days before the USMCA deadline, the UAW released a 36-page white paper, “Trade and the American Dream: NAFTA, the USMCA, and the Future of the Working Class.” Its purpose is to demonstrate that the UAW can help administer trade war, supply-chain restructuring and labor discipline across the continent.

The UAW claims it cares about protecting “American” jobs while it is helping the Big Three and parts makers destroy them. Thousands of Big Three autoworkers have lost their jobs since the UAW secured ratification of the 2023 contracts under false pretenses. Even as the white paper was released, the union was holding a contract vote at Nexteer Automotive in Saginaw, Michigan at proverbial gunpoint inside the factory, to force through a deal workers rejected three times. At the same time, the UAW was also pushing through an agreement allowing the closure of International’s truck assembly plant in Springfield, Ohio.

The white paper builds its case on struggles the bureaucracy itself betrayed. It celebrates the 2023 Mack Trucks strike without mentioning that workers rejected the deal Fain personally endorsed by 73 percent before the apparatus isolated the strike and shut it down. It invokes the 2021 John Deere strike, in which workers twice voted down UAW-backed agreements before the bureaucracy forced through a third.

In reality, it is the interests of the union apparatus, and not the workers, that animate the document. Far from opposing the annual reviews with which Washington will bludgeon Canada and Mexico, the UAW bureaucracy demands a “seat at the table” where the bludgeoning is organized.

The document also bears the political fingerprints of the Democratic Socialists of America and Labor Notes advisers in Fain’s inner circle, who have worked vigorously to present the bureaucracy’s accommodation to Trump’s trade-war agenda as “working class” politics. The document’s real content is disguised with “pro-worker” phraseology and feigned concern for Mexican autoworkers.

*****

The white paper demands a “top-to-bottom revamp” of the USMCA enforced by tariffs and concludes with an ultimatum indistinguishable from Trump’s own: a new deal on America-first terms, or “the United States must get out of NAFTA 2.0.” 

*****

UAW President Shawn Fain states the document’s central argument in his introduction: “There is no future for the US working class that doesn’t address the free trade disaster ... trade is at the heart of the rise of global authoritarianism, wealth inequality, and the political weakness of the working class.”

This is not a “left” or “pro-worker” argument, but the classic position of the extreme right, which has always sought to counterpose workers supposedly rooted in the “national” soil to disloyal foreign or “international” bankers.

By “authoritarianism,” Fain does not mean the Trump administration, with which Fain is collaborating. In fact, his reference to the “free trade disaster” is lifted verbatim from the vocabulary of Trump’s trade war. He is using the standard euphemism for countries targeted for regime change by American imperialism, including China, Russia and Iran. 

*****

Under the heading “Build Here to Sell Here,” the UAW demands that corporations balance production and sales across North America or face punitive tariffs. The white paper says companies seeking tariff relief would have to meet a “1-to-1 production-to-sales quota.”

The UAW poses as a friend of Mexican autoworkers, who, it says, are “too poor to buy the cars they produce.” But its proposal means mass unemployment and poverty for these same workers. The white paper complains that the US produces only 61 cars for every 100 sold domestically, while Mexico produces 249 for every 100 bought. A one-to-one quota would require a drastic reduction of Mexican auto production, wiping out hundreds of thousands of direct jobs and many more across export-dependent regional economies.

The white paper never answers the obvious question: how will Mexican workers’ living standards be raised by shutting their factories and throwing them into the streets?

The white paper’s discussion of “independent unions” in Mexico continues along the same lines. For decades, the old charro unions—state-backed company unions that signed sweetheart contracts, intimidated workers and suppressed strikes—served as the chief instruments of labor control in Mexico. These organizations are now hated and discredited. After explosive struggles such as Matamoros and Silao, Washington, the AFL-CIO Solidarity Center and the union bureaucracies promoted a new layer of “independent” unions through the USMCA labor chapter and the Rapid Response Mechanism, seeking to contain Mexican workers within a framework supervised by American imperialism and its labor agents. 

The UAW proposes to make American union officials paid overseers in the colonial exploitation of Mexican workers. Under the heading “Build a System of True Tri-National Labor Rights,” the white paper calls for a new agreement that “establishes the right of U.S. unions to provide technical support to Mexican workers and independent unions.” It complains that the US Department of Labor has “just five labor attachés in Mexico” to combat “labor abuse and unfair trade practices” and adds that “staff from U.S. unions could dramatically expand support for Mexican workers if tariff revenues were used to support their work.” The UAW boasts that it already has “dedicated UAW staff in Mexico City and Washington” through its Mexico Solidarity Project.

The American union bureaucrats would operate among Mexican workers not as representatives of a common struggle against the corporations, but as personnel of a US-dominated labor-policing framework. The same tariff regime that threatens mass unemployment in Mexico would create new paid positions, institutional authority and privileges for UAW officials, paid for by the US government revenues from tariffs against Mexico.

*****

The culmination of the bureaucracy’s program is the “tri-national commission.” The white paper proposes a body of “unions, governments and academic experts” to work with industry in “rationalizing supply chains.” In plain language, this means the joint administration of austerity: state-supervised capacity cuts, plant closures, wage controls and production mandates enforced over the heads of workers in all three countries. The unions would receive an official role in imposing across the continent the restructuring demanded by the corporations and the American state.

This is corporatism: the integration of the unions into the state and management to suppress the class struggle in the name of defending the nation. The historical origins of corporatism are in Mussolini’s fascist Italy, which created state-controlled syndicates and corporations that brought together employers, fascist officials and so-called labor representatives under the doctrine that class conflict had to be subordinated to the national interest.

The UAW proposes a North American variant adapted to present conditions: unions, governments, academics and industry jointly reorganizing production, imposing labor discipline and subordinating workers to the demands of “competitiveness” and “national security.” 

*****

The UAW’s “America First” nationalism, which it has promoted since long before Trump ever ran for office, never saved jobs. It justified the destruction of jobs in the name of “competitiveness,” while scapegoating foreign workers for attacks the bureaucracy helped management carry out. 

***** 

The UAW’s program today develops the old nationalism of the bureaucracy under conditions created by the historic decline of American imperialism. The United States is driven into ever more ruthless conflict against its rivals abroad and class war at home, seeking to reverse its economic decline through trade war, militarism and dictatorship. This has already produced the NATO war against Russia in Ukraine, US support for the Israeli genocide in Gaza, the war against Iran and advanced preparations for future war against China.

Fain has repeatedly invoked the UAW’s World War II alliance with the auto companies and the Roosevelt administration in the so-called Arsenal of Democracy—the years when the union enforced the no-strike pledge, policed speedup and victimized the leaders of wartime wildcat strikes, while the Roosevelt government jailed Trotskyist opponents of imperialist war.

Under Biden, Fain and the UAW apparatus functioned as semi-official partners of the administration. Biden appointed Fain to the President’s Export Council, an advisory body on trade policy that includes major corporate executives. In 2024, Biden gave a speech describing the AFL-CIO as his “domestic NATO.” This meant that the unions were to perform the role of disciplining opposition and preparing the country for war.

The same process extends across the union bureaucracy. The Teamsters under Sean O’Brien, the International Longshoremen’s Association and other labor apparatuses have embraced protectionism, tariffs and overtures to Trump. Their appeals to the would-be Führer are the highest expression of their integration with American capitalism and their hostility to the independent interests of the working class.

The DSA and Labor Notes milieu supplies the “left” credentials for this nationalist program. They have relentlessly defended Fain while he adapts to Trump’s trade war, presenting tariffs and national industrial policy as tools for workers rather than instruments of American capitalism. Their nationalism ideologically subordinates workers to Wall Street and the American state, leaving them politically disarmed before fascism, dictatorship and war.

This is the political service rendered by the pseudo-left not only to the bureaucracy, but to Trump and the extreme right. It takes workers and young people repelled by Trump and demobilizes their opposition back behind the union apparatus, the Democratic Party and the national interests of American capitalism. 

Autoworker, socialist, and working class hero, Will Lehman

Opposition to the nationalist and pro-war bureaucracy has been advanced by Will Lehman, the Mack Trucks worker and socialist who first ran for UAW president in 2022 and was nominated at last month’s UAW Constitutional Convention to stand again in 2026. In a May 2025 Newsweek editorial, Lehman wrote that Fain’s claims that Trump’s tariffs “would defend our jobs and livelihoods” were “a fraud and a deadly danger to the entire working class.” They are preparations for war with China, he said, whipping up hatred against Chinese workers “who are not our enemies but our class brothers and sisters.”

He continued:

Workers in the U.S. must reject the lie that we can only save our jobs at the expense of workers in other countries. We can only defend our interests by uniting with our class brothers and sisters throughout the world.

That’s why I urge autoworkers to form rank-and-file committees in every plant and to join the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC). The corporations are globally coordinated. We must be too.

We don’t need a trade war. We don’t need nationalism. We need a new strategy: internationalism and socialism. Not backing the nationalist competition between different corporations, but creating a society based on genuine equality, in which the global economy is controlled by the workers and for the workers.

6. Why the New York Times’ list of “definitive” movies about America is so unsatisfactory

...Unfortunately, eclecticism and pettiness prevail among the film writers, as they do in the broader milieu in which they circulate.

On the one hand, the writers apparently interpreted their task to involve considering primarily newer films, presumably the better to sum up 250 years more effectively. There is one movie from the 1930s, none from the 1940s and 1950s, one from the 1960s, three from the 1970s and one each from each of the past five decades. 

*****

Filmmaking has played and continues to play an outsized role in American social and cultural development, yet none of the writers thought to view it in the light of the issues and events bound up with the 250-year anniversary–equality and democratic rights, aristocracy and monarchy, insurrection and revolution, life-and-death social and political struggles.

That would mean, first of all, coming to terms with the contemporary crisis of political and social life, the decades of war, the lurch to the right by the entire establishment, the death-bed of bourgeois democracy that has placed a fascist in the White House. The Times specializes in soothing its readers’ nerves and reassuring them nothing decisive has changed, nothing requiring radical measures.

*****

A chief difficulty is that the various Times writers and critics have no substantive or objective criteria for making their selections.

None of them appears to have a meaningful theory about American society and its historical development. The result is a collection of relatively arbitrary and subjective shots in the dark. The overall outlook owes something to what Friedrich Engels termed an “essentially pragmatic” approach that “divides men who act in history into noble and ignoble and then finds that as a rule the noble are defrauded and the ignoble are victorious.” Therefore, “nothing very edifying is to be got from the study of history.” 

*****

... A writer describes Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point as “a hypnotic meditation on American ideals,” and that should be enough by itself to set off alarm bells. Film critics resort to the phrase “a meditation on” when they have no idea what a work is saying or what they themselves think about it. 

The birth of the movies in the US coincided almost exactly with America’s emergence as an imperialist power. The ensuing 125 years have witnessed earthshaking upheavals and many different stages in the struggle between the social classes. The vicissitudes of the social conflict have profoundly influenced filmmaking and art as a whole. As we have suggested before, perhaps because it is an art form bound up with modern industry and mass society, filmmaking tends to be most fresh and original, and ground-breaking, under conditions of intense popular mobility and activity. Strikes, protests, social discontent often propel the filmmakers, in ways that the artists themselves may not fully understand.

Individual filmmakers encounter and represent life differently, but not as free-floating atoms doing as they please. Generalized national, generational, institutional, class features and pressures shape them as they do everyone, the uniqueness lying in the particular “welding together” of the latter. What “serves as a bridge from soul to soul,” in other words, “is not the unique, but the common.” And the common is configured in humanity by the “the deepest and most persistent conditions which make up his ‘soul,’ by the social conditions of education, of existence, of work, and of associations. The social conditions in historic human society are, first of all, the conditions of class affiliation” (Trotsky).

An orientation to “class affiliation” and to the history of the struggle that erupts on the basis of class affiliation does not solve the problem of creating an artistically striking and memorable work (or criticizing one), but it does push to the forefront the questions and problems that inspire the sharpest artistic perceptions and inspirations, because they are the “deepest and most persistent conditions which make up [mankind’s] ‘soul.’” The filmmaker is neither a “free-floating atom” nor an empty machine for producing form. He or she is a participant in social life, tied to his or her social environment and times by the strongest and most necessary ties.

It is illuminating that the Times writers manage to avoid choosing a single work from the years in which Hollywood filmmaking was at the height of its realism and social and aesthetic seriousness, the late 1930s to the early 1950s, before the fully chilling effect of the anti-communist purges and the virtual illegalization of left-wing thought in the American cinema. During that decade and a half, writers, directors, actors and producers created scores of films that grappled with varying degrees of success with the conditions and challenges of life, not simply for the upper middle class, but for broader layers.

The Times piece cuts away at the social connections and responsibilities of the artists, reducing the filmmaker to a version of the social type in which the writers see themselves: “independent-minded,” beholden to no one, “spiritual” rebels, wry and skeptical (and passive) observers of the passing scene. From our point of view, they come across for the most part as “dazed and confused” in their own right, with very little grasp of America’s past or present.

7. NATO warmongers meet in Ankara

Against the backdrop of the summit, the United States again bombed Iran on Tuesday. That evening the US military announced “a series of powerful strikes against Iran,” hitting air defenses, coastal radar and missile sites near the Strait of Hormuz, hours after the Treasury cut off Iran’s oil sales. It was the latest escalation of the war that began on February 28, when US and Israeli strikes killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and has now dragged on for more than four months.

The bombing fell as vast crowds mourned Khamenei in Qom and the Iraqi city of Najaf. Iranian state media reported explosions at Bandar Abbas, Qeshm and Sirik, where shrapnel wounded several people at a commercial pier. US President Donald Trump had declared on Monday, in the Oval Office: “We’re either going to make a deal, or we’re going to finish the job.” He added, “It won’t be tough to finish the job.”

The summit’s main business is the escalation of the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine. The opening of the summit followed a sustained barrage of long-range strikes by Ukraine deep inside Russian territory, which the assembled powers openly celebrated. “Ukraine has a window of opportunity and is changing the dynamics on the battlefield,” NATO Deputy Secretary General Radmila Shekerinska told the summit. “Russia, for the first time, is faced with the reality of war.” 

*****

Even as they plotted war around the world, the imperialist gangsters quarreled among themselves. Trump renewed his threat to annex Greenland, the territory of NATO member Denmark, calling it “an important part for the United States” that “should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark,” and warned that Washington could “remove all of our soldiers out of Europe.” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen answered that a US seizure of the island “is not going to happen.” 

*****

Türkiye locked down Ankara for the summit. In the weeks beforehand, Erdoğan’s government banned all demonstrations in the capital for thirteen days and detained 225 people—among them leftists, lawyers, a university professor, a gay-magazine editor and a comedian who had mocked the president—jailing 103 of them. On Sunday, police detained scores of anti-NATO protesters and fired tear gas to break up their march. 

8. Police shoot patient inside Southern California hospital

The Los Robles shooting belongs to a documented pattern of police applying street-level compliance tactics—verbal commands, physical domination and lethal force—to patients suffering severe trauma, medical disorientation or acute psychiatric crises. In March 2023, Irvo Otieno, a 28-year-old Kenyan émigré experiencing a severe mental health crisis, was killed by seven Henrico County sheriff’s deputies and three hospital employees during intake at Central State Hospital in Virginia. Video footage showed as many as ten people piling onto a shackled and handcuffed Otieno for twelve minutes until he stopped breathing. 

*****

The conditions inside HCA hospitals have been the subject of repeated complaints from nurses and healthcare workers. At Los Robles itself, nurses fought HCA in 2023 over out-of-ratio assignments and unsafe staffing. SEIU Local 121RN reported at the time that nurses were demanding stronger contract language to prevent the hospital from placing nurses out of ratio and putting patients at risk. Rosanna Mendez, the union’s executive director, said then that nurses had “sounded the alarm” over unsafe assignments that endangered patients and produced enormous stress.

In another Los Robles case, SEIU reported that former RN Jacqui Rum worked in HCA’s StaRN program and faced “routine unsafe staffing” for 13 months, under conditions so intense that she resigned. HCA then sought to make her repay $4,000 for what it called training. In 2025, SEIU reported that HCA agreed to pay penalties and restitution over its training repayment agreement program, including approximately $83,000 in restitution to California nurses and more than $1.16 million in penalties to the state.

This provides significant context to the Los Robles shooting. Nurses and hospital workers confront real danger in emergency departments and inpatient units. They are placed in unsafe conditions by understaffing, overcrowding, inadequate psychiatric resources, management pressure and the general collapse of social supports outside the hospital.

The response of SEIU Local 121RN to the Los Robles shooting has been to accept the “law and order” framework of the police. Mendez issued a statement blaming “a series of failures and missed protocols.” She said Code Grey and Code Silver alarms were not activated, hospital security did not immediately respond and questions remained over whether the patient was properly restrained while in police custody.

The same logic underlies California Assembly Bill 2975, the “Secure Hospitals for All” Act, which Governor Gavin Newsom signed in 2024 after a campaign led by SEIU. The union celebrated the law as a measure to reduce or eliminate weapons in hospitals.

The law requires California’s occupational safety standards board, by March 1, 2027, to amend hospital workplace violence standards to mandate weapons-detection screening policies. The law requires screening devices that automatically scan people at specified hospital entrances, including the main public entrance, the emergency department entrance and a separately accessible labor-and-delivery entrance. It also requires trained personnel to operate the screening system and protocols for alternative searches and responses when a weapon is detected.

But the gun fired inside Los Robles did not enter through the emergency department waiting room in the hands of a visitor. It was brought into the hospital by the police.

9. Three children die of carbon monoxide poisoning in Michigan after massive power outage

Three children died of carbon monoxide poisoning in metro Detroit over the holiday weekend, as families struggled to cope with a massive power outage, which left 400,000 households without lights, air conditioning, refrigeration and other necessities after a storm Friday evening.

All three were killed after their families, left in the dark for days, ran gasoline-powered generators to restore electricity, generators that filled enclosed spaces with lethal carbon monoxide.

The deaths of these children were the consequence of deliberate policies that allow hundreds of thousands of people across metro Detroit to lose power during routine summer storms due to chronic under-investment in vital infrastructure.

*****

The immediate cause of the outage was a severe storm system. Thunderstorms with wind gusts exceeding 60 miles per hour swept across southeast Michigan over the holiday weekend, downing trees and power lines and knocking out electricity to more half a million utility customers statewide. At its peak, this including 120,000 customers of Consumers Energy. At its peak, nearly 400,000 DTE Energy customers lost service. DTE restored power to more than 325,000 customers within 48 hours, a figure the company has prominently publicized.

For working class families living paycheck to paycheck, the refrigerator and freezer represent weeks of careful financial planning. Families purchase meat and other expensive food when it is on sale and freeze it because it is the only way to stretch budgets gutted by inflation, rising utility costs and stagnant wages. Several days without power during a Michigan summer can destroy all of it. 

*****

In 1993, seven children died in a Detroit house fire after the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department shut off the family’s water over a $225 bill. Similar tragedies followed, including the deaths of three children in Sylvia Young’s Detroit home after DTE cut off heat and a 2009 Detroit family killed by carbon monoxide poisoning after using a generator following a power shutoff. The circumstances vary, but the pattern is the same: When electricity is treated as a commodity rather than a necessity, working class families are forced into dangerous choices.

*****

The deaths in Metro Detroit occurred amid official claims of a Detroit revival. The “Detroit renaissance” narrative is built around luxury developments, downtown projects, stadiums and corporate investment. It does not reflect the material conditions of working class neighborhoods throughout the city and surrounding communities.

Poverty, inflation and deteriorating public infrastructure continue to shape daily life for millions of workers. Food prices remain high, utility costs have increased, and many families have little or no financial cushion when disaster strikes. A storm that should be a temporary inconvenience becomes a life-threatening event when families lack the resources to protect themselves.

10. German government adopts historic war budget

On July 6, one day before the NATO summit began in Ankara, the Merz-Klingbeil government set in motion the largest rearmament budget in the history of the Federal Republic. The government draft of the 2027 federal budget adopted by the cabinet places the whole of society on a war footing.

The regular budget of the Defense Ministry will rise within a single year from €82.7 billion to €109.7 billion—a leap of 32.7 percent. No other ministry will see anything approaching such an increase. Added to this are €30 billion from the so-called special fund for the Bundeswehr and €11.6 billion for support to Ukraine. These three items alone amount to €151.3 billion. In addition, 6,000 new military posts and 2,100 civilian positions are being created in the Defense Ministry. 

*****

The political connection between the war budget and the NATO summit is unmistakable. The day after the cabinet decision, the meeting of heads of state and government began in Ankara, accelerating the implementation of the 5 percent target agreed in 2025 and the expansion of the European armed forces.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte describes this course as “NATO 3.0”—a “stronger European NATO” in which the European powers take over a larger share of conventional warfare and military burden-sharing with the United States is reorganized. He explicitly cited Germany as the leading example. “Germany is leading, and Germany is delivering,” he declared in Berlin at the beginning of July. Even before the presentation of the current draft budget, Rutte pointed out that Germany would increase its annual military expenditure to more than €150 billion by 2029.

In fact, no other major European power is proceeding as aggressively as Germany. Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) has repeatedly declared that the Bundeswehr is to be built up “as quickly as possible into the strongest conventional army in Europe.” When he took office, he explicitly justified this claim with Germany’s population size, economic strength and geographical location at the center of Europe. 

*****

War abroad and class war at home are two sides of the same policy. A society that permanently spends hundreds of billions of euros on military violence cannot guarantee democratic rights. The more opposition grows to conscription, social cuts and war, the more aggressively the state will proceed against strikes, protests and socialist opposition.

The NATO summit itself provides a clear warning. The government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan banned protests and transformed Ankara into a fortress with tens of thousands of police and security personnel. More than 100 participants in an anti-NATO demonstration were arrested. At the same time, the authorities carried out so-called anti-terror raids against hundreds of other people; with more than 100 of them placed in pretrial detention.

All NATO powers support this repression because they need the Erdoğan regime as a partner for their wars against Russia and Iran and their preparations against China. The measures in Ankara simultaneously illustrate the dictatorial methods with which the ruling classes in North America and throughout Europe will themselves suppress growing opposition to war, conscription and social devastation. 

11. Ford fired worker over a $1.95 cookie. The UAW told him to say sorry

Ford Motor Company fired the 60-year-old electrician with a perfect attendance record over the allegation that he took a $1.95 chocolate chip cookie without paying during his overnight shift on May 9. The worker, Kurt Kromm, was an 11-year veteran at the Kentucky Truck Plant (KTP) in Louisville. Co-workers described him as “an excellent worker…attentive and very helpful.”

Kromm, who is diabetic, had gone to the break room during a 12-hour shift after feeling lightheaded from low blood sugar. When the first self-service kiosk, operated by Aramark, flashed a red “payment failed” screen, he moved over to a second terminal, a transaction that his bank statement confirmed.

A week later, Kromm was called into his supervisor’s office and was informed by his UAW representative that he was being fired for theft under the company’s zero-tolerance policy. He was escorted from the plant immediately, barred from retrieving his own tools from his work station. 

*****

The Aramark vending system at KTP operates through self-checkout payment kiosks located in plant break rooms, where food and beverage items are displayed in the open and workers are expected to scan and pay using debit or credit cards. 

In practice, however, the kiosks are notoriously unreliable. Workers report that the machines routinely fail to process payments, display red error screens even when transactions have gone through, decline cards on first attempt only to accept them on a second or third swipe at a different kiosk, and frequently fail to produce receipts. 

These malfunctions have created a situation in which workers are uncertain whether a purchase has been completed, and in multiple documented cases, the payment discrepancies generated by the defective equipment have been used by Ford and Aramark as the basis for termination proceedings against employees. 

*****

KTP is the crown jewel of Ford’s global operations. The Louisville facility, employing over 8,000 workers, builds the Super Duty pickup Ford Expedition and the Lincoln Navigator — vehicles that together generated an estimated $25 billion in revenue in 2023 alone. The Super Duty anchors Ford’s commercial truck division, Ford Pro, which posted a staggering 12.4 percent profit margin that year, helping drive the company’s overall 2023 profits to $10.4 billion. 

Workers at KTP report that the Aramark payment kiosks have been malfunctioning for years and that the company and union are well aware of the problem. Kromm’s coworker Victoria Thomas, a 34 year Ford electrician, told Shifting Gears that the kiosk payment glitches are “well known” at the plant and have happened to her personally. “I have friends who were terminated because they bought a $2 drink.” 

*****

Ford and the UAW have responded to these complaints with evasion. Ford spokeswoman Jessica Enoch offered a carefully worded statement acknowledging only that “there are times when we look into things and realize it could have been handled differently.”

Aramark, the $16 billion food service contractor that operates the kiosks refused to address the malfunction issue at all, with its spokesman issuing a vacuous assurance that the company remains “focused on providing convenient, flexible snack options.” 

*****

Only after Kromm fought his case on his own did the UAW belatedly inform him that Ford would change its policy from immediate termination to suspension in cases of disputed kiosk transactions — a tacit admission that the system has been destroying workers’ livelihoods on the basis of defective equipment with the union’s full complicity.

The UAW’s refusal to defend Kurt Kromm does not represent the failure of the union apparatus, it is the apparatus functioning exactly as intended. The UAW long ago abandoned any defense of the workers it supposedly represents in favor of unlimited collaboration with management, suppressing strikes and imposing management’s dictates inside the plants. For these services it is well rewarded. It sits on a $1.25 billion strike fund, extracted from the dues of workers it refuses to defend, while its officials collect six-figure salaries, vacation at luxury resorts, and serve as de facto personnel managers for Ford.

When Kromm was hauled into the labor office and told he was being fired for stealing a cookie, the union bargainer did not challenge the accusation, did not raise the years of documented kiosk failures, did not demand that Ford produce evidence. He told Kromm to apologize. That is the UAW’s role: not to fight the company, but to manage the workforce on the company’s behalf.

This will not change through appeals to the bureaucracy or through elections that the apparatus controls. The corporatist partnership between the UAW and the auto companies is a class alliance against the workers, part of the broader war drive of American imperialism.

Workers must take power into their own hands by forming rank-and-file committees, independent of and opposed to the union bureaucracy. Against the authority of management and their UAW overseers workers must assert their own authority through the use of their collective strength. These rank-and-file committees must unite workers across departments, plants and industries to halt victimizations, monitor line speeds and enforce health and safety standards, including the right to refuse to work under unsafe conditions.

12. IBEW apparatus shuts down Philadelphia PECO strike as deadly heat wave and storms cause mass power outages

Despite mass public support for the striking workers, the union apparatus quickly shut the strike down after three days, having reached a paltry tentative agreement.

13. Sri Lanka: Negombo Prison riots leave at least 20 people dead

At least 20 prisoners were killed and nearly 100 people, mostly prisoners, were wounded on July 6 in clashes that erupted at the prison in the coastal town Negombo. It is a grim reminder of past prison massacres in Sri Lanka’s history.

The carnage came just one day after an earlier clash at the same facility claimed two lives on July 5, bringing the death toll from the unrest to at least 27. Seven of the deceased were prison officials.

A number of the seriously injured were transferred to the National Hospital in Colombo for specialist treatment, while others were treated at Negombo Hospital. While the government says it has begun investigations into the riots and the causes of the deaths, available evidence indicates that at least some inmates were killed by gunfire. Dr. Pushpa Gamlath, director of Negombo Hospital, told Agence France-Presse: “There are some victims with gunshot injuries, some with cuts and severe bruises.”

According to Prisons Commissioner and Media spokesperson A. C. Gajanayake, the official account is as follows: Violence first erupted on July 5 between remand prisoners and convicted inmates after the exposure of an alleged prison drug-trafficking network orchestrated by an underworld-linked trafficker. Although the unrest was temporarily contained, clashes resumed the following morning during breakfast. Authorities claim that the inmates attacked prison officers and attempted to breach the main gate, prompting officers to use what they described as the minimum force necessary to restore order.

This version of events is being uncritically regurgitated by the corporate media, despite serious gaps. It does not explain how a supposedly controlled situation on the first day erupted into a deadly clash despite the presence of significant security forces, including members of the notorious Special Task Force (STF) who had been brought in to “control” the situation. In fact, the STF and Sri Lanka Police, under successive governments, have a well-documented history of provocation—deliberately or recklessly triggering violence in prisons and communities—followed by lethal crackdowns, systematic cover-ups, and near-total impunity for perpetrators.

*****

A video widely circulated on social media showed a prison officer outside the closed main gate firing through a narrow opening toward the area where the clashes were taking place. Questioned about the footage on July 7, Acting Commissioner General of Prisons Prasad Hemantha Kumara defended the officer’s actions, claiming the shots were fired to prevent a catastrophic prison breach and to protect officers trapped inside. His remarks make clear that prison officers and security forces deliberately opened fire to disperse prisoners gathered near the main gate.

Angry relatives, including mothers and wives of prisoners, most of them poor villagers, denounced the government and police for failing to protect the prisoners and for refusing to give any information.

Justice Minister Nanayakkara sought to justify the use of lethal force by claiming that inmates had attempted to “sabotage the smooth functioning of prison operations” after the government had “taken stern action to prevent drugs and other illegal contraband from entering the prisons.” He pointed to the destruction of a body scanner and CCTV cameras during the unrest.

This narrative functions as a political cover for the killings, folding them into the government’s escalating “war on drugs.” 

*****

The claim that prison massacres result from inter-gang violence or drug-related conspiracies is a well-worn tactic of the Sri Lankan state. When 11 inmates were shot dead at Mahara Prison in November 2020, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government blamed psychiatric medication, drug dealers and shadowy conspirators. Prison Reform Minister Sudarshini Fernandopulle ludicrously invoked “an invisible hand which activated suddenly.”

*****

The Sri Lanka College of Psychiatrists was compelled to issue a statement debunking these fabrications, noting that the claimed connection between psychiatric drugs and violent behavior was “without any rational basis.” The government’s story was a lie from start to finish, designed to obscure the fact that prison guards and STF officers had opened fire on unarmed inmates demanding COVID-19 protections.

Sri Lanka’s prisons are overcrowded, under-resourced, and resemble a living hell, creating conditions in which tensions can easily erupt into clashes. Negombo Prison, built to accommodate about 900 inmates, currently holds nearly 2,400.

The severe overcrowding has also heightened the danger of infectious disease outbreaks. On July 5, alongside the unrest, a group of women prisoners climbed onto the rooftop to protest a dengue outbreak and demand treatment for about 20 infected inmates. Essential medicines were unavailable, and infected prisoners had reportedly not been isolated. In a video circulated on social media, the women appealed for urgent medical care. Pro-government media, however, falsely portrayed the protest as support for one of the rival prisoner factions.

Overall, Sri Lanka’s prisons—built to accommodate just 11,762 inmates—now hold more than 42,000, over four times their intended capacity. In its 850-page 2021 report, the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) documented conditions in which prisoners are forced to sleep standing, defecate into shopping bags, and survive on food that, as one inmate stated, “even cats and dogs” would reject.

The overwhelming majority of prisoners come from the poorest layers of society, with many held on remand simply because they cannot afford bail or legal representation. Around 75 percent of Sri Lanka’s prison population consists of remand prisoners awaiting trial. 

*****

The Negombo killings follow prison riots and massacres at Mahara in 2020, Welikada in 2012, Anuradhapura in 2011, and Kalutara in 2000. They are the logical expression of a government that has strengthened the architecture of a police state since taking office in 2024 and is responding to increasing popular unrest with brutal force.

14.  Hypocritical condemnation from US Pacific allies over Chinese missile test

A chorus of criticism from the US and its allies in the Asia-Pacific has followed China’s testing of a ballistic missile in the Pacific Ocean on Monday. 

Few details of the test itself are available. Senior Captain Wang Xuemeng, a spokesman for China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) navy, confirmed that a Chinese nuclear submarine had launched a strategic missile carrying a dummy warhead which “accurately landed within the predetermined sea area” in the Pacific.

Wang described the missile test as routine, adding: “It complies with international law and international practices and is not targeted at any specific country or target.” China’s state-owned Global Times cited Chinese defense experts as saying the test was likely of the JuLang-3—the country’s most advanced submarine-launched missile.

The immediate reaction of US military allies in the region has been censure even as the Trump administration accelerates the decade-long preparations for war with China through a vast military build-up and a strengthening of alliances and bases throughout the Indo-Pacific.  

*****

Barely mentioned in the outpouring of criticism in the political establishment and media throughout the region is the fact that the US military regularly conducts ballistic missile tests in the Pacific Ocean. Two launches have taken place just this year. On March 3 and again on May 20, an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) was launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California into the Marshall Islands region. 

By comparison, China has only ever conducted three missile tests into the Pacific Ocean—in 1980, 2024 and the latest this week.

In addition to the cacophony of criticism of China, the media is replete with speculation by various security analysts as to the military significance of Monday’s test—the first of a submarine-launched missile into the Pacific. Their chief concern is the expansion of China’s nuclear capability. In reality, however, the US nuclear arsenal dwarfs that of China in size and sophisticated delivery systems. 

15. Australia: What professional staff face at Western Sydney University

The professional staff enterprise agreement proposed by the trade unions at WSU is even worse than the academic staff version, laying the groundwork for further destruction of jobs and conditions.

16. WSWS begins posting highlight clips from webinar on the American Revolution

On June 25, the World Socialist Web Site hosted an extraordinary panel of eminent historians at a webinar to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the American Revolution.

The full webinar, “The American Revolution and Its Place in History: From the War Against Monarchy to ‘No Kings,’” can be accessed at wsws.org/1776.

Here is one clip:

17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, 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.