Apr 21, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. The “Global Progressive Mobilization”: A bankrupt spectacle in Barcelona

It was not a gathering of opponents of austerity, repression and war, but of their administrators. It was not a mobilization against the far right, but a convention of the very parties and state functionaries whose policies have created the conditions for its advance. It was not a defense of democracy, but an exercise in political branding by representatives of governments that defend oligarchic wealth, fortify the repressive powers of the state and support imperialist violence all over the world.

A very low bar has been set for what now passes as “progressivism.” The term has been emptied of all serious content. It now embraces virtually every politician to the left of Attila the Trump. To qualify as a “progressive” today, one need do little more than impose socially regressive policies with a humane tone of voice, shed a symbolic tear for the poor while attacking wages and social programs, offer ritual sympathy for migrants while fortifying borders against them, and emit a sigh of regret over imperialist slaughter while funding, arming and defending it.

In an earlier period, however limited and bourgeois in character, “progressivism” implied social reform, democratic rights, hostility to entrenched privilege and, in some measure, opposition to the more predatory forms of capitalist exploitation. Today, it signifies the effort to place a morally presentable face on austerity, repression and war.

The roster of speakers made clear what this gathering actually was.

*****

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez:

...president of the moribund Socialist International, heads a government that is increasing military spending to record levels, attacking migrants and imposing austerity. 

*****

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva:

...once presented as the voice of workers and the poor, now a veteran manager of Brazilian capitalism. 

*****

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa:

As president, he oversaw the starving to death of more than 100 zama zama miners at the beginning of this year.

*****

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum:

...representing a government that speaks in mildly reformist phrases while deploying the Mexican National Guard against workers and migrants at Washington’s behest. 

*****

German Vice Chancellor and Social Democratic Party co-leader Lars Klingbeil:

...whose government is overseeing a massive €1 trillion military and infrastructure spending plan aimed at making Germany “fit for war.” 

*****

United Kingdom Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy:

[who] last year... was responsible for stonewalling lawyers and doctors attempting to meet with young people on hunger strike after being arrested for protesting the genocide in Gaza.

*****

To describe such a gathering as “progressive” is not merely to deprive the word of meaning. It is to legitimize political fraud.

*****

Of course, we cannot neglect the representatives from the United States. The two American Democrats in attendance—Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz—performed the function assigned to the Democratic Party. Walz actually spoke the word “Trump,” calling him a “feeble-minded, trigger-happy president” who had launched the Iran war “where no threat was present, with no clear objectives and no exit plan.” Murphy declared that “Donald Trump is out to end our democracy” and that “we are not on the verge of a totalitarian takeover, we are in the middle of it.” 

*****

In their mouths, such phrases are empty. If the United States is in the midst of a totalitarian transformation—and here what Murphy said was true—the Democratic Party is not fighting it but adapting itself to it. It votes for war budgets for the military-intelligence apparatus, backs the machinery of repression and blocks any independent political movement of the working class.

Hillary Clinton, one of the principal architects of the regime-change operations that devastated Libya and Syria, was granted the honor of a video address. The organizers evidently concluded that no conclave of political frauds would be complete without a benediction from one of the high priestesses of imperialist regime change.

Nor, for that matter, would such a gathering be complete without the presence of Zohran Mamdani.

The newly elected mayor of New York City and member of the Democratic Socialists of America delivered a video message that was revealing precisely for its emptiness. Mamdani, elevated through the familiar pseudo-left process of making social promises while remaining safely within the framework of the Democratic Party, thanked Sánchez for convening the summit, observed that there were many crises and conflicts in the world, noted that rent is high and called for collective action against inequality.

What he did not say was more important. He did not mention Trump. He did not mention Iran. He did not mention Gaza. He did not mention Lebanon. He did not mention the deportation operations being carried out against immigrants in New York. He did not even use the word “war.”

Mamdani and the DSA exist to absorb radical sentiment, strip it of political clarity and redirect it into the dead end of Democratic Party politics. In a speech on his 100 days in office a week ago, Mamdani focused his record of achievements on the filling in of potholes, in what he called “pothole politics.” “The phrase deserves to survive, if only as an accidental monument to the political bankruptcy it was meant to disguise. 

*****

The ruling classes of every major country are arming to the teeth. They are cultivating fascist movements as battering rams against the working class. The war against Russia, the genocide in Gaza, and the bombardment of Iran and Lebanon are the opening stages of a new imperialist conflagration. And in the face of all this, the assembled “progressives” in Barcelona produced 15 agreements, a critical-minerals deal, a proposed UN panel on inequality and a reforestation target.

The shamelessness of it all was almost breathtaking. Faced with war, dictatorship and social collapse, they answered with bureaucratic vapor.

The pretense of opposition to Trump, stripped of all verbiage, comes down to this: a request that he moderate his rhetoric, consult his allies and observe proper diplomatic etiquette before ordering the next bombing—and prosecute the war against Russia. 

The task facing the working class is not to pressure these people, or to wait upon them. It is to break politically from the parties they represent—from the Democratic Party in the United States, from the PSOE, PT, SPD, Labour and their pseudo-left satellites—and to build in every country an independent movement of the working class, armed with an international socialist program.

That is the only basis on which fascism, dictatorship and imperialist war can be fought. Nothing in Barcelona pointed in that direction. Everything was designed to prevent it.

2. US seizes Iran-bound ship from China in Arabian Sea

US Marines boarded and seized an Iranian-flagged container ship in the Gulf of Oman on Sunday after the destroyer USS Spruance put five-inch shells through its engine room. It was the first time a US warship had fired on a merchant ship since the blockade of Iran began on February 28. 

The seizure—an act of international piracy, wholly illegal under international law—marks a new escalation of the 52-day-old US-Israeli war on Iran. It comes two days before the scheduled expiration of a nominal ceasefire between the United States and Iran.

The ship, the M/V Touska, was bound for Bandar Abbas. Over the six weeks before the seizure, it had twice docked at Zhuhai, in southern China.

In a report Monday, the Wall Street Journal identified the Touska as part of a fleet operated by a subsidiary of the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines that “often sails to China, one of Tehran’s most important backers.”

The Touska has been under US Treasury sanctions since 2018. The US military has not disclosed its cargo. A search of the 965-foot ship will follow once tugs bring it in.

The seizure extends a pattern of US attacks on Russian and Chinese shipping that began with the military campaign against Venezuela. US President Donald Trump ordered a blockade of Venezuelan oil exports beginning last December 17. This has accompanied a series of missile strikes on small boats in the Caribbean and Pacific that have killed at least 181 people and that Human Rights Watch has called extrajudicial killings. Since December, the US Navy has boarded and seized at least 10 tankers carrying Venezuelan crude.

The Russian-flagged Marinera, formerly the Bella 1, was seized on January 7 in the North Atlantic south of Iceland while under Russian navy escort, including a submarine. Navy SEALs carried out the boarding, ferried by Army special operations helicopters and watched over by AC-130J gunships and P-8 surveillance planes. A Chinese-operated tanker, the M Sophia, was taken in the Caribbean the same month. On February 9, the US Navy captured the tanker Aquila II in the Indian Ocean with 700,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude that were bound for China.

Since February 28, the US military has stopped 25 ships off Iran and turned them back. Roughly 230 loaded oil tankers now sit trapped inside the Persian Gulf. 

*****

The two-week ceasefire is set to lapse at midnight Wednesday, April 22. In an interview Monday with Bloomberg News, Trump said it was “highly unlikely” he would extend it. 

*****

On Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi posted on X that the Strait of Hormuz was open to commercial shipping on a route hugging the Iranian coast. Nineteen ships transited the strait on Friday and Saturday morning—the first cargo to move through since the war began 51 days earlier.

On Saturday afternoon, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps gunboats fired on two Indian-flagged ships without the standard radio warnings. That evening, the Revolutionary Guard overruled Araghchi and announced the strait was re-closed.

“No vessel should make any movement from its anchorage in the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman,” the Guard’s statement read. “Approaching the Strait of Hormuz will be considered as cooperation with the enemy.”

India’s Foreign Ministry summoned the Iranian ambassador. On Sunday morning, the USS Spruance stopped the Touska.

Within hours, US President Donald Trump had posted a burst of messages on Truth Social threatening to destroy the civilian infrastructure on which 90 million Iranians depend. “The United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran. NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

*****

On the ABC News Sunday interview program, “This Week,” US Ambassador to the United Nations Michael Waltz defended Trump’s threat. Destroying civilian power stations and bridges, he said, “is not a war crime.” He cited the Allied strategic bombing campaigns in the Second World War as precedent.

By Monday’s close, US oil futures rose about 7 percent to $89.61 a barrel; Brent crude settled near $97. The American Automobile Association posted a nationwide average gasoline price of $4.05 a gallon.

International Air Transport Association Director General Willie Walsh warned of jet fuel shortages forcing flight cancellations across Europe by the end of May. Goldman Sachs has modeled a Brent price of $135 in an extended closure of the Strait of Hormuz; Oxford Economics has modeled a peak of $190 a barrel and a world downturn exceeded in the last four decades only by the 2008 crash and the COVID shock.

Al Jazeera puts the Iranian dead at 2,076, among them 240 women and 212 children. The independent Iranian human rights monitor HRANA puts the toll at 3,636.

The Iranian Red Crescent Society counts 339 damaged hospitals and clinics, 857 schools and 32 universities. The UN refugee agency estimates that between 600,000 and a million Iranian households—up to 3.2 million people—have been driven from their homes. Iran’s government puts the monetary damage at $270 billion.

The Lebanon ceasefire signed at midnight April 17 was broken within 48 hours. UN experts, quoted by Al Jazeera, describe the Israeli pattern in southern Lebanon as “domicide.”

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz has ordered the demolition of Lebanese houses along a 10-kilometer “Yellow Line” that runs across 55 villages; residents of those villages have been barred from returning to them. “We have not yet finished the job,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

3. White House sends delegation to deliver war ultimatum to Cuba

Following mounting reports the Pentagon is acting on Trump administration orders to accelerate preparations for military action against Cuba, the White House has dispatched the first high-level US delegation to the island since 2016.

While that earlier visit, led by Barack Obama, took place under conditions of a temporary diplomatic reopening, the actions of the latest delegation bear all the hallmarks of an ultimatum preceding aggression.

The delegation arrived in Havana on April 10 aboard a US government aircraft and presented a sweeping set of demands to the Cuban government. These included a two-week deadline to release high-profile political prisoners, implement sweeping market reforms, expand the private sector and attract foreign investment.

The demands, delivered during what US officials described as a “secret meeting,” were accompanied by calls for compensation to American corporations and individuals whose assets were nationalized following the 1959 revolution.

Washington further insisted on “greater political freedoms” culminating in so-called “free and fair elections,” a familiar pretext for regime-change operations across the globe.

Far from representing genuine diplomacy, these talks recall the pattern employed by US imperialism in the lead-up to military interventions in countries such as Iran and Venezuela: declare the target government noncompliant, and then claim that all peaceful avenues have been exhausted.

*****

Active military preparations are already underway. According to reports by CiberCuba, the US Navy has flown at least two surveillance missions using the high-altitude MQ-4C Triton drone in less than a week. The aircraft was detected circling the island on April 17 and again on Monday, based on publicly available tracking data.

These reconnaissance flights are widely understood as precursors to potential military action.

Trump himself has repeatedly declared that Cuba is “next” following US operations targeting Iran, as his administration announces a “Greater North America” doctrine to reassert dominance across the hemisphere.

The internal situation in Cuba, meanwhile, is marked by both concessions to imperialist pressure and growing fears of imminent attack. Cuban Deputy Prime Minister Oscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga recently declared that “there are no limitations” on investment from the Cuban diaspora, explicitly appealing to Cuban exile capitalists in Miami, many of whom have historically backed terrorist attacks and coup attempts against the island.

*****

Workers must carefully study the fate of Venezuela following military aggression. A January 3 military operation led to the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, who now face terrorism charges in a US court. In the aftermath, a puppet regime aligned with US interests was installed, handing over control of oil, minerals and the broader economy to American corporations and the US Treasury.

However bad the economic situation was in Venezuela, it has only grown worse for workers, who have protested against the government and US embassy demanding living wages. Cuba would meet a similar fate under a pro-US regime, which would seek to attract investments on the basis of maintaining desperate conditions to coerce workers to accept extremely low wages and sweatshop conditions.

*****

Having already imposed devastating sanctions and blockades, Washington now insists that Cuba open itself fully to foreign capital—effectively demanding surrender in exchange for the possibility of relief.

The alternative posed by US imperialism is not democracy or prosperity, but the restoration of a neocolonial order reminiscent of the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, under which Cuba functioned as a playground for foreign capital and organized crime.

The escalating threat of war against Cuba must be opposed by workers throughout the Americas and internationally. Workers in the United States, in particular, bear a decisive responsibility. Through their collective power over production and distribution, they have the capacity to break the embargo and halt the machinery of war. This requires an independent political mobilization, as part of a broader struggle against capitalism and for socialist internationalism. 

4. Thousands march in London against housing crisis, but capitalist politicians offer no way forward

Several thousand people marched through central London on Saturday in a national housing demonstration organized by the London Renters Union (LRU) and allied campaign groups. Demonstrators assembled in Soho Square Gardens and marched along Oxford Street to Berkeley Square, demanding rent controls and council housing.

Workers attending the rally gave voice to widespread anger over the housing affordability crisis. Between 40 and 50 percent of all working age adults across the UK are struggling to meet housing costs or falling behind on payments. 

*****

Workers are facing an economic order in which housing has been subordinated to speculation, finance and private profit. A statement issued by the Socialist Equality Party, “The socialist answer to the housing crisis in Britain”, was distributed by SEP members, with some attendees asking for multiple copies to distribute in their area.

The statement explained: “Housing has been transformed over the past 45 years into a speculative arena for the enrichment of the banks and major institutional and private investors”. It linked this to the domination of the oligarchy over every aspect of life, explaining: “The housing affordability crisis testifies to the parasitism and non-productive nature of modern capitalism. The UK has 156 billionaires, with the 50 richest families owning more wealth than 34 million people. Society can no longer afford the rich! The wealth of the billionaires must be confiscated and directed to meet urgent social needs.” 

*****

Under reactionary new Ground 7B regulations, entire households can be evicted with only two weeks’ notice if even one tenant is deemed to have “no right to rent” under immigration law. The result is not the curbing of landlord power, but its legal reorganization into a more codified, efficient and in some cases broader eviction machinery.

The Shelter charity reports that since Labour was elected more than 30,700 Section 21 claims were issued and more than 15,000 households were removed by bailiffs under the no-fault procedure, while tenant groups have reported a last-minute surge of landlords trying to push through evictions before the May 1, 2026 deadline.

5. Federal court orders release of El Gamal family after 10 months in ICE detention

A federal court in Texas has ordered the release of Hayam El Gamal and her five children after more than 10 months of vindictive imprisonment by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Trump administration at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center, a for-profit detention camp operated by CoreCivic in south Texas.

The Texas Tribune reported Monday that the El Gamal family, including 5-year-old twins, is “believed to be among the longest detained” at the Dilley facility, which first opened in 2014 under the Obama administration.

On Monday, US Magistrate Judge Elizabeth S. Chestney issued a 33-page Report and Recommendation finding that the El Gamal family’s amended habeas corpus petition should be granted and that the family should be released from ICE custody.

A habeas corpus petition is one of the oldest legal mechanisms for challenging unlawful detention. Its purpose is to require the government to justify why it is holding a person in custody. In the El Gamal case, the family challenged not a final removal order, but the procedures that kept them locked up after an immigration judge had previously found that they could be released on bond.

Attorney Eric Lee announced the development Monday on X, writing: “I am thrilled to report the El Gamal family's habeas petition was GRANTED. The family has been ordered released.” Lee credited attorneys Chris Godshall-Bennett, Niels Frenzen and Rebecca Webber as the federal court legal team.

Importantly, Lee noted that “despite the court’s ruling, the family has not yet been released.” A hearing is scheduled for Thursday but Lee called on the federal government to release the family now, noting that ICE “continues to detain them even though a court has held that their prolonged detention violates the Constitution.”

*****

The federal court ruling itself underscores the significance of the family’s prolonged detention. The magistrate judge noted that the family includes “a mother with five children, ages 18, 16, 9, and twin five-year-olds,” and that their detention, then over 10 months long, had become especially grave because “each additional day a child is detained increases the risk of severe and lasting adverse effects on their psychological and physical development.” 

The court decision is a significant victory, but only a first step. The family remains detained and in removal proceedings. The Dilley camp remains open. ICE and Customs and Border Protection goons continue to imprison, abuse and kill immigrants and citizens across the country. And the Trump administration, backed by congressional Republicans, is seeking to secure years of funding for the immigration Gestapo even as the Department of Homeland Security shutdown approaches 70 days.

*****

Under current immigration procedures, many detainees must prove that they are neither a danger nor a flight risk in order to win release. Chestney concluded that, under the specific facts of this case, forcing the El Gamal family to prove a negative while the government used aggressive procedural maneuvers to keep them imprisoned violated due process. “In this case,” she wrote, “the Government’s aggressive tactics taken to prevent Petitioners’ release on bond combined with the allocation of the burden of proof on Petitioners to prove they are not a flight risk together violated Petitioners’ right to procedural due process.”

The release order is a blow to the Trump administration’s campaign of collective punishment against the family. But it does not end the danger facing them, or thwart the drive of the ruling class to impose a presidential dictatorship.

*****

The actual release of the El Gamal family would be a welcome development. But the very fact that it required emergency litigation, public pressure and a federal habeas petition to free a mother and five children who had committed no crime is an indictment of the entire system.

What the US government did to the El Gamal family, it will do to others. The assault on immigrants is the spearhead of a broader attack on the democratic rights of the entire working class. A state that claims the power to imprison children, deny urgent medical care, override court rulings, intimidate supporters and impose collective punishment on innocent people is asserting powers that will be used ever more broadly against workers, students, protesters and all opponents of dictatorship and war.

6. Disney carries out “massive layoffs,” while Sony, SnapChat, Artnet do their own job slashing

Relentless downsizing in the arts, entertainment and creative industries continues with layoffs at Disney, Sony Pictures, SnapChat, Bad Robot and Artnet. The application of artificial intelligence (AI) tools and the desire of investors for quick returns are often driving forces.

*****

Last week, Walt Disney Company’s new CEO Josh D’Amaro announced in a memo what Forbes magazine described as “massive layoffs.” The giant conglomerate, D’Amaro reported, would lay off over 1,000 workers, to “streamline operations.” These include jobs in studios, television networks and sports. Particularly hard hit will be workers in the Marvel Studios Visual Development department. These include a wide variety of specialists responsible for the look of Marvel’s various film and television productions.

Unlike artists hired for a single film, these long-term illustrators, character designers and environment specialists were a part of a single, unified endeavor of “world-building” years before film production commenced. They translated, for example, comic book costumes into cinematic form. By shifting this in-house team to a project-based freelance model, the studio loses over a decade of knowledge from the creative workers who ensured that hundreds of disparate characters and places felt like part of a single cohesive unit. 

*****

Big investors were enthusiastic about the job destruction. Business Insider reported that “Disney shares rose 1.6% on Tuesday as the S&P 500 climbed 1.1%, and the stock gained steam after news of the layoffs broke.” 

*****

The level of inequality that the stock market helps to produce was not lost on hundreds of thousands of readers on social media. One comment that went viral on Reddit after the layoffs were announced said, “They pay the CEO $45M to play golf and fire the people who actually draw the movies. If the CEO took even a 10% pay cut, half these jobs could be saved tomorrow.” 

*****

On April 7, Sony Pictures Entertainment made public plans to eliminate “a few hundred” of its workers in film, television and corporate divisions globally. CEO Ravi Ahuja has characterized these cuts as a “strategic pivot” to align the company with specific high-growth sectors. 

*****

The layoffs include junior and middle management roles in Sony’s Motion Picture Group, and positions will be lost from the streamlining of production and marketing units, the reorganizing of its TV Game Show Group. The company will lay off administrative and operational workers at its Culver City headquarters and global offices. Sony will also shut down Pixomondo, its visual effects and virtual production studio, which it acquired in 2022.

In his memo to staff, Ahuja shed a few crocodile tears about the “difficult decisions” affecting “talented people who have contributed meaningfully to our work and culture. … I know this kind of change can feel uncertain and raise questions.”

*****

On April 15, Evan Spiegel, the co-founder and CEO of Snap Inc., the parent company of the social media app Snapchat, announced in an internal memo to all employees that the firm is cutting 1,000 jobs, some 16 percent of the company’s global workforce.

In the memo, Spiegel framed the layoffs as a necessary response to a “crucible moment” for the company, driven by two primary factors: the need for financial profitability and the rapid advancement of Artificial Intelligence. Like Ahuja, he too found the job-cutting “an incredibly difficult decision.” Spiegel’s personal net worth, according to Forbes, is $2.2 billion.

The move follows intense pressure from Irenic Capital Management, holding a 2.5 percent stake that urged Spiegel to “optimize” the company’s portfolio and slash annualized expenses by over $500 million. Irenic specifically targeted Snap’s expensive projects, notably its Specs augmented reality glasses division, which has consumed $3.5 billion in capital and reportedly loses $500 million annually. 

By eliminating these roles and closing 300 additional open positions, Snap has aimed to reassure investors of its commitment to profitability, a strategy that saw the company’s stock rise nearly 8 percent immediately following the announcement.

In the art world proper, dozens of editorial employees have been laid off by the visual arts web platform Artnet, following a merger with Artsy on April 16. Beowolff Capital, the investment firm founded by former Goldman Sachs partner Andrew Wolff, acquired both web platforms, the two most significant in the visual art world, in 2025. Artnet is a multi-faceted platform that serves as both a marketplace for buying and selling art and the industry’s primary art market tracker. 

*****

In another downsizing move, publishing giant Condé Nast is ceasing publication of Self magazine after 47 years. It is also closing the international editions of Glamour in Germany, Spain and Mexico. This will result in the loss of approximately 300 jobs in total. In a memo on April 16, CEO Roger Lynch explicitly noted that Condé Nast is reorganizing its technology division to reflect the “rapid advancement of AI,” with the goal of building products faster.

Workers at the company have protested management conduct, particularly after four union leaders and journalists were dismissed by Condé Nast without pay following a November 2025 protest at the company’s Manhattan offices against the “downsizing” of another Condé Nast publication, Teen Vogue. The incident began when about 20 staffers gathered outside the 34th-floor office of Stan Duncan, the Chief People Officer in Manhattan, to demand clarity on why senior creative roles were being eliminated while executive pay remained untouched.

Most of the staff were laid off at Teen Vogue, and the magazine, which had a notably left-wing posture, was absorbed by other publications.

7. A connecting link between Trump and Epstein: Who is Paolo Zampolli?

Attention to Zampolli risks personalizing what is in fact systemic. His growing prominence reflects a decay in political life. As ruling classes rely increasingly on intermediaries operating outside formal accountability, democratic institutions are hollowed out and replaced by direct forms of oligarchic control. As inequality rises and social conditions deteriorate, workers face declining living standards and little to no influence over political decisions, while private actors move freely between business and government, shaping policy without public oversight.

8. Lufthansa closes regional carrier CityLine with immediate effect: An act of top-down class war

On Thursday, April 16, the Lufthansa executive board announced the immediate closure of regional carrier CityLine. In an unprecedented act of top-down class war, it has suspended around 1,300 pilots, stewards and stewardesses, and technical and other personnel with immediate effect.

Last week, the entire personnel of CityLine, around 25,000 employees, had participated in strike actions at Lufthansa Classic, Lufthansa Cargo and Eurowings to defend jobs, working conditions and pensions. In a loud demonstration on Wednesday, well over a thousand strikers marched right up to the corporation’s centenary celebration in Frankfurt am Main.

Only one day later, the Lufthansa executive board gave its answer: In an internal communication, it informed CityLine employees that the operation of their airline had been discontinued with immediate effect: “All affected employees in the cockpit and in the cabin will be suspended subject to recall—with a few exceptions.” 

*****

Behind the Lufthansa executive board stand billionaire shareholders such as Kühne Holding, which owns 15.01 percent of Lufthansa. Multimillionaire Karl-Michael Gernandt, a major shareholder of Kühne+Nagel, Hapag-Lloyd and Lufthansa, as well as a member of the Lufthansa supervisory board, personally spoke up in an open letter to demand that the sectoral trade unions UFO (cabin crew) and Cockpit (pilots) immediately break off the strikes, hurling foul abuse at them. Gernandt accused them of “unreliability, egoism and blind industrial action.” 

The chairman of the supervisory board, Karl-Ludwig Kley, the multimillionaire CEO of pharmaceutical giant Merck, also insulted the striking unions as “destructive” at the ceremony marking Lufthansa’s 100th anniversary, demanding Chancellor Merz bring in a new regulation of the right to strike before this “grows into an even greater competitive disadvantage.”

Under conditions of trade war, the wars against Iran and Russia and exploding energy costs, German business leaders are determined to pass the entire burden of the crisis, the tariff war and massive rearmament costs onto the working class. Anyone who resists this is insulted as “egoistic” and “irresponsible” and threatened with dismissal or punished.

It is clear that this must not be accepted, as otherwise the floodgates will be opened for even sharper attacks on more and more workers—at the suppliers, subsidiaries and the core brand Lufthansa alike. But workers’ jobs, wages and retirement provisions are not negotiable. They take precedence over the profits of the oligarchs, not only in the interests of the workforce and their families, but in passenger safety as well. To defend them today requires the principle of solidarity: “One for all and all for one.” 

*****

A coherent industrial struggle is possible. It is now five years since service provider WISAG at Frankfurt Airport dismissed around 230 ground workers and bus drivers and partially withheld their wages, with at least 30 more dismissals being added subsequently. Those sacked were experienced and professional airport workers who had worked at the airport for decades. Verdi did not lift a finger for them and even contributed to their dismissal.

But contrary to what the corporation, Verdi and the works council had expected, the WISAG workers refused to accept the dismissals. Under the motto: “Today it’s us—tomorrow you!” they began to organize their resistance together, demonstrating countless times at Frankfurt Airport, in front of company headquarters and the private villa of WISAG boss Wisser, as well as in Wiesbaden in front of the Hesse state parliament. At Terminal 1, they even organized a hunger strike for eight days, and they appeared as a collective at all court hearings.

The WISAG workers were able to reverse some, though not all, dismissals at the time, as they remained essentially isolated back then. But the most important thing their struggle achieved was the understanding that workers must mobilize independently, and that this is possible.

All the institutions of society—the media, the trade unions, the bourgeois parties and also the courts—act as instruments of a narrow layer of super-rich capitalists who were able to further enrich themselves in the COVID pandemic. Today, they enhance their wealth boundlessly in the various wars. Lufthansa is also involved in the insane military rearmament program; its subsidiary, Lufthansa Technik, works as a supplier to the air force and profits from it. 

9. Federal prosecutors seize on California warehouse fire to criminalize anti-capitalist opposition

On April 7, shortly after 12:30 a.m., a major fire broke out at a 1.2 million-square-foot Kimberly-Clark distribution warehouse in Ontario, California. The facility, which stored large quantities of paper products, was rapidly consumed by the blaze.

All 20 workers on the night shift were evacuated, with no deaths or injuries reported. Some 175 firefighters from more than a dozen agencies battled the inferno, which took nearly 12 hours to extinguish. The warehouse was destroyed, with losses estimated at $500 million to $600 million.

The facility was owned by Kimberly-Clark Corporation, a multinational personal care and hygiene products giant whose brands include Kleenex, Huggies, Scott and Kotex. The company sells its products in more than 170 countries and reported operating profit of $2.4 billion in 2025, compared to $2.7 billion the year before.

Later that day, Chamel Abdulkarim, 29, a warehouse worker employed at the facility through a third-party contractor, was arrested. Authorities claim Abdulkarim ignited the fire and filmed himself doing so. A video posted to his personal Instagram account, which appears to show him lighting paper products on fire, quickly went viral on social media.

Authorities have not officially confirmed a motive, but video Abdulkarim filmed and uploaded to social media points strongly to anger over low wages and poor working conditions.

Throughout the video, Abdulkarim can be heard repeatedly tying the act to low wages, declaring, “If you’re not going to pay us enough to f*cking live or afford to live, at least pay us enough not to do this sh*t”; “You know, we may not get paid enough to f*cking live, but these bitches [lighters] dirt cheap”; and “All you had to do was pay us enough to live.” 

*****

Abdulkarim allegedly compared his actions to those of Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing Brian Thompson, the former CEO of UnitedHealthcare. In other texts and phone calls cited by authorities, Abdulkarim stated: “1% is a f*cking joke”; “Billionaires profiting off of war …”; and “All you had to do was pay us enough to live. Pay us more of the value WE bring. Not corporate. Didn’t see the shareholders picking up a shift.”

Abdulkarim has pleaded not guilty to the state charges. If convicted in state court, he could face up to 10 years in prison, according to prosecutors. He also faces a federal arson charge carrying a mandatory minimum sentence of five years and a maximum of 20 years, underscoring the effort to impose an exemplary punishment.

The incident has struck a nerve among workers internationally because Abdulkarim’s statements gave expression, in a politically confused manner, to the intense anger over poverty wages, corporate greed and worsening working conditions.

What has alarmed the ruling class is not the isolated actions of individuals who lash out at their employers and destroy property. Such actions are politically bankrupt, endanger other workers and provide the authorities a pretext to expand state repression. What the capitalist class fears is that the widespread hostility to exploitation and social inequality will find conscious, organized and socialist expression in the working class. 

*****

The fact that social anger is often expressed in desperate and individualistic acts is the product of decades of betrayals by the trade union bureaucracy, which long ago abandoned any serious resistance of capitalist exploitation and has left workers alone to face unprecedented attacks on their jobs, living standards, working conditions and democratic rights.

Workers are not lacking anger or a will to fight. What they confront is a union apparatus that systematically isolates struggles, wears workers down and enforces sellout agreements on behalf of the corporations.

This has been demonstrated in recent months in the betrayal of the strike by meatpackers at JBS in Greeley, Colorado, where UFCW Local 7 ordered workers back on the job despite the company making no new offer; in New York City, where 32BJ SEIU officials abruptly called off a strike by 34,000 doormen, porters and maintenance workers without any vote by the membership; and in Los Angeles, where the union apparatus, working with Mayor Karen Bass and the Democratic Party, canceled a strike by 77,000 educators and school workers only hours before it was set to begin.

These betrayals create the conditions in which social anger, blocked from finding collective and organized expression, can take confused and individual forms. The task is not to romanticize or justify such actions, but to build a conscious leadership in the working class capable of transforming anger over exploitation into a collective struggle against the capitalist system.

That a warehouse worker could resort to such extreme and politically misguided measures will come as no surprise to workers familiar with the brutal conditions in warehouses and logistics facilities. Warehouses are better described as industrial slaughterhouses, where speedup, injuries, safety violations and labor grievances are endemic. 

*****

Southern California, where this incident took place, is a crucial chokepoint for world commerce. A strike by warehouse workers, in alliance with port workers, truck drivers and rail workers, would shut down vast sections of the US economy. This enormous social power must be consciously organized through rank-and-file committees, independent of the pro-corporate union bureaucracies and both big-business parties.

Isolated acts against capitalist property, moreover, do not solve the underlying problem, which is the capitalist system itself. The means of production must not be destroyed by individual workers driven to the breaking point but taken out of the hands of the capitalist class and placed under the democratic control of the working class, to be run for human need, not private profit.

The fight for decent wages, generous benefits, healthcare, paid time off, safe working conditions and secure employment must be waged as a political struggle of the working class against capitalism and for socialism.

10. Borneo fire devastates thousands of Malaysia’s poorest people

A catastrophic blaze destroyed about 1,000 makeshift homes and displaced almost 10,000 residents in a coastal village in Malaysia’s Sabah state in the early hours of Sunday. The tragedy underscores the plight of hundreds of thousands of people living in shanty settlements in both the Malaysian and Indonesian parts of the island of Borneo.

Kampung Bahagia, near the port city of Sandakan on the northern tip of Borneo, is one of Sabah’s densely-populated so-called water villages—which consist of highly inflammable houses made of wood and board built on stilts—housing some of Malaysia’s poorest people, including many stateless and indigenous groups. 

Authorities were notified of the fire about 1:30 a.m. and about 35 firefighters arrived 20 minutes later, according to media reports. Sandakan district’s fire and rescue chief Jimmy Lagung said strong winds and the close proximity of the houses caused the fire to spread rapidly and made access difficult. The inferno was not extinguished until noon—over 10 hours later.

Drone footage of the scene shows almost total destruction covering more than four hectares, or about 10 acres, of densely packed homes. Houses are no longer recognizable structures, just charred debris, as if the fire had quickly flattened the entire area.

No deaths have been reported yet, but some people were injured, Sandakan police said, according to the Malaysian state news agency Bernama. Police dismissed social media reports claiming lives were lost.

*****

The extreme fire dangers in coastal settlements are well known. Most homes are built entirely of wood, boards and other flammable materials. Houses are tightly packed with minimal space between them, allowing flames to jump from roof to roof in seconds. Narrow wooden walkways and a lack of direct road access prevent standard fire engines from reaching the sources. At low tide, firefighters lose their most immediate water source—the sea—as seen in Sunday’s Kampung Bahagia disaster.

Moreover, the Sabah and Malaysian governments, like governments around the world, are conducting an intensifying crackdown on immigrant residents, including those who live in makeshift villages. In 2025, Malaysian authorities significantly escalated immigration raids. Between January and May, authorities arrested an estimated 34,000 people, according to civil rights organisations.

Previous studies have estimated that some 215,000 people live in about 84 major “Kampung Air” (water villages) across Borneo, with at least 50,000 people in 10,000 settlements in Sabah alone. A significant proportion of the residents are stateless immigrants or refugees, denied citizenship, healthcare, education and land ownership rights. Building on stilts above the water—often considered “no man’s land”—is their only option.

Many residents work in nearby cities—like Sandakan or Kota Kinabalu—as labourers or in the fishing industry, but they cannot afford the high cost of formal land-based housing. Children born in these villages often cannot attend government schools. When their homes are destroyed, their informal community schools can disappear as well. 

*****

In some areas, governments plan to replace water villages with new townships, hotels and offices to boost tourism. After some previous fires, governments have demolished or failed to rebuild homes, forcing people into even more precarious living conditions, provoking considerable popular opposition.

For stateless residents, fires can mean losing their only proof of identity—such as IMM13 permits or birth certificates—in the flames. Without these, they face a higher risk of arbitrary detention or deportation, as they cannot prove their right to be in Malaysia.

While saying that humanitarian assistance is a priority, Prime Minister Anwar and state ministers have insisted that the country’s laws regarding illegal structures must be upheld to ensure long-term security.

Anwar’s government has quickly proposed a redevelopment plan for Kampung Bahagia. Deputy Human Resources Minister Datuk Khairul Firdaus Akbar visited the fire-ravaged site yesterday. He said gazetting the 60-acre village would lay the groundwork for “comprehensive development, including the construction of a planned settlement for residents.”

During the Sabah chief minister’s visit to the site on Monday, he said the area was previously recognised as a settlement for Filipino refugees under the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) but that status had been removed. He said a full report on the victims was expected within one to two weeks, noting about 70 percent of them were non-citizens, and those placed in six evacuation centres would remain there for a week pending further assessment.

More broadly, Anwar’s supposed “progressive” Pakatan Harapan coalition government increasingly has been trying to blame migrant and stateless workers—among the most vulnerable members of the working class—for deteriorating economic and social conditions, which Malaysia’s ruling capitalist class is now intensifying amid the global impact of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

11. Porto Alegre Conference: How not to fight fascism

From March 26 and 29, representatives of dozens of pseudo-left organizations from around the world gathered in Porto Alegre, capital of Brazil’s southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, for the so-called “1st International Antifascist Conference for the Sovereignty of Peoples.” With 4,000 participants and a “forum of authorities and parliamentarians” from some 40 countries, the event was celebrated by its organizers as a “qualitative leap in the international coordination” of the left.

The document adopted by the conference, dubbed the Porto Alegre Charter, acknowledges explosive signs of the world imperialist crisis and a growing social radicalization. It declares:

That same week, the Nuestra América convoy to Cuba took place; more than a million people took to the streets in Argentina, fighting for memory and against Milei; there were hundreds of thousands at the antifascist mobilization in the United Kingdom, and especially the great and historic “No Kings” demonstration in the United States, where millions of Americans gathered in hundreds of cities, once again declaring Trump an enemy of humanity.

The capitalist-imperialist system is living through a profound crisis and a sharp economic, social and moral decline. The response of the imperialist powers to their decline has been the fostering of fascism everywhere, the imposition of neoliberal policies, military aggression against weaker nations and their recolonization.

But far from representing a step forward in the construction of an international movement against fascism and war, the Porto Alegre Conference was a platform for political forces determined to block the development of a revolutionary and independent response by the working class to the deepening world capitalist crisis.

*****

The 1st International Antifascist Conference for the Sovereignty of Peoples does not represent a step forward in the struggle against fascism and imperialism. It represents, on the contrary, a new chapter in the history of the political containment of working class struggle by pseudo-left apparatuses. This is a history whose previous chapters include the WSF, the Pink Tide, Syriza and Podemos. In each case, the radicalization of the masses was channeled into the framework of bourgeois politics, and the result was the weakening, not the strengthening, of the working class’s resistance to fascism and imperialism.

The Latin American working class paid a devastating price in the second half of the last century for the subordination of the working class by social democracy, Stalinism and Pabloism to various forms of bourgeois nationalism, which politically disarmed the masses in the face of brutal dictatorships. The perspective offered by the Porto Alegre Conference—the “broad front” with bourgeois parties, the subordination of the class struggle to the electoral calendar, an “internationalism” that is, in practice, a collection of diverse national campaigns—is the repetition of that same catastrophic policy under new circumstances.

To prevent even more devastating betrayals and defeats at a moment of deepening world capitalist crisis and of the real rise of fascism, the only way forward for Brazilian and Latin American workers is to build an independent political leadership of the working class, in a break with the PT, the PSOL and all parties that subordinate the struggle of the exploited to the interests of the ruling classes. This requires the construction of sections of the International Committee of the Fourth International in every country of Latin America. It represents the only political tradition that analyzed and predicted the trajectory of capitulation of these tendencies, and that defends the international unity of the working class not as electoral rhetoric, but as a program for world socialist revolution.

12. Mass arrests in Brisbane add to repression of anti-genocide protests in Australia

Large squads of riot police arrested 22 anti-genocide demonstrators in Brisbane last weekend, taking to more than 50 the number of pro-Palestinian protesters violently arrested in three Australian states in recent weeks.

The Brisbane arrests, conducted over Saturday and Sunday at two rallies, marked a show of force by the Queensland state Premier David Crisafulli’s right-wing Liberal National Party (LNP) government to enforce its recently enacted “hate speech” legislation, which bans the anti-genocide phrases “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada.” 

At the first demonstration on Saturday by about 300 people against the laws, Queensland’s heavily-armed Public Safety Response Team (PSRT)—which specializes in “incidents of critical level violence or public disorder and civil disobedience”—arrested 20 people on 14 charges of displaying prohibited expressions and 7 charges of reciting prohibited expressions.

Dozens of PSRT commandos, backed by horses, arrested speakers at the rally and charged into the crowd to grab people who were chanting or displaying the banned “river to the sea” slogan.

After 15 people were arrested at the event, another five were arrested following a march to the police lockup. Two more arrests were made by large PSRT contingents at a Justice for Palestine (JFP) anti-genocide rally of about 700 people the following day.

Over the past two weeks, police have also arrested three other people for reciting or displaying a prohibited slogan.

These moves followed police operations in recent weeks conducted by the state Labor governments in New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria, involving dawn raids on homes across Sydney and Melbourne.

*****

Like those in Sydney and Melbourne, the Brisbane arrests are designed to try to intimidate protests against the continuing US-Israeli genocide in Gaza under conditions in which the mass killings have been extended to Iran and Lebanon, all with the material, political and diplomatic support of the Albanese government.

All these arrests must be condemned and defeated. They are based on the utterly false allegation, spearheaded by the Labor governments, that opponents of the genocide in Palestine, which include many Jews, are antisemitic. 

*****

The Brisbane arrests had a stage-managed character to them. Opening Saturday’s protest, JFP organizer Phil Monsour foreshadowed the arrests, stating: “A message to the Crisafulli government… we will use violence against us to grow our movement.” He said the JFP had a “strategy” to double its social media following.

Over the next two hours, this “strategy” became evident. Speakers concluded their comments with a chant of the prohibited phrase “from the river to the sea” and were escorted by PSRT squads into waiting police vehicles.

At the event’s conclusion—after the 15 arrests—Monsour declared that the “JFP determines when and where people get arrested,” and that “the police did exactly what we wanted.”

That is, the aim of the organizers was to use arrests to place pressure on the Queensland LNP government. This served to channel the protest against the LNP government, while barely mentioning the federal and state Labor governments.

Nor was there any reference to the Albanese government’s support for the US-Israeli war on Iran, or its wider commitment to the underlying drive by US imperialism for control over the resource-rich and strategic Middle East as part of preparations for war against China.

There was no mention of US President Donald Trump’s threats to exterminate an entire vilification in Iran, or the Albanese government’s dispatch of SAS troops, a war command aircraft, missiles and other military assistance to the Gulf region to bolster the assault on Iran. 

*****

As the limited character of last Thursday’s NSW Court of Appeal ruling demonstrates, democratic rights cannot be defended exclusively through the courts, whose function, alongside the police, is to defend, enforce and seek to legitimize the capitalist economic and legal order overall.

The demand must be raised throughout the working class for the dropping of all the charges and the overturning of all the anti-protest and “hate speech” laws, including those of the Labor governments that have led the charge against anti-genocide protests since the US-backed Israeli assault began in October 2023.

The Albanese government’s 2026 National Defence Strategy, released last week, is another statement of the Albanese government’s total commitment to US-led wars globally, and above all to Washington’s preparations for a catastrophic war against China, of which the drive for US control over the entire Middle East is a critical part.

Defence Minister Richard Marles pledged to increase military spending by $53 billion over the coming decade, on top of record expenditure of $60 billion this financial year. That means further cutting social spending—from health and education to disability services—to pay the colossal bill, at the expense of working-class households.

As the World Socialist Web Site has stated: “The only way to defeat the attacks on fundamental democratic rights and stop the plunge into wider wars is through the mobilization of the power of the working class against all those responsible, including the Labor governments. This fight requires the development of an independent working-class movement—in workplaces, throughout industries and across national borders—against the capitalist system that is the root cause of war and repression.”

13. University of California workers prepare to strike

Around 42,000 University of California system employees with the AFSCME union (American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees) are preparing for an open-ended strike beginning May 14. These include the lowest-paid layers of the UC workforce, including custodians, food service workers, security personnel, medical assistants, MRI technicians and respiratory therapists.

Their contracts expired in two phases, with patient care technical workers losing their agreement on July 31, 2024, followed by service workers on October 31 of the same year. Since then, the union has kept them on the job without a new deal and called five short-term strikes, carefully limited in scope and duration.

Now, an indefinite strike has been authorized. While this is a sign the UC workers have had enough, the outcome of the struggle depends upon the assertion of control by the rank and file over the struggle, independent and in opposition to the apparatus. 

*****

The University of California’s latest contract offer has been cynically promoted as “historic.” In reality, it is a carefully constructed fraud. The headline claim of 32.3 percent “total pay growth” is padded with previously agreed increases and stretched over years, amounting to a real pay cut after inflation. It does nothing to address the fundamental reality that UC employees cannot afford to live anywhere near the campuses they serve.

The touted $25 minimum wage is equally deceptive. It formalizes a wage floor that remains far below what is required in California’s major metropolitan areas. For many workers, rent alone consumes the bulk of their income. The addition of a one-time $1,000 bonus is an insult. It vanishes instantly under the weight of basic expenses like housing, food and transportation.

On healthcare, the proposal is even worse. By tying premiums to a percentage, it guarantees workers will pay more every year as costs rise. Small stipends and cherry-picked “low premium” examples do not change the basic structure, which steadily shifts costs onto workers. In practice, it amounts to a wage cut.

At the same time, the university continues to push for 401(k) retirement schemes that shift risks onto workers while reducing its long-term obligations. Chronic understaffing has become institutionalized, with hiring freezes and high vacancy rates used to cut costs. 

Employees are sleeping in their cars, cycling through shelters or enduring punishing commutes of two to three hours each way. Entire sections of the workforce are effectively excluded from the communities in which they work. In cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, living near one’s workplace is not merely difficult, it is impossible.

The conditions facing UC workers are mirrored in the student population. Housing insecurity is widespread, with one in 13 UC students experiencing homelessness or unstable living conditions. The same economic pressures that drive workers into poverty are shaping the lives of the next generation.

Behind this stands the political establishment in California, the richest state in the country. The Democratic Party, which dominates the state and oversees the UC system, bears direct responsibility for this social disaster, carrying out austerity at the state and local levels.

However, AFSCME’s response is also vague. Its calls for a “living wage,” equity adjustments and limited subsidies do not challenge the underlying framework. The union bureaucracy’s role is not to mobilize workers against austerity but to contain and manage their opposition.

*****

The union bureaucracy is working more openly to disrupt the class struggle as conditions for it are becoming more and more favorable. Last Tuesday in Los Angeles, teachers and school workers were blocked from carrying out a joint strike, instead confronting them with a last-minute deal that achieved none of their demands. Friday that same week, the Service Employees International Union canceled a strike of 34,000 doormen and other building workers in New York City.

These strikes would have involved a combined 114,000 workers in the two largest cities in America. It goes without saying that they would have had a galvanizing impact on workers around the country and even the world.

Also at the University of California, the United Auto Workers pushed through a contract for tens of thousands of graduate student workers without allowing sufficient time to review its terms, effectively splitting the AFSCME workers from one of their most powerful allies. And last November, UPTE (University Professional and Technical Employees) preemptively undermined the largest coordinated UC strike in decades.

This reflects the social position of the union bureaucracy itself. Integrated into corporate and political structures, it functions to contain workers, not to advance the interests of the rank and file.

The authorization of an open-ended strike reflects a growing recognition that the status quo is untenable. But the decisive question is leadership, who directs the struggle and in whose interests. 

*****

The issues extend beyond wages to the allocation of social resources. While billions fund war and repression, workers’ needs are ignored. The UC strike must become part of a wider struggle against austerity and inequality, recognizing that the problem is not individual administrators but a system prioritizing profit over human need.

14. “We do have the money to pay for education. Unfortunately, it’s been funneled away to pay for wars”: California Little Lake teachers walk out

More than 200 teachers and school employees in the Little Lake City School District in Los Angeles County continued their strike into its third day Monday, following a walkout that began April 16.

Little Lake City consists of seven elementary schools, from kindergarten through sixth grade, and two middle schools, serving seventh and eighth grades, in Santa Fe Springs, Norwalk and Downey in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. The district employs roughly 200 teachers, not all of whom are full-time, and serves 3,656 students. The overwhelming majority of students, about 80 percent, qualify for free school lunches in this impoverished section of southeast Los Angeles County.

The issues in the strike are wages, healthcare benefits, class sizes and special education support services. The immediate trigger was a midyear healthcare benefits cut that could increase some employees’ monthly costs by as much as $1,400. It is the first strike in the district’s 154-year history, and more than 90 percent of district teachers voted to authorize the walkout.

The educators are members of the Little Lake Education Association (LLEA), which is affiliated with the California Teachers Association (CTA) and, through it, the National Education Association (NEA). 

*****

The Little Lake City teachers’ strike is part of a growing wave of struggles by teachers and education workers in California and throughout the country. In February, more than 6,000 teachers and paraprofessionals in San Francisco struck for the first time in nearly 50 years, closing schools serving roughly 50,000 students.

Last week, some 70,000 teachers, principals and school support staff in Los Angeles Unified, the second-largest school district in the country, were prepared to strike before the walkout was called off at the last minute after tentative agreements were reached by the unions.

These struggles are driven by the same conditions: unaffordable healthcare costs, wages that do not keep pace with the cost of living, overcrowded classrooms, understaffed schools and attacks on special education services. They are unfolding under conditions in which both big business parties insist there is “no money” for public education, even as trillions are squandered on war, tax cuts for the rich and the bailout of the financial oligarchy.

On the first day of the strike, reporters from the World Socialist Web Site spoke with teachers and supporters and discussed how the struggle could be broadened beyond Little Lake City and placed under the democratic control of educators themselves. 

*****

Andrea, a fifth grade teacher, said she has “been with the district for over 10 years. And throughout this time, I’ve encountered amazing educators. Educators that support, value and guide our students. And today, we fight for them. Our district wants to increase class sizes. We know that more students in the classroom is a disservice to them. And that’s not the education that this community deserves.

“Our district has removed our healthcare coverage and is using increasing classroom sizes as a bargaining chip. For many of us paying over $1,000 a month means being forced to make an impossible choice between the profession we love and the financial stability for our own families. We stand together as educators wanting the best for our students.

“Currently, I already have 31 students. So an increase in class sizes, we can only imagine. It’s not fair to any of us: the students, the parents or teachers.

“Some of these teachers are paying over $1,000 a month for their health care,” she added.

Andrea noted that LAUSD is “one of the biggest districts ... they are powerful. We are a tiny district trying to be just as strong.

“We are not even asking for a raise. All we are asking for is for our healthcare to be covered and for our class sizes not to increase.”

15. United Kingdom:  CWU pushes “relaunch” of partnership with Kretinsky, based on sellout “negotiators agreement” with Royal Mail

The Communication Workers Union (CWU) has reached a “negotiators agreement” with Royal Mail on national deployment of USO reform and equalization of new entrants pay, terms and conditions, announced in a Letter to Branches (LTB) on April 15.

The nine-page “final agreement” makes clear what CWU general secretary Dave Ward and deputy Martin Walsh have been up to in their talks with management over the past two months, shielded from rank-and-file oversight by the official Dispute Resolution Procedure.

*****

The Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee (PWRFC) calls for a resounding No vote. But rejection alone is not enough. Opposition must be mobilized demanding the removal of Ward, Walsh and the entire CWU Postal Executive who serve as Royal Mail’s enforcers.

This rotten agreement has been endorsed by the entire CWU Postal Executive. Briefings have been held with full-time officials and local reps, but a ballot date has not been announced for members to decide. This is deliberate, as the CWU prepares to launch a PR blitz based on lies, disinformation and threats to crowd out rank-and-file opposition with pro-company messaging.

Postal workers must seize the initiative. Rank-and-file committees should be established at all delivery offices and mail centers. Decision making must be transferred to the rank-and-file, based on a fighting strategy to protect the mail service, not EP Group profits! 

16. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Protests continue against FATE tire layoffs

Canada:

Montreal municipal workers stage 3-day strike 

Chile:

Fishers sue over contamination of coastal waters

Colombia:

Educators stage protest strike

Honduras:

Public health doctors carry out work to rule protests

United States:

Colorado educators strike over unity with staff workers
Illinois State University workers rally to demand higher wages
 
Minnesota county workers strike over wages

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

"Peace for the world! Down with war!"  

Apr 20, 2026

On Friday, May 1, the International Committee of the Fourth International and the World Socialist Web Site will hold its annual International Online May Day Rally, uniting workers from across the globe in the fight against fascism, dictatorship, and war.

This year’s rally takes place in the aftermath of the most serious war crisis since World War II. The US-Israeli assault on Iran, launched on February 28, has brought the world to the brink of a catastrophe that threatens all of humanity. The working class must intervene as an independent political force to halt the drive to world war.

The 2026 International May Day Rally will present a revolutionary perspective to unify workers internationally in the struggle against capitalism, imperialist war, and the global assault on democratic rights. It will outline a program to end the criminal aggression against Iran, oppose the rise of fascism, and build a society based on equality and human need.

For more information and to register, please visit HERE.

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

 1. This week in history: April 20-26

  • 25 years ago:
Peruvian government and CIA shoot down civilian aircraft 
  • 50 years ago:

Socialist Party wins in Portuguese elections

  • 75 years ago:

    500,000 Spanish workers strike against Franco dictatorship

  • 100 years ago:

Reza Khan crowned Shah of Iran    

2. APWU president Smith on USPS financial crisis: “nothing to see here”

The American Postal Workers Union bureaucracy is telling postal workers that the financial crisis at the United States Postal Service is not a crisis at all—but a “situation,” and that “victory is only a phone call away.”

That was the central message of APWU President Jonathan Smith’s livestream last Tuesday, an exercise not in organizing opposition to the massive concessions being prepared against postal workers, but in getting out in front of rank-and-file resistance in order to smother it.

The reality is far different from Smith’s complacent claims. Earlier this month, Postmaster General David Steiner warned Congress that USPS is approaching a liquidity crisis so severe that, “At our current rate we’ll be out of cash in less than 12 months.” Without new borrowing authority, he said, “the postal service would be unable to deliver the mail.”

*****

The crisis is already being paid for by workers. USPS has suspended its biweekly employer contributions to the Federal Employees Retirement System—roughly $200 million every two weeks—to preserve cash, effectively looting workers’ deferred compensation and using it as an emergency reserve. 

*****

Corporate America is salivating over the prospect of privatizing USPS. [Postmaster General] Steiner’s appointment itself—he comes from FedEx’s board of directors—is a signal of what is under consideration. Last year, a five-point Wells Fargo memo laid out the steps needed for privatization: Higher prices, route restructuring, removal of regulatory constraints and greater emphasis on parcel delivery over universal service. Much of this is being carried out under the guise of resolving the present “financial crisis.”

The “Delivering for America” restructuring launched under former Postmaster General Louis DeJoy was aimed, though thus far without achieving profitability, at reorganizing USPS along Amazon-style logistics lines and making it more attractive to investors.

USPS is increasingly being transformed from a public service into a last-mile delivery contractor for private corporations. In many areas it already functions as Amazon’s de facto delivery service partner. Similar arrangements are being pursued elsewhere, undermining the universal service obligation and creating privatization in fact if not yet in name.

Smith’s attacks on “headlines” and “panic” were in particular a response to warnings raised by the World Socialist Web Site and by growing opposition among postal workers, especially through the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee.

The same day as Smith’s webinar, the Springfield, Massachusetts [Rank-and-File Committee] issued a statement declaring, “USPS is a public service, not a profit-making enterprise.” That statement explained:

“This manufactured ‘liquidity emergency’ is the product of the 1971 corporatization of the service and recent restructuring programs such as ‘Delivering for America,’ which have increased precarious non-career staffing, intensified workloads, and produced unsafe workplaces and massive losses in first-class mail revenue. Meanwhile, management and both parties in Congress demand further austerity.”

The committee explained that it was founded because workers “reject the current, non-democratic union structure and strive to build a movement that is by the worker, for the worker.”

Smith was clearly determined to prevent any such opposition from emerging. During the livestream Q&A, he explicitly told workers to keep their questions “germane,” shutting down broader discussion of restructuring, layoffs and the political causes of the crisis. 

*****

The unions have worked hand in glove with management for years. They backed the 2022 Postal Service Reform Act, which rescinded the prefunding mandate for retiree health benefits while requiring future retirees to enroll in Medicare. NALC and the rural carriers union (NRLCA) openly support Delivering for America, which has eliminated thousands of routes for their own members, while signing side agreements allowing invasive electronic monitoring and massive pay cuts.

There is no doubt that when attacks on jobs are openly announced, the union apparatus will support them as unfortunate but necessary “shared sacrifice.”

In reality, this is a manufactured crisis created by decades of deliberate policy. USPS’s $9 billion net loss last year amounts to only a few days’ worth of munitions in the imperialist assault on Iran. It is a class policy: To free up resources for Wall Street and for war by carving them out of the backs of the working class.

And it is international. Canada Post is preparing to eliminate 30,000 jobs out of a workforce of little more than 50,000 and slash home delivery, a sign of what is being prepared in the United States. 

The APWU webinar underscores the necessity for rank-and-file organization. The bureaucracy functions to enforce the dictates of management and anti-democratic strike bans even as the ruling class violates every law at will under the Trump administration.

The answer is not “common sense” appeals to Congress, but the class struggle. Conditions for this are rapidly emerging as workers across the country radicalize in response to dictatorship, war and austerity, and as major strikes break out.

Postal workers must find new channels that they themselves control, giving them real agency over their own struggle. The International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) and the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee are fighting to build those channels.

3. Mass protests by workers in northern India against price hikes due to US-Israeli war against Iran

Tens of thousands of unorganized workers employed in manufacturing industries in the National Capital Region (NCR) in northern India have been engaged in explosive strikes and protests, which began on April 10, against price hikes driven by the US-Israeli war against Iran. Workers are demanding an increase in minimum wages to keep up with the sharp increase in rent, utilities and food prices.

The eruption in northern India is part of a global wave of resistance to unbearable fuel and food price increases due to Trump’s criminal war against Iran and the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz. In recent weeks, mass protests by workers and farmers have hit the Philippines, Haiti and Northern Ireland.

The NCR is a region surrounding the nation’s capital, New Delhi. It includes metropolitan New Delhi, the older Delhi city and adjacent industrialized districts in the states of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan.

It is home to about 15,000 small, medium and large domestic and transnational manufacturing industries that employ around 4.5 million workers, most of whom are contract or temporary workers. Before the war, the NCR—along with the Bombay metropolitan region—had one of the highest costs of living in the country. Workers across the region are demanding uniform minimum living wages of around Rs. 23,000 ($247) per month.

This latest working class eruption began in the Noida industrial township but rapidly spread across the NCR. So desperate are the conditions of India’s toilers that even domestic workers employed by individual middle class households joined the agitation.

Wages are so low that a majority earn a mere Rs. 10,000 ($107) to Rs. 15,000 ($160) per month for six days a week of intense work lasting 10–12 hours a day. Current wages have largely remained unchanged for about a decade.

The government responded to the protests with violent police repression, which reached a high point on April 13-14. Both local and state government authorities sent huge contingents of police forces to suppress any opposition by workers to their daily misery.

After firing large quantities of tear gas and beating many protesters mercilessly, police arrested over 350 workers on April 14. The angry workers fought back by throwing stones and firecrackers and overturning several police vehicles.

In addition, the Hindu-supremacist Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath of Uttar Pradesh—who has a long history of unleashing police violence against Muslims and the poor—branded this worker uprising as a “Naxal” and even “Pakistan-linked” conspiracy. The Naxalites were Indian Maoists who began armed peasant uprisings in the late 1960s. They have largely been stamped out by the murderous violence of the Modi government.

Despite his threatening rhetoric, Adityanath was compelled to announce a 21 percent hike in minimum wages. Even as he announced the paltry wage increase, the chief minister ordered the police to maintain “vigilance against disruptive elements” and told workers to be thankful that their oppressive employers “provide employment opportunities.”

*****

Even with the wage hike announcements of 35 percent by the Haryana government and 21 percent by the Uttar Pradesh government, the workers can barely make a living. There is deep ferment among the Haryana workers over these meager increases. They are, however, being held in check by the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), which is associated with Stalinists of the Communist Party of India (Marxist). 

Two factors have largely driven this spontaneous uprising. The first is the impact on the Indian economy by the US-Israeli war against Iran. India, which imports large quantities of crude oil, fertilizer, and cooking gas from Persian Gulf countries, has been severely impacted by shortages and price increases, which in turn have driven up food prices.

The second major factor is the new set of four “Labour Codes” implemented last November by the pro-business Prime Minister Narendra Modi–led BJP national government. This was a further step by the fiercely anti-worker Modi government to enhance the “Ease of Doing Business,” an utterly reactionary concept initiated and energetically promoted by the World Bank.

The Stalinist trade unions—the CITU and the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC), which is associated with the older Communist Party of India (CPI)—appear to have been caught flat-footed by the uprising. Both the CITU and AITUC have a long history of betraying strikes, especially in the state of Tamil Nadu, where they have significant presence. They are now scrambling to bring the movement under control by sending delegations to intervene in the strikes and protests.

*****

Despite the Indian elite boasting of having the highest economic growth rate, the condition of workers in India reflects that of the 19th century. According to the 2025 Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS), only 23.6 percent are employed on regular salary or wages. Of the rest, 56.2 percent are “self-employed,” a glorified term used to describe people making a living by selling fritters on the sidewalk, while 20.2 percent are casual laborers who work whenever they can find some kind of manual job.

The CITU, which claims to represent 6.2 million workers, has called for nationwide protests on April 16 in support of the NCR workers. But the record of both union federations, which have allowed the national and state governments to escalate their anti-working class policies, points to the necessity of workers breaking the grip of the labor bureaucracies and developing their own independent means of struggle, including rank-and-file committees controlled associated with the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees.

4. The Pitt: The medical drama whose social realism and honesty have gripped millions

The Pitt, to its considerable credit, is different. While Season 2 does not shy away from contradictory and flawed characters, it is largely life-affirming. The makers set out intentionally and in a sensitive manner to engage with the social problems of our time and how they shape the human material.

*****

The Pitt takes place in a big city hospital, and, thus by its very nature, the staff and patients are multi-national, multi-ethnic, multi-racial. Yet identity politics is absent from the program. The racial and ethnic differences aren’t significant issues. The viewer is struck by the high level of solidarity among the physicians, many of them from widely different backgrounds. A broad cross section of America is here, and yet there’s no racial storyline. In a similar vein, when inter-generational conflicts arise, they are not presented as insurmountable. The characters are drawn according to the common problems and challenges they encounter. 

*****

The difficulties faced by the central character, an attending physician in crisis, also have a more general meaning. Dr. Robinavitch is attempting to fight through the serious, at times intractable problems in the hospital and in his life without losing his sanity. Although The Pitt has resonated especially strongly with healthcare workers, this is something to which the broader population clearly relates.

Workers are the ones who keep society functioning in all its aspects, but they come up against obstacles created by the existing social framework every day. How can we have decent transportation, quality education, safe construction and industrial projects, a functioning electricity grid, a working service sector and so forth, if workers are driven to exhaustion, budgets are slashed, positions are cut and conditions are generally made impossible? Workers can see and feel the effects of the system on themselves and on others in myriad forms, and they are looking for ways to not “succumb” to these pressures.

The Pitt has risen in popularity as the official political institutions and big business sink lower and lower in the public estimate. Of course, this is not simply a matter of one television program. Nurses have been named the most trusted profession in the US for 24 consecutive years as of 2026, according to annual polling from Gallup. Approximately 75 percent of American adults rate nurses’ honesty and ethical standards as “high” or “very high.” Medical doctors and pharmacists also receive the approval of the majority, typically being considered trustworthy by between 53 and 62 percent of those surveyed.

On the other hand, capitalists and business executives are generally disliked, if not despised. Recent data shows only about 12 to 15 percent of the public views such individuals as having high ethical standards: “They are often viewed more negatively than positively.”

*****

In opposition to short-staffing, low wages and harsh working conditions, healthcare workers have dug in their heels in fierce battles with management in recent times, including in Providence, Rhode Island, and Grand Blanc, Michigan. Tens of thousands of nurses were blatantly sold out at Kaiser Permanente and in New York City by their unions. This is a major battlefield in the class struggle. It is not for nothing that the ultra-right City Journal recently (and nervously) headlined an article, “Why Are So Many Nurses Left-Wing?” 

*****

The success of The Pitt coincides with the participation of millions upon millions of people in every sizable community in the US on March 28 in the “No Kings” protests against ICE, war and dictatorship. The population is moving to the left, to an ever more critical view of the status quo, of the gang of criminals and murderers who rule the US and of capitalism itself.

5. Trump threatens to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges after IRGC closes the Strait of Hormuz

The Sunday television interview programs of April 19, 2026 are a portrait of a ruling class with no significant opposition to mass murder. The sitting president threatens the destruction of the civilian infrastructure on which 90 million people depend. His ambassador to the United Nations defends the threat by citing the fire bombing of Dresden in World War II. A former senior Biden official admits on camera that the previous administration had war-gamed the same strikes.

The war on Iran is the policy of both parties of American capital, backed by their German, British and French partners, against the peoples of Iran, Lebanon and Palestine. The struggle against this war cannot be waged through the existing two-party framework, entirely controlled by corporate America. It requires the independent mobilization of the American and international working class, on a program of socialist internationalism, led by the International Committee of the Fourth International.

6.  Tensions between Israel and Türkiye escalate

Israeli and Turkish leaders have launched the most extraordinary rhetorical attacks on social media against each other.

On April 11, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on X of “massacring his own Kurdish citizens”, “accommodating Iran’s terror regime and its proxies” and undermining regional stability.

Erdoğan had earlier warned that “provocations” could derail the US–Iran ceasefire and criticized Israel’s actions in the region. Turkish officials described Netanyahu as the “Hitler of our time”, citing Israel’s military actions in Gaza and across the region, and stating that Israel was manufacturing Türkiye as its next enemy. They accused him of destabilizing the region for his own political survival. Presidential advisor Burhanettin Duran accused Netanyahu of committing genocide in Gaza and dragging the region into chaos.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz called Erdogan a “Muslim Brotherhood man, who massacred Kurds”. He criticized the Turkish president for failing to respond to Iranian missiles fired into Türkiye, calling him a “paper tiger”, accusing him of antisemitism and declaring “field trials in Türkiye against Israel’s political and military leadership”. The fascist National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir tweeted in Hebrew, “Erdogan, do you understand English?” before adding, in English: “F*** You.”

Several Israeli politicians, within the government and the opposition, including former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, have publicly described Türkiye as a new regional threat, comparable to Iran. These were references to Erdogan’s earlier threats against Israel when he said that Türkiye could “enter Israel” just as it had intervened in Libya and Karabakh—Türkiye’s interventions to support Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia and in the Libyan civil war.

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan accused Israel of deliberately trying to portray Türkiye as its next enemy. Netanyahu was trying to “undermine peace negotiations” in the region as he continues “his expansionist policies”.

*****

Turkish criticisms of Netanyahu function largely as an attempt to channel rising domestic anger over soaring living costs and intensifying state repression toward an external rival. Recent surveys in Türkiye show most of the population opposes the Iran war. Yet Ankara cannot afford a direct confrontation with the United States. It joined the Riyadh Declaration in condemning Iran and redirected much of its public response on the war against Israel, drawing on domestic opposition to the war to reinforce the narrative that Israel provoked the conflict. 

*****

These latest rhetorical attacks followed an announcement that caused uproar in Tel Aviv: Istanbul’s chief prosecutor filed indictments against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and 34 other Israeli officials—including Defense Minister Israel Katz, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir, and former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen. The charges relate to Israel’s naval interception of dozens of vessels in the Global Sumud Flotilla, seeking to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza in late September and early October 2025. 

Israel detained and later deported all activists aboard the 39 boats, including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg and 24 Turkish citizens. Ankara condemned the interception as “an act of terror” that endangered civilians. The indictments include allegations of crimes against humanity, genocide, torture, and unlawful deprivation of liberty—charges that, if upheld, would carry cumulative sentences amounting to thousands of years.

Ankara has consistently criticized the mass civilian deaths in Gaza since October 2023, yet it has maintained significant economic and logistical ties with Israel. Azerbaijan’s oil exports still transit the pipeline running through Türkiye, and US bases in Türkiye have remained available for military intelligence-gathering operations that benefit Israel.

Erdoğan was also a signatory to the rotten agreement at Sharm el-Sheikh last October advanced by the Trump administration for Gaza. The plan envisaged Gaza being administered by a “Peace Council” chaired by the US president, without recognizing any political rights for the Palestinians in the territory, while granting Israel a permanent security role controlling borders. 

*****

Today’s rapid escalation in Israel–Türkiye tensions reflects a long-running rivalry that has now transformed into open hostility, driven by developments in Gaza, Syria, Iran, and domestic politics in both countries.

The rivalry between two allies of US imperialism in the region primarily concerns their shares in the carve-up of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East. While both governments support aspects of Washington’s drive for dominance in the Middle East, Ankara has grown increasingly concerned about Israel’s expanding partnerships, particularly in Cyprus and Syria. 

*****

It is above all the criminal US-Israel attacks on Iran that have provoked consternation among Türkiye’s ruling circles. They fear that, as a NATO member hosting US bases and providing intelligence for US-Israeli forces that have been targeted by missiles, possibly as false flag operations, Türkiye could be drawn into the war. The global rise in oil and natural gas prices caused by the conflict will exacerbate the already severe cost-of-living crisis, intensifying class tensions.

While Erdogan declared the attacks on Iran were illegal and called for a ceasefire and negotiations, Türkiye’s military, economic and financial dependence upon its alliance with Washington means aligning with President Donald Trump’s “new Middle East” policy. To do otherwise would invite a coup against him, as the 2016 NATO-backed coup attempt demonstrated. For this reason, he refrained from condemning the US under the leadership of his “friend” Trump. 

*****

Tensions between Israel and Türkiye are also rising in the Horn of Africa, a vital strategic area for the Middle East powers. The region’s ports, military bases, and political alliances shape access to the Bab el-Mandeb straits—the southern gateway to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal—which functions both as Israel’s maritime lifeline via the Eilat–Ashdod corridor and as Türkiye’s access point to the Indian Ocean.

Over the past decade, the two states have cultivated opposing regional blocs: a Türkiye–Qatar–Somalia axis on one side and an Israel–UAE–Eritrea/Ethiopia axis on the other.

Somalia is the most visible front in this rivalry. Türkiye has become Mogadishu’s primary political patron, military trainer, and economic partner. It operates its largest overseas military base in the capital, trains Somali forces, and controls key infrastructure including the port. Ankara has dispatched the Çağrı Bey vessel and supporting ships to begin deep-sea drilling at the Curad-1 well, 250 miles off Somalia’s coast, a move that signals its long-term geostrategic interests in the region.

Israel, by contrast, has sought influence through Somaliland. Last December, it became the first and only UN member state to formally recognize Somaliland as a sovereign state, a step widely interpreted as an effort to secure access to the port of Berbera and one that antagonized both Ankara and Mogadishu.

In Sudan, Türkiye had secured a long-term lease on Suakin Island—viewed by some analysts as a potential naval foothold on the Red Sea—before the Sudanese army ousted President Omar al-Bashir in a pre-emptive coup amid a mass uprising. In Djibouti, Ankara has expanded its diplomatic and commercial presence as part of its broader Red Sea strategy.

Israel’s footprint in the Horn is older and more discreet. It has long maintained intelligence and security ties with Ethiopia, including around the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which Egypt and Sudan fear could reduce Nile flows during a drought. Israel has reportedly used Eritrean ports and islands for intelligence gathering in the Red Sea. Its partnership with the UAE—a major actor in Eritrea, Somaliland, and southern Yemen, and a backer of the Rapid Support Forces in Sudan’s civil war—has extended its reach.

The Iran-aligned Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping linked to Israel, carried out in support of the Palestinians, have forced vessels to reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, underscoring the strategic value of the Red Sea corridor. This has become more pronounced as Iran threatens to close the Red Sea if the US continues to block the Strait of Hormuz.

*****

On Friday, Türkiye held a three-day Diplomacy Forum in Antalya, which more than 150 countries were expected to attend, including more than 20 heads of state and government, among them Syrian President al-Sharaa and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The foreign ministers of Türkiye, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt were to meet on the sidelines of the forum to discuss the war and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

7. Starmer government facing collapse over Mandelson/Epstein scandal

UK Labour government Prime Minister Keir Starmer will deliver a statement to the House of Commons Monday to “correct the record” regarding the vetting of Peter Mandelson prior to his appointment as UK ambassador to the US.

Before handing Mandelson the job in December 2024, though he is still attempting to deny this, Starmer was fully aware of his intimate connections with the billionaire child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Mandelson continued his relationship with the pedophile even after he was convicted and served jail time.

On Thursday, an investigation by the Guardian revealed that “A formal decision to deny him clearance was made by [UK Security Vetting (UKSV)] on 28 January 2025… According to sources, UKSV informed the Foreign Office that the risk factors involving Mandelson meant that his clearance should be denied.”

Starmer claimed on Friday that he was not informed until as late as Tuesday evening this week that Mandelson failed vetting. Even if a man who has served at the highest levels of the state and was formerly the UK’s Director of Public Prosecutions were to be believed, it would reveal a level of incompetence beyond comprehension. 

*****

The Independent reported—fully seven months before the Guardian—in the article, “Concerns Mandelson did not pass MI6 vetting for US ambassador role – but Starmer appointed him anyway,” that it was told by sources “that MI6 failed to clear the Labour peer largely because of concerns over his business links to China. However, there were also worries that his past links to the disgraced financier and convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein ‘would compromise him’.”

Starmer therefore knew. Yet much of the media coverage, particularly the pro-Labour Guardian, has still focused on what Starmer knew and when. This is because there is a fear that his downfall will bring to a head a far broader political crisis of rule for the British bourgeoisie, possibly claiming the Labour government as its victim. 

*****

Among the figures being touted as Starmer’s replacement should he fall, whether now or after May’s local elections—expected to be disastrous for Labour—is Health Secretary Wes Streeting. Another Blairite, Streeting is equally compromised, having already been forced to delete a batch of photos of himself with Mandelson, including one in which Streeting fawns over the “legend Lord Mandelson.”

Sections of the media, including the Financial Times, have warned in recent months that whatever Starmer’s decline in political fortunes, he still represents the “stability” sought by the bourgeoisie after a period of crisis-ridden Tory rule—which saw the Conservative Party burn through a staggering four prime ministers and five chancellors in the space of just eight years. 

*****

All the political mechanisms of rule established over more than a century are falling apart at the seams—above all the Labour Party.

Under conditions of entrenched and growing social inequality and mounting class conflict, political minnows such as Lammy, Kendall and Streeting—who all agreed with Mandelson, as a leading architect of New Labour, that he was “intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich”—are incapable of reversing a perilous situation for the ruling class.

Labour is today hated by millions of workers and youth. Indeed, it is only due to the betrayal carried out by the nominally left Jeremy Corbyn, who led the party for more than four-and-a-half years from September 2015, that the Blairites have survived at all, and Starmer handed leadership of the party.

Starmer went on to win a landslide in the 2024 general election under Britain’s undemocratic first-past-the-post electoral system, despite having won just 33.7 percent of the vote—the lowest share for any single-party majority government in post-1945 UK history. 

Starmer was eased into power due to the betrayal of the trade union bureaucracy, who quelled a mass strike movement as they backed a Blairite whose hostility to the working class was made clear by his ban on shadow cabinet ministers supporting workers’ picket lines and his support for genocide in Gaza.

Thanks to the continued refusal of Corbyn and the “left” to wage political war on the Blairites, almost two years of Starmer’s government of austerity and militarism has mainly benefited the most right-wing forces—including the far-right Reform UK.

*****

Following Corbyn’s betrayal and the debacle of his Your Party vehicle, and the prostration before Starmer of Labour’s parliamentary left-wing of a few dozen MPs, the Green Party has seen a surge in support in recent months—and now polls in second place behind Reform. But whatever vaguely leftist rhetoric is spouted by new leader Zack Polanski, the pro-capitalist Greens also represent no alternative to Starmer’s collapsing party.

If Reform, and the most vicious anti-working-class representatives of the super-rich they represent, are to be stopped in their tracks, then there is no time to waste: the working class must adopt the program of socialist internationalism.

As the WSWS noted on Mandelson’s arrest:

Mandelson’s career epitomised the transformation of the Labour Party into a naked instrument of finance capital and architect of illegal wars of imperialist plunder, most infamously against Iraq in 2003. Having now resigned five times from various positions in his career, including being forced from office twice in the Blair years due to earlier scandals, he was welcomed back to the summit of political power by Starmer. Not only did Mandelson epitomize the New Labour agenda of serving every requirement of the banks and corporations, but his close relations with Epstein were seen at the time as an asset that would facilitate efforts to woo the Trump administration.

For the working class, the central issue is not holding Mandelson or [Andrew] Mountbatten-Windsor to account through parliamentary debates, humble addresses, or official inquiries—including the public inquiry into Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador advocated by Your Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The fundamental task is the building of a new, independent political party of the working class and making a decisive political break with the entire parliamentary set-up and all its rotten parties. It is the capitalist system they all defend that enabled the financial oligarchy—and figures such as Mandelson and Mountbatten-Windsor—to thrive.

8. Union officials call off strike of 34,000 New York City doormen, porters and maintenance workers

On Friday, union officials abruptly cancelled what would have been a major strike of 34,000 doormen, porters and maintenance workers in New York City. The deal between 32BJ SEIU (Service Employees International Union) and the Realty Advisory Board (RAB), which represents the landlords, was decided without any vote by the membership on whether to call off the strike.

Only two days earlier, around 10,000 residential building workers had rallied in Manhattan’s Upper East Side. The rally was a forceful demonstration of the workers’ willingness to wage what would have been the first strike of New York’s building workers since 1991. More than 550,000 residents live in the buildings that would have been affected.

The 32BJ bureaucracy’s abrupt about-face is an effort to prevent a struggle and appease the landlords. In a statement released on Friday, 32BJ SEIU President Manny Pastreich said that the union had “found a common path forward with the RAB.” This comment is unintentionally revealing. The RAB “wanted to have labor peace,” its president and CEO Howard Rothschild told Bloomberg.

This was the second major strike called off last week. Early Tuesday morning, education unions called off a city-wide strike in Los Angeles schools after negotiating inadequate deals that pave the way for planned budget cuts.

This underscores the fact that workers confront not only a ruthless corporate America and its two parties, but a trade union bureaucracy which functions as a labor police force. The better the conditions for class struggle—major strikes in America’s two largest cities would have had a galvanizing impact on workers across the country—the more open their efforts at sabotage. Workers must prepare new channels of struggle by forming independent rank-and-file committees, to impose their democratic will and give themselves genuine agency.

*****

During last week’s mass rally, Pastreich physically embraced Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who had come to address the workers. The rally heard a slew of speeches from union and Democratic Party officials with the typical slogans and chants of “solidarity” and that New York City is a “union town.” But it was wholly devoid of a fighting strategy for rank-and-file workers. 

*****

Mamdani highlighted the extreme inequality that exists between building workers and wealthy tenants and landlords at the rally, but the self-described socialist had traveled to the White House months before to fawn over Donald Trump and request billions of dollars in funding for new real estate projects. Having campaigned on a platform centering affordability, he is now touting the mere $40/week increase for low-paid workers as a win. 

9. Australia:  IYSSE speakouts opposing war against Iran draw support from university students [with videos]

The International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) in Australia has held speakouts on university campuses opposing the escalating US-led war against Iran. Events have taken place at Western Sydney University (WSU) and Queensland University of Technology (QUT), with a further speakout scheduled at the University of Melbourne.

IYSSE speakers condemned the criminal and unprovoked US-Israeli war, which so far has claimed the lives of an estimated 2,000 people, largely civilians, and threatens to escalate into a global conflagration.

The Australian Labor government is supporting and complicit in the war crimes against Iran. Australian military personnel were aboard the US submarine that torpedoed and sank the unarmed IRIS Dena in international waters, killing 140 sailors. Labor has deployed missiles, a warplane and personnel, including SAS commandos to join in a war aimed at regime-change and the annihilation of Iranian society. 

10. Germany:  Say No to the Verdi Collective Bargaining Agreement—Join the independent Transport Workers Action Committee

Excerpts from a statement by the [Public] Transport Workers Action Committee in Germany on the sellout deal between the Verdi union and the Berlin Transport Company:

Verdi has stated that the long timeframe for the contract—four years until the end of 2029—protects against attacks by the BVG. “The employer side made it very clear in these collective bargaining negotiations that they want to tamper with many provisions of the framework agreement,” reads a Verdi statement on the collective bargaining outcome from March 31. “We must prevent this, and a longer term helps in doing so.”

In plain language: Anyone who rejects this sellout can expect even greater attacks. “Take it or leave it!” This demonstrates once again the role of the Verdi apparatus and its defenders as the ones serving up these attacks to us workers. 

*****

Public transportation is facing brutal cuts. The federal transportation budget was slashed from 38.3 billion euros last year to 28.2 billion this year—a reduction of nearly 28 percent. According to the transportation contract, the BVG receives around 1.3 billion euros annually, which, however, does not cover actual needs. The BVG’s debt is set to skyrocket from 1.4 billion euros in 2024 to over 3.7 billion euros by 2028 because the Senate is forcing the BVG to take out loans—only to then claim that there is no money for staff and better working conditions.

Ultimately, this will pave the way for the complete privatization of the BVG. Even now, following the privatization of the Ringbahn here in Berlin, other transport systems such as the S-Bahn subway network—the North-South subnetworks and the Stadtbahn—are also slated for privatization. RTHey are to be awarded to a private consortia comprising S-Bahn Berlin GmbH, Siemens, Stadler and other corporations, thereby further fragmenting the system.

The same thing is happening to colleagues in many other countries. In Paris, 19,000 employees of the RATP public transit network—with 308 lines and over 4,500 buses—are set to be sold to global corporations by the end of this year. In Chicago, more than 40 percent of the Chicago Transit Authority’s public transit system faces dismantling because the Trump administration will no longer cover the $771 million deficit. In Madrid, a strategy to liberalize the EMT urban bus sector has been underway for years, opening it up to private capital and outsourcing individual services.

And everywhere, the union bureaucracies play the same role: They limit protests to symbolic actions, agree to lousy compromises, push through cutbacks and prevent workers from uniting across companies, cities and countries. In contrast stands the International Workers’ Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC), with which we collaborate. It fights to unite transport workers in Berlin, Paris, Chicago, Madrid and worldwide to organize joint struggles against social cuts, war and fascism. 

*****

The conclusion is clear: The union leaders act as co-managers in the interests of the government and corporations. They support the government’s arms buildup and war policies and suppress any serious resistance to them.

Outrage over this is growing—yet within the Verdi apparatus, pseudo-left organisations in particular ensure that this opposition is defused and kept under control. They present themselves as “reformers” of the union, but in reality they nip every independent movement from below in the bud.

Representatives on bargaining committees and shop stewards like Manuel von Stubenrauch—who, as a tram driver and Verdi shop steward, sells the new “transparency” and “feedback” as a democratic breakthrough—serve precisely this purpose: They give the bureaucracy’s maneuvers a seemingly “left-wing” and grassroots veneer, but at the decisive moment defend the course of the Verdi leadership, which enforces the directives of the Senate, the government and the companies.

These pseudo-leftists receive political backing from the Left Party, which has been and remains actively involved in cuts and privatizations in the Senate and in the districts.

The Action Committee must be consciously developed against these maneuvers by the Left Party and its union proxies as an independent alternative that pits the interests of the workforce against the demands for “restraint” and “austerity” aimed at keeping the war chest full, and that does not divide us as BVG employees from our colleagues in other transit companies, in the public sector, in the private sector, in administration and in industry. 

*****

We counter the Verdi agreement with our own immediate demands, which stem from our daily experience and the real needs of our colleagues:

1) Mandatory introduction of the 30-hour workweek with full wage compensation for all driving staff. Only a significant reduction in weekly working hours with full pay can end the constant work overload.

2) Abolition of six-day shifts and a maximum of eight hours per shift—including in split shifts. The formal “37-hour workweek” obscures the actual time on duty, which rises to over 50 hours in a six-day shift week, destroys our health and endangers passenger safety.

3) At least 10 minutes of paid turnaround time after one hour behind the wheel—even in the event of traffic jams, detours, or other traffic chaos. Rest periods at the terminal must be guaranteed in the schedule and in practice, and not split up or shortened if the driving time is shorter; a digital tachograph is necessary for this.

4) Reversal of the reduction in bus service and simultaneous extension of rest periods between individual shift days to at least 12 hours. The necessary increase in staff and vehicles per route reduces stress and prevents overcrowded buses and long wait times.

5) The equipping of all terminal stations with high-quality restroom facilities and air-conditioned break rooms. The current conditions—a lack of toilets, filthy containers, or mobile “outhouses”—are unacceptable and harmful to health.

6) Illness must not be punished: Abolish the reduction of the Christmas bonus for prolonged illness, abolish the so-called “negative prognosis” for prolonged illness, and put an end to dismissals due to illness.

7) Prepare for a full-scale strike through democratically run staff meetings. Only an indefinite joint strike by all local transit workers—including S-Bahn, U-Bahn, and private operators—can achieve our demands.

11. H-E-B grocery warehouse worker dies after workplace accident in San Antonio

Austin Lewis Flores, a worker at a warehouse for the H-E-B grocery chain in San Antonio, Texas, died after a workplace accident earlier this month. Reports indicate that on April 4 he was working with a floor jack when he was hit by a forklift.

Flores was sent to a clinic where an X-ray revealed he had a broken ankle. Several days later he was later found unresponsive at his home. An autopsy revealed that he died of a pulmonary thromboembolism that developed after a blood clot had dislodged and traveled to his lungs. 

*****

This follows the death of another H-E-B warehouse worker at the same location last October. Teresa Dominguez, 27, was found unconscious in a freezer. The Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office later determined that she had died of blunt trauma. Witnesses said that she had exhibited signs of distress while driving a forklift. After being discovered, EMS was called and transported her to a local hospital, where she later died.

“Six months and nothing has changed. No major safety improvements. Nothing was fixed,” Brenda Flores said. “My son should have been transported to an ER immediately from hitting that floor at H-E-B, no excuses, no exceptions. And now my son is gone, too.”

Workplace injuries and deaths are not uncommon in warehouses. Grocery stores are also hazardous workplaces. Some of the most common causes of injuries include forklift and other vehicle accidents, falling objects, slips on wet or cluttered floors, extreme temperatures in freezers and overexertion and repetitive stress.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, grocery workers experience nearly twice the average rate of nonfatal workplace injuries compared to other private sector workers. In 2024, the approximately 2.6 out of 100 workers suffered some type of workplace injury, while for grocery workers they suffered at a rate of about 4.0 per 100. 

*****

H-E-B workers are not covered by a union, but in unionized workplaces officials work as little more than agents of management. The United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) has rammed through pro-company contracts across the country in the face of worker opposition. In spite of a history of workplace accidents in the grocery industry, unions have done nothing to improve worker safety in these environments.

Government workplace safety regulations are weak due to limited enforcement mechanisms and low penalties for violations. Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has limited authority and resources. Many employers consider the low fines as a cost of doing business rather than a serious consequence that will cause them to change their practices.

Based in San Antonio, H-E-B is a major grocery chain, operating over 400 grocery stores in Texas and Mexico. The company employs about 175,000 workers and is one of the largest private employers in Texas. In 2025 it had total revenues of $50 billion, making it the 19th largest retailer in the United States. H-E-B Chairman Charles Butt was listed 230th on the Forbes list of billionaires in 2025, with a net worth of over $10 billion.

12. Aldi DX tech workers in Germany fight job cuts: Form a rank-and-file committee!

Over 2,000 employees of the IT company Aldi DX gathered in Essen, Germany on March 31 and elected an electoral board to prepare and carry out the election of a works council. Many workers of the discounter’s IT subsidiary are determined to fight against job cuts and the deterioration of working conditions.

The Sozialistische Gleichheitspartei (Socialist Equality Party, SGP) and World Socialist Web Site support this willingness to fight. We advocate expanding this growing resistance and making it the starting point for a broad mobilization of all employees at all locations.

The attacks on Aldi’s IT workers are part of the global crisis of the capitalist system. Everywhere, new forms of production, above all utilizing AI, are being deployed to massively cut jobs and increase conditions of exploitation immeasurably. At the same time, the unrestrained enrichment of those at the other end of society is taking place. A super-rich financial aristocracy is destroying society. With the same aggressiveness with which President Trump and the oligarchs behind him are threatening the destruction of civilization in Iran, the ruling class in every country is taking action against the working class.

In order to successfully fight against job cuts and deteriorating working conditions, it is necessary to connect the workplace dispute with a systematic mobilization against the capitalist profit system.

Only on the basis of a socialist perspective, which rests on the old principle of the labor movement that the interests and needs of workers rank higher than the profit maximization of the capitalists, and which strives for democratic control over production, can workers’ rights be enforced.

Therefore, the founding of a rank-and-file committee is necessary, which stands in the tradition of workers’ councils, mobilizes all Aldi DX employees and creates the organizational framework for a joint struggle. This is the way to connect the dispute that has begun at Aldi with the many workers in other sectors who are confronted with the same or very similar problems.

*****

The German government is driving forward an insane rearmament program in order to become the leading military power in Europe. It is using the Ukraine war to prepare an Operation Barbarossa 2.0 (Hitler’s original invasion of Eastern Europe was named Operation Barbarossa). In order to finance this war policy, social benefits are being massively cut. “We can no longer afford the welfare state!” Chancellor Friedrich Merz declares.

In truth, however, the population can no longer afford capitalism and its profit system. For the working class, the much-vaunted “new era” in foreign and military policy means a return to the class struggle! Just as the ruling class is reanimating its reactionary traditions of mass dismissals, social cuts, war and dictatorship, the working class must turn again to its revolutionary, socialist traditions.

There is no lack of willingness to fight. In conversations with the World Socialist Web Site, many Aldi DX employees show themselves to be self-confident, determined and combative. One of them said that if the new work-from-home regulation was indeed preparation for further job cuts, “one must also think about strikes.” Another said that there was much uncertainty in the company, but “The mood is combative. I just listened to the Internationale on the underground on the way here,” he reported smiling.

13. Argentine union boss pitches corporatist alliance to US executives and fascistic President Milei

Jorge Sola, general secretary of Argentina’s General Confederation of Labor (CGT), participated last week in the summit of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Buenos Aires, a gathering of US multinationals operating in Argentina. The event brought together corporate executives, representatives of the US Embassy, fascistic President Javier Milei alongside members of his cabinet, governors and other leading political figures.

From this platform of imperialist finance capital, Sola articulated a program that lays bare the role of the Peronist trade union bureaucracy as an instrument for subordinating the working class to the destruction of living standards and labor rights and the turn to fascism under Milei.

Speaking on a panel, Sola declared:

Those of us who represent workers represent the interests of labor power, but we believe in a strategic partnership between productive investment, that productive force of capitalism, and labor… Conflicts must be addressed at a great negotiating table, where the state is also present—a smart and efficient state, not one that merely serves capital and legally subordinates everything to it.

In an interview with the right-wing outlet Infobae at AmCham, Sola reiterated this perspective in even clearer terms: “That strategic partnership between those who invest productively and those who generate labor power must exist in Argentina. It has always existed in Argentina and goes far beyond the ideological affinities of the government in power.”

These statements were made in between friendly criticisms of Milei’s “Labor Modernization Law,” approved with the complicity of the CGT, which blocked any real resistance in exchange for discarding clauses that affected the bureaucracy’s source of revenue from automatic dues deductions and other income.

The law imposes longer workdays of up to 12 hours without overtime pay, slashes severance, guts collective bargaining, reduces sick pay and vacation time, and effectively criminalizes strikes in strategic sectors, rolling back protections from the 1974 Labor Contract Act to 19th-century conditions. Not even the US-backed military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983 dared to go so far.

This draconian legislation is centered around facilitating mass layoffs even after Milei’s “shock therapy” has already eliminated 300,000 formal jobs—including 61,000 in the public sector. 

*****

While the CGT was founded in the 1930s as a conglomerate of anarchist, Stalinist and socialist unions, its transformation into an appendage of the capitalist state was consummated with the rise of Juan Domingo Perón, who came to power in 1943 as part of a military junta. During a period of post-war economic expansion, Peronism sought to reconcile the interests of industrial capitalists with those of the working class through state mediation.

The CGT formed the Labor Party that initially secured Perón’s election in 1946, adopting a model directly inspired by the integration of trade unions into the fascist state of Benito Mussolini, which Perón had studied while serving as a military attaché in Italy. This system—corporatism—subordinates workers’ organizations to the state, suppressing class struggle in the name of national unity and economic development.

Today, the CGT is offering its services to Milei, proposing a similar alliance between the state, union bureaucracy and corporations. This policy, rooted in fascist ideology, is being advanced under conditions in which Milei is carrying out a restructuring of Argentine capitalism rooted in the devastation of workers’ rights and conditions. 

*****

The CGT’s current trajectory is rooted in its long history as an agent of the bourgeoisie. After Perón’s ouster in 1955, the federation remained dominated by the right wing of Peronism. When Perón returned from exile on June 20, 1973, CGT-linked gunmen participated in the Ezeiza Massacre, opening fire on left-wing Peronist youth and workers.

This massacre, which left at least 13 dead, marked the consolidation of the fascistic wing of Peronism and paved the way for the formation of the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A), a death squad responsible for over 1,500 killings between 1973 and 1976. Organized by José López Rega and supported by sectors of the CGT bureaucracy, the Triple A targeted leftists, intellectuals and militant workers.

By suppressing revolutionary struggles throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, the CGT played a decisive role in paving the way for the US-backed military coup of March 1976 and the ensuing dictatorship.

Today, the CGT continues to support Peronist factions whose representatives in Congress and provincial governments have facilitated Milei’s austerity measures. It has also sought closer ties with the Catholic Church, one of the most reactionary institutions in Argentina, proposing a “new stage” in relations with its leadership. 

*****

Another critical component in propping up the union bureaucracy is the role of pseudo-left organizations in and around the so-called Left and Workers Front (FIT-U). Despite covering the AmCham summit, outlets such as La Izquierda Diario and factions linked to the Partido Obrero failed to mention the CGT’s participation. 

*****

Milei, far from his right-wing populist pretense of opposing the “political caste,” is constructing a corporatist regime in which all institutions—state, unions and corporations—are integrated to guarantee the upward transfer of wealth to the financial oligarchy.

He enjoys the support of virtually every section of the bourgeoisie and is aligning Argentina’s military and foreign policy with Washington, while advancing extreme right-wing ideological positions.

Within this framework, different factions of the union bureaucracy perform a division of labor: the CGT openly collaborates, while the CTA, FreSU and pseudo-left currents adopt a more “combative” posture to channel opposition back into the CGT.

The events at AmCham and Sola’s statements confirm that the trade union apparatus is not an instrument for defending the working class, but an instrument of its class enemies.

As Leon Trotsky warned in 1938, in periods of acute class struggle, trade union leaders seek to “become masters of the mass movement in order to render it harmless,” often integrating directly into the bourgeois state.

This process has deepened under globalization, with unions increasingly functioning as partners of corporate management. 

*****

In his History of the Russian Revolution, Leon Trotsky documents the rapid growth of coordinated lockouts and factory closures in the months before the October insurrection—hundreds of plants closed in successive months, throwing tens of thousands out of work and fueling the radicalization of workers and factory committees. The Bolsheviks linked factory committees and soviet power, raising a program that addressed the social control of industry and the political overthrow of the capitalist state as the opening shot of the world socialist revolution.

What is required today is no different: the building of independent rank-and-file committees, uniting workers across industries and national borders, and breaking decisively from the union bureaucracy and its pseudo-left appendages. Such organizations must form part of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, which fights to coordinate struggles globally.

At the same time, the political struggle against capitalism and fascism requires the construction of a revolutionary leadership in Argentina, as part of the International Committee of the Fourth International.

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

"Peace for the world! Down with war!"