May 5, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Graham Platner: A bogus “pro-worker” face for the Democratic Party in Maine

Platner is being promoted as an outsider, but his campaign was recruited, packaged and launched through the AFL-CIO, Bernie Sanders and the Democratic Party apparatus. 

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The AFL-CIO did not search for a socialist, an antiwar candidate or a representative of rank-and-file workers to run in Maine. It searched for a marketable “working class” face: a Sanders donor with a military background, which turned out to include a Totenkopf (death’s head) tattoo and a kill count. 

The AFL-CIO’s role in recruiting Platner exposes the class character of his campaign. The AFL-CIO is not a fighting organization of the working class but a corporatist apparatus tied by a thousand threads to the Democratic Party, US imperialism and the capitalist state.

The federation was formed in 1955 through the merger of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations.

As the World Socialist Web Site has explained, this merger took place “on the explicit basis of anti-communist red-baiting and support for American imperialism’s Cold War agenda.” AFL-CIO President George Meany combined class collaboration at home with support for US imperialism abroad, including the Vietnam War, while the federation’s foreign affairs department worked with the CIA and the State Department to establish pro-US unions and prop up right-wing dictatorships internationally.


Nor was the earlier CIO the pristine model of rank-and-file democracy later mythologized by the pseudo-left. The CIO emerged out of the mass industrial upsurge of the 1930s, but its leadership, working with the Roosevelt administration and the Stalinist Communist Party, blocked the development of a political movement of the working class. Instead, it channeled this explosive movement into a trade union form loyal to the profit system and politically subordinated to the Democratic Party. This was bound up with the preparations of American imperialism for World War II, with the unions accepting no-strike pledges and enforcing labor discipline on the home front.

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After the world war, both the AFL and the CIO conducted anti-communist purges, driving out socialist-minded workers linked to the Communist Party and the Socialist Workers Party, then the Trotskyist movement. The merger in 1955 was the final stage, not in uniting the working class but cementing the split in the bureaucracy on the basis of a common commitment to American imperialism.

In the decades after the postwar boom, the AFL-CIO’s reactionary role became still more explicit. In the 1980s, it isolated the PATCO air traffic controllers after Reagan fired and blacklisted 11,300 striking workers, opening the door to decades of union busting, concessions, wage cuts and plant closures. The character of the trade unions underwent a fundamental change, as they became nothing more than instruments of the corporations and the capitalist state, a labor police force entirely hostile to the interests of the working class.

The same role continues today. At the May Day Strong events in Chicago, the AFL-CIO bureaucracy and the Democrats sought to smother growing opposition to Trump, war and dictatorship, while figures such as UAW President Shawn Fain promoted economic nationalism and remained silent on US imperialism’s war drive.

Platner’s recruitment by AFL-CIO-connected operatives must be understood in this context. His campaign is an expression of the bureaucracy’s function: to package economic nationalism and pro-union rhetoric as a substitute for class struggle, while channeling opposition back into the Democratic Party. 

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Should Platner be elected, he would not enter the Senate as a tribune of the working class. He would join the roster of former military and intelligence figures promoted by the Democratic Party in recent years, including Elissa Slotkin, Abigail Spanberger, Mark Kelly, Jared Golden, Jason Crow, Mikie Sherrill and Andy Kim.

2. Further light shed on criminal US torpedoing of Iranian ship

A Tehran Times article entitled “IRIS Dena sinking: Survivors testimony, diplomatic delays, and US-India-Sri Lanka role” published on May 2 is based on their interviews. It not only makes clear that the US Navy deliberately sunk the vessel after first disabling it, but also points to the complicity of India and Sri Lanka in the criminal attack.

The IRIS Dena, the Iranian frigate, was returning from multinational naval exercises—MILAN 2026—hosted by India when a US submarine attacked. Of the Dena’s 180 naval personnel crew, only 32 were rescued alive by the Sri Lankan coast guard and 84 bodies were recovered from the water.

As the World Socialist Web Site wrote at the time, the attack amounted to mass murder carried out thousands of kilometres from the Middle East as part of Washington’s escalating war against Iran. “It sent an unmistakable message: the conflict will be prosecuted wherever the US chooses, unconstrained by international law or convention.”

Underscoring this assessment, US War Secretary Pete Hegseth acknowledged the US Navy’s involvement, reportedly describing the operation as a “quiet death.”

On the same day, a second Iranian naval vessel, IRIS Bushehr, carrying 208 crew members, sought permission to enter Colombo Port. After initially refusing entry, the Sri Lankan government allowed the ship to dock on March 5 but only after intense behind-the-scenes diplomatic exchanges.

While Colombo claimed it acted on “humanitarian” grounds as a “neutral” country, it detained 32 survivors from IRIS Dena along with the crew of IRIS Bushehr, according to a Reuters report published on March 7.

Reuters cited an internal US State Department cable dated March 6 in which Chargé d’Affaires Jayne Howell urged that the crew not be repatriated, adding, “Sri Lankan authorities should minimize Iranian attempts to use the detainees for propaganda.”

The Sri Lankan government complied, delaying the return of 84 recovered bodies for over a week and holding the detained the 240 crew members for nearly five weeks, despite repeated requests from Tehran for their repatriation. During their detention, the crew were barred from speaking to the media.

Only after April 14, following a US-declared ceasefire with Iran, were the Iranian naval personnel allowed to leave Sri Lanka and return home. 

Speaking after his return, IRIS Dena captain Zarri rejected claims by the US Indo-Pacific Command that the vessel was armed. “One of the exercise’s conditions was that missiles and torpedoes should not be carried by participating vessels,” Zarri said. He confirmed that the frigate carried neither anti-submarine torpedoes nor strategic missiles, leaving it unable to defend itself against an underwater attack. 

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All the evidence—from the technical record of the attack to the harrowing account given by Commander Zarri and his first officer—confirms that the US Navy carried out a deliberate war-crime in torpedoing of an unarmed, immobilized Iranian ship whose crew was in the process of evacuating.

Whether or not they were directly informed of the impending US attack, the Indian and Sri Lankan governments were well aware of the dangers to the Iranian vessels faced. There is no innocent explanation for the delays in allowing them to dock.

The evasions and hypocritical declarations of “neutrality” by Colombo and New Delhi, along with the silence of the imperialist-aligned media, cannot cover-up the fact that these governments were complicit in this US war crime.

3. Trump’s deployment of warships to Strait of Hormuz escalates Iran war

The increasingly desperate actions of American imperialism express the strategic debacle it confronts after 35 years of uninterrupted wars of aggression.

4. “All this money for bombs but no money for education”: May Day protesters in US denounce war and dictatorship

Although officially dominated by Democrats and the labor bureaucracy, hundreds of thousands in the US marched on May Day to oppose war and defend immigrants and democratic rights.

5. Trump withdraws 5,000 US troops from Germany as Berlin steps up rearmament

The announcement by President Donald Trump to withdraw 5,000 US troops from Germany and halt the planned deployment of US intermediate-range weapons in Germany marks a further escalation of the crisis in transatlantic relations.

6. Islamist offensive tacitly backed by Paris shakes Mali

On April 25, an alliance of Tuareg nationalist militias and Islamists launched a coordinated offensive across Mali. This offensive shook the ruling military junta, which responded in 2013 to mass demonstrations against the French-led war in Mali by imposing the withdrawal of French troops and allying itself with the Kremlin.

While the junta retained power and control of the country’s more populous southern cities, the Tuareg-Islamist offensive shook it badly. Mopti in the north fell under control of Islamist and Tuareg forces, backed by the Algerian military regime and above all by Paris. In the global context of the imperialist war against Iran and Russia, the conflict between the anti-imperialist aspirations of the Malian working masses and the bourgeois politics of the junta is emerging ever more clearly.

The offensive began with surprise attacks across the country, targeting Kidal and Gao in the north, Sévaré and Mopti in the center, and Kati and the capital, Bamako, in the south. According to the X account of the Russian Africa Corps stationed in Mali, the offensive mobilized between 10,000 and 12,000 fighters. In Kati, it assassinated the junta’s second-in-command, Defense Minister Sadio Camara, a key architect of the alliance with Moscow, with a car bomb.

The day of the initial assault “was truly terrifying, we were afraid,” a Bamako resident told Radio France Internationale (RFI). “We were woken up by heavy weapons fire and then, after an hour of exchanges, we realized it was a terrorist attack. It all started around 6 in the morning and went on until the afternoon.”

RFI also quoted a resident of Mopti, who said: “The population is panicked, there was no market, almost all families are sheltering at home and houses are shut… The gendarmerie and the police station were stormed by the attackers, who now control practically everything.”

The Africa Corps was forced to suddenly abandon Mopti, negotiating the departure of its troops but leaving hundreds of Malian soldiers behind as prisoners of the Islamists. Islamist and Tuareg militias are now trying to blockade energy supplies to Malian cities.

It is difficult to provide casualty figures for the losses in the initial assault. According to the Africa Corps, the government and Russian counter-offensive killed 1,000 fighters and destroyed more than 100 vehicles. On the evening of the 25th, the junta issued a communiqué reporting 16 civilian casualties. The true death toll on both sides likely runs into the thousands. 

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Numerous reports, notably concerning the use by Islamist militias of fiber-optic guided drones deployed on the Russo-Ukrainian front, point to the role of the pro-NATO Ukrainian regime. Since 2024, Kiev has repeatedly pledged to assist forces in Africa fighting the Russian Africa Corps. On March 26, 2026, less than a month before the offensive in Mali, it convened a governmental meeting on its African policy.

Afterwards, Kyrylo Budanov, the former head of Ukrainian military intelligence who was then serving as head of the Ukrainian presidential office, announced: “For the first time, Ukraine has set itself the objective of comprehensively influencing the situation on the African continent.”

In reality, the Ukrainian regime cannot intervene in the Sahel independently of French imperialism. It is entirely funded by the European Union, whose member states transfer tens of billions of euros to it annually. It acts on behalf of NATO, waging war against Russia but also in the Sahel, where Paris seeks to topple the juntas that demanded the withdrawal of its troops.

Through a series of proxies, Paris is attempting to reinstall a neocolonial regime that would better protect French imperialism’s economic and strategic interests in Mali. Its strategy remains essentially that of its 2011 war in Libya, which paved the way for its war in Mali.

In 2011, Paris, Washington and London responded to the workers’ uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia by arming Islamist and tribal militias to overthrow the Libyan regime. After the fall of the Libyan regime, the flood of arms and fighters leaving Libya destabilized the region. Paris then intervened in Mali, ostensibly to fight the Islamists and protect Bamako. But Paris subsequently negotiated with the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad—the FLA’s precursor—to carve out a neocolonial base in northern Mali.

The demonstrations in Mali in 2021–2022 brought to power, within the Malian regime, officers hostile to the French military presence. To shield themselves from Paris’s anger, they built a pragmatic alliance with the Russian capitalist regime. They naturally did not pursue a revolutionary policy, refusing to appeal to working class opposition in France to the widely hated Macron regime, or to mobilize workers and oppressed masses across Africa against imperialism.

The current offensive reveals the limits of such bourgeois politics which, precisely because it rejects a socialist struggle against capitalism, cannot fight imperialism. Rejecting a more egalitarian policy toward rural farmers and herders, which would cut the ground from under the Islamists and Tuareg nationalists, the junta allowed Paris to maneuver with Kyiv, Algiers, the Tuareg nationalists and JNIM. It even negotiated in March with a “Sahel envoy” sent by the Trump administration, Nick Checker, while Trump was bombing Iran.

The Malian army served for decades as a neocolonial instrument of France. Paris is now mobilizing its closest supporters among the Tuareg nationalists and accommodating the role of elements linked to Al-Qaeda, in order to carry out a regime change—but its principal target is not the army. It is the anti-imperialist aspirations of workers and oppressed masses across the Sahel and the whole of Africa. 

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The current crisis in Mali points to the urgent necessity of overcoming the obstacle the junta poses to a revolutionary struggle against imperialism. The decisive question is the unification of workers in Mali and across the Sahel with workers in France and all NATO countries, in a socialist movement to halt the ongoing imperialist wars, break the power of the imperialist governments and transfer power to workers and the oppressed masses. 

7. Spirit workers lose paychecks and benefits as executives seek $10.7 million in “retention” bonuses

Workers were deliberately kept in the dark up until the last minute. WARN Act notices—legally required advance warning of mass layoffs—were issued only after the shutdown. Spirit’s explanation in its court filing was that publicizing the layoffs earlier “would have hindered its efforts to secure additional funding.”

Spirit has told the court that it does not even have enough cash on hand to organize a structured auction of its remaining assets, including 131 aircraft. Instead, the company is requesting permission to allow it to abandon this equipment or let creditors repossess them. Most of Spirit’s fleet was not actually owned by the airline but leased to it by major banks such as Wells Fargo.

Bankruptcy law prioritizes the company’s secured creditors—the Wall Street banks and aircraft lessors like Wells Fargo—over workers. Pilots, flight attendants and ground staff will get whatever is left after Wall Street has picked the bones clean.

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Spirit is the opening act of a broader industry crisis. Jet fuel was roughly $80 per barrel in March. By the week ending April 24, the International Air Transport Association recorded an average of $179 per barrel. The Middle East previously accounted for 75 percent of Europe’s net jet fuel imports, according to the International Energy Agency, whose executive director warned in mid-April that European supplies could be exhausted within weeks. 

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More bankruptcies in the United States are likely. Industry blog View From the Wing reports one analyst now estimates low-cast carrier JetBlue’s probability of bankruptcy by next year at greater than 75 percent. JetBlue founder Dave Neeleman warned publicly this year that the airline could file this year; it has not turned a profit in six years, carries $9 billion in debt, and faces a potential pre-tax loss exceeding $1 billion in 2026. Frontier Airlines, a direct competitor to Spirit, is already returning aircraft and deferring deliveries.

Spirit’s 17,000 workers must be made whole. They must not be forced to drain their retirement savings while bankruptcy court allocates what remains after the secured creditors are paid.

The tens of billions in windfall war profits of the oil industry and the major banks must be expropriated to fund full compensation for every worker dislocated by the economic consequences of the Iran war.

More broadly, both airline jobs and affordable travel can only be guaranteed by removing the industry from the profit motive. The airlines must be be taken out of private hands and operated democratically as a public utility under workers’ control. The US-Israeli war on Iran must be ended, with full compensation for the Iranian people and the trial of those war criminals responsible for it.

Fighting for this requires new forms of organization for industrial and political struggle. Workers need to build independent rank-and-file committees, connected through the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, to organize across carriers, across borders, and in opposition to the union bureaucracies that seek to manage their defeat.

8. New sanctions, threats and military exercises set stage for US assault on Cuba

In what appeared as an offhand remark, Donald Trump openly declared his administration’s intentions toward Cuba with chilling clarity last Friday.

Speaking before a wealthy audience at the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches, Trump referred to “Cuba, which we will be taking over almost immediately.” The comment drew laughter from the crowd, prompting him to elaborate: “Cuba’s got problems. We’ll finish one first. I like to finish the job. On the way back from Iran, we’ll have maybe the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier come in, stop about 100 yards offshore, and they’ll say, ‘Thank you very much. We give up!’”

Far from a joke, the remarks encapsulate the real trajectory of US policy. On the same day, Trump signed an executive order designating Cuba an “unusual and extraordinary threat,” vastly expanding sanctions against the island. The order targets not only the Cuban state but also foreign companies engaged in security, energy, finance, mining “or any other sector … as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State.” 

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The unraveling US debacle in Iran heightens the danger of what Trump believes will be a rapid surrender by Havana and a political victory he can score ahead of the November mid-term elections.

These political and economic measures are unfolding in tandem with a further militarization of the region. One day prior to Trump’s remarks, the US Navy announced that its “hybrid fleet is ready” following the completion of the Flex 2026 exercises in Key West, Florida—just 90 miles from Cuba’s northern coast.

The exercises emphasized “greater reach, faster decisions and decisive action” across the Caribbean and Central America. While officially framed as anti-drug operations, the drills incorporated advanced artificial intelligence systems, unmanned platforms and rapid-response integration capabilities.

The scale, location and technological sophistication of these maneuvers belie their stated purpose. Flex 2026 took place directly opposite Cuba, coinciding with intensified intelligence-gathering missions mapping the island’s defenses, including flights by MQ-4C Triton drones and RC-135 Rivet Joint reconnaissance aircraft, widely used for preparing precision strikes.

Flex 2026 also tested a “kill chain” scenario against alleged “drug boats” as the Pentagon escalates its extrajudicial killing spree that has murdered at least 186 fishermen in the Caribbean and Pacific falsely accused of drug trafficking, underscoring the lawless character of US military activity in the region.

The “hybrid warfare” doctrine being tested—refined through conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East—is now being directed toward Cuba. This strategy integrates cyber operations, intelligence warfare, economic pressure and conventional military force into a unified campaign aimed at regime change. 

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Faced with mounting pressure, Havana has responded with a contradictory policy combining concessions and nationalist rhetoric. On one hand, Cuban officials have opened the door to “unrestricted” foreign investment and provided guarantees to US corporations during backroom talks involving sections of the Cuban government.

On the other hand, the government has issued warnings of imminent military danger. On May Day, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel and his predecessor Raúl Castro led a march of hundreds of thousands to the US embassy, denouncing threats of military intervention and calling on the population to prepare to defend the country.

At the same time, Havana continues to appeal to rival powers for support. In late April, during a gathering in Moscow involving Stalinist and bourgeois nationalist organizations forming a so-called “International Socialist Network,” Fidel Castro Smirnov, the grandson of Fidel Castro, denounced the US embargo, stating it has cost Cuba more than $144 billion and is now “asphyxiating” the island. His remarks—“Fidel is here with us. Dreaming, riding on,”—were met with a standing ovation.

This participation underscores efforts by the Cuban leadership, alongside figures such as Nicaragua’s Sandinistas and Bolivia’s Evo Morales, to maintain ties with Moscow while navigating escalating US aggression.

Yet these maneuvers reveal the fundamental bankruptcy of the Cuban ruling elite and all bourgeois nationalist leaderships. While one wing appeals to Russia and China, another reportedly engages in discussions with Washington aimed at overseeing a transition toward a pro-US regime, similar to developments in Venezuela, where sections of the Chavista leadership have overseen the transformation of the country into a US semi-colony following the kidnapping of President Nicolas Maduro.

9. Brazil’s unions isolate São Paulo education strikes

The struggles of teachers and students in São Paulo are part of a growing movement of the international working class against the austerity policies driven by the capitalist crisis and the effects of the war against Iran.

10. Australian Labor government axing public sector jobs to deepen budget cuts

The Albanese government is slashing thousands of public service positions—a warning of what is to come in next week’s budget. 

11. Union presents pay-cutting offer to New Zealand nurses

Nurses and healthcare workers should reject the offer presented by the NZNO, which would slash wages and do nothing to address the staffing crisis in hospitals.

12. The new code of silence: Texas Tech University bans gender and sexuality teaching and research

In a sweeping attack on freedom of speech and thought and science, Texas Tech University (TTU) in Lubbock, Texas, a public institution that serves 42,000 students, has issued a near total ban on the teaching, research and discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI). This is in line with other attacks in Texas university systems.

The draconian directive, announced in an April 9 memo from University Chancellor Brandon Creighton, is an obvious appeal to social and intellectual backwardness and an attempt to shove ultra-right Christian ideology down the throats of faculty, students and staff. This is only the thin end of the wedge, laying the groundwork for a far broader assault on critical investigations of modern society and, ultimately, of capitalism and the oppression and violence that flow from it. The “illegalization” of entire fields of study in this authoritarian manner has only sinister, Nazi-like implications. 

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According to the university’s new policy, courses cannot include any materials that “center on” the topics of sexual orientation or gender identity. The issues cannot be raised in any university setting, no student can engage in research or write on the subjects, undergraduate and graduate courses, certificates, and programs that address sexual orientation and gender identity are now banned, and all future faculty hires must take into account the university’s new code of silence.

Even “incidental references”—defined as a single sentence—must be avoided and “alternate materials” swapped in. If this is impossible, the incidental references cannot be discussed. “There are no exceptions to the Alternate Materials Rule for core, undergraduate courses,” states the memo.

AI will be used to search out sexual orientation and gender identity themes.

Allegedly, students currently conducting research on or enrolled in programs that relate to SOGI can finish their studies, SOGI-related work by faculty already employed at TTU can continue, and references can be made to SOGI legal and political policies and demographic data where necessary. In addition, if the study of the subjects is required to attain professional certifications and credentials, students are permitted to do so.

However, the limits placed on these circumstances are so extreme as to make it impossible to actually investigate or discuss sexual orientation or gender identity.

Thus, if a textbook addresses the question, professors are instructed to skip over it. If the issue comes up in relation to another subject—for instance, the fact that James Baldwin, the major 20th century African American author, was gay—it can be noted in passing, but not taken into consideration in discussions of Baldwin’s life story, much less his art.

Even in instances in which sexual orientation and gender identity are topics that must be learned or a person will be disqualified from his or her profession—such as counseling and the health sciences—TTU bureaucrats first must be notified of the fact and second, reserve the right to determine that the curriculum actually is not necessary.

The ACS Committee may require changes if, upon further review and consultation with the respective Provost, the committee determines the material is not strictly required by the relevant licensing or credentialing body, or if the content disclosed under patient and clinical care is determined not to be strictly required for such care.

In short, far-right ignoramuses who know nothing about science or society will be telling future doctors or therapists, for example, what they can and cannot know. 

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The TTU Board of Regents’ absolute equating of sex and gender is one of the most degraded aspects of the policy. Under its “Two Human Sexes Requirement and Biological Science” section of the memo, the university declares, “State and federal law and TTU System guidance dictate that only two human sexes, male and female, are recognized.” It adds, as part of its “Prohibition on Endorsement of a Gender Spectrum,” “Instructors may not teach that gender identity is a fluid spectrum, endorse the existence of more than two genders, or decouple gender from biological sex as a factual or scientific baseline.”

There is neither a federal nor state law that states that there are only “two human sexes, male and female.” And while it is an aim of the extreme right, the First Amendment has not yet been overturned. People are free to say whatever they want about sex and gender.

Beyond that, historical and contemporary evidence demonstrate that gender norms shift over time and vary across cultures. Homosexual sex was not uncommon among Roman men, and it was not regarded as a violation of male social norms. In Afghanistan today, some segments of society raise daughters as Bacha Pash—that is, female children are treated as boys until the age of puberty. In South Asia, Hijra are formally recognized as a third gender. Even in societies that have traditionally had more rigid categories, what has been expected of men and women has constantly changed, as cultures evolve and people push against, reject, and transform what is considered socially “acceptable” behavior. 

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Both gender and human sexuality are fascinating and very complex realms of social reality, bringing together questions of biology, psychology and culture. They are universal, inescapable, and impact everyone. They are deserving of scientific inquiry, social reflection and artistic exploration. When society finally began to throw off the yoke of religious obscurantism, social humiliation and prudishness that for centuries surrounded these realms of the human experience and to understand these subjects as worthy of serious investigation, it took an important step forward. 

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The Christian right-wingers who penned TTU’s policy wish to, as Trump revealed in his promise to return Iran to the “stone age,” bring the world back in time. They fantasize about some sort of mythical-biblical age in which, in their mind’s eye, to be a woman means to pop out infants and a man to run around clubbing animals for dinner. The consideration of anything otherwise is blasphemy to be denounced by the priests of the high order.

An aspect of the memo that is less well-developed but equally, if not more, dangerous, is the attack on those who are not heterosexual. While much of the TTU board’s order focuses on assaulting the idea of gender fluidity, the study, discussion and research of sexual orientation is also banned. The very words “gay,” “lesbian,” “bisexual,” “queer,” can no longer exist at TTU, much less be the subject of investigation and discussion.

Homosexuality is commonplace in society and widely accepted by the majority of the US population, which generally also believes that LGBTQ+ communities should have special anti-discrimination protections. The ultra-right, however, has always viewed romantic and physical relationships that defy social boundaries with terror, because they bear within them the prospect that people will unite across divides and challenge those in power. At TTU, these layers, knowing that support for the Trump administration’s policies is faltering and they are isolated and increasingly hated, hope they can stoke ignorance and use fear as some sort of bulwark.

In an effort to win support for its policy, the Board of Regents includes prohibitions that tap into frustrations over the identity-politics approach that has come to dominate academia over the course of the last several decades.

They write,

To ensure academic objectivity, faculty are prohibited from teaching as absolute truth that: ● One race or sex is inherently superior to another; ● An individual, by virtue of race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, consciously or unconsciously; ● Any person should be discriminated against or receive adverse treatment because of race or sex; ● Moral character or worth is determined by race or sex; ● Individuals bear responsibility or guilt for actions of others of the same race or sex; or ● Meritocracy or a strong work ethic are inherently racist, sexist, or constructs of oppression.

The standards outlined here are directed at the reactionary notions, preached widely in the social sciences and humanities, that all whites are racists, all men are oppressors, all heterosexual individuals are privileged and that these hierarchies constitute the social structure, are systemic and institutional, inescapable tools of domination that benefit all within the majority group. The New York Times has been a leading proponent of this view, with its 1619 Project rewriting American history in order to fit this narrative. Concepts like “color-blind racism,” propagated by sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, apply these notions to contemporary reality. For years, DEI [Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion] efforts have become the mainstay of the Democratic Party and what passes for American liberalism or radicalism.

When applied to the classroom, these racial, gender, and sexuality-based approaches, with zero progressive content, have been enormously damaging, serving as grist for the mill for the far right. For years, sociology courses have, to varying degrees, subjected students to the gospel of “white privilege,” terrorizing those who question the validity of the concept, which is rooted in a rejection of economic class as the basis of oppression, bulldozes over all social and historical complexities to arrive at a pre-determined idea that the root of society’s problems has and always will be “whites,” full stop.

13. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Bolivia:

Workers rally in support of peasants battling far right Paz regime

Chile:

Protesting high school students assaulted by police

Mexico:

Parents of Ayotzinapa student massacre victims hold Mexico City protest

Puerto Rico:

Workers demand expulsion of Financial Control Board
 
University of Puerto Rico students declare strike over cuts, tuition hikes

Canada:

Long-term care and nursing home workers in Ontario seek new contracts

United States:

Washington state concrete ready-mix drivers enter second month on strike
 
California Marathon Renewables workers strike after company rejects national pattern agreement
 
Minneapolis baseball concession workers begin voting to authorize strike
 

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

May 4, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

 1. This week in history: May 4-10

  • 25 years ago:
South African gold mine explosion kills 12 miners  
  • 50 years ago:

Ulrike Meinhof found dead in prison cell

  • 75 years ago:

    “Greenhouse George” nuclear test brings United States a step closer to creating the first hydrogen bomb

  • 100 years ago:

The British General Strike begins  

2. The 2026 International May Day Online Rally and the tasks of the international working class

The 2026 International May Day Online Rally, held on May 1 by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), the World Socialist Web Site, the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) and the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC), was a milestone in the development of an international socialist and revolutionary movement against imperialist war and capitalism.

A total of 18 reports were delivered by speakers from 14 countries on five continents. The broadcast was subtitled in 11 languages—English, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Sinhala, Spanish, Tamil and Turkish—making it accessible to broad layers of the international working class. Five montages, drawing on more than 30 interviews on every continent, were interspersed throughout the program, integrating the analysis of the ICFI with the testimony of workers and youth entering into political struggle.

The rally was entirely unique in the political analysis and orientation it advanced. This is not a subjective claim. There exists today no other political tendency anywhere in the world that addresses the global crisis as the eruption of the historic and insoluble contradictions of the capitalist system, or that identifies the international working class as the revolutionary force capable of resolving that crisis. The language of Marxism is spoken nowhere else. The rally addressed, as a unified whole, all the decisive questions confronting the international working class. In doing so, it underscored a central political fact: the ICFI stands alone today in advancing a Marxist-Trotskyist program based on the perspective of world socialist revolution.

3. Spirit Airlines collapses: 17,000 workers pay for Wall Street’s war on Iran

 

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In Europe, Lufthansa is cutting 20,000 short-haul flights over the next six months. Air France-KLM has imposed a €100 surcharge on long-haul tickets. Scandinavian Airlines has canceled 1,000 flights. 

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Meanwhile, the war is generating a profit bonanza for the oligarchy. With oil around $100 per barrel, the major oil conglomerates—Aramco, ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron and others—stand to collect an additional $234 billion in 2026 profits, $30 million every hour, according to one report last month by The Guardian. ExxonMobil alone stands to gain an additional $11 billion; Aramco, $25.5 billion.

The six largest US banks posted collective first-quarter profits of $47.6 billion—JPMorgan up 13 percent, Goldman Sachs up 19 percent, Citigroup up 42 percent—boosted by war-driven market volatility, which they used to fund record share buybacks.

The Iran war shock is the trigger, but Spirit’s collapse is the outcome of 47 years of bipartisan policy. Indeed, Spirit’s ultra-low cost business model was made possible by the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act enacted during the Democratic administration of Jimmy Carter, sponsored in the Senate by Democrat Edward Kennedy and championed by Carter’s Civil Aeronautics Board chairman Alfred Kahn. The Civil Aeronautics Board—which had regulated routes, prices and market entry since 1938, creating the conditions under which airline workers won relatively high wages, relatively secure employment and defined-benefit pensions—was formally abolished in 1984.

In 1981, using blueprints first drawn up under Carter, Republican President Ronald Reagan fired 11,000 striking air traffic controllers from the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization. The refusal of the AFL-CIO union officials to call a general strike in defense of PATCO began a decade of union-busting and wage-cutting during which time millions of industrial workers lost their jobs.

Mass layoffs and a steady erosion of working conditions, airline service and safety followed with no resistance by unions, which claimed to represent machinists, pilots, flight attendants and ground crews. Continental Airlines voided all union contracts in 1983 and operated with strikebreaking replacement workers. Eastern Airlines was liquidated in 1991 after a bitter two-year strike betrayed by the International Association of Machinists (IAM). Pan Am dissolved the same year, eliminating 26,000 jobs.

Following the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, US Airways, United, Delta and Northwest used Chapter 11 to tear up labor agreements, destroy defined-benefit pensions and slash wages. American Airlines issued layoff notices to 13,000 workers.

One result is the industry has consolidated from dozens of competing carriers into four mega-airlines—Delta, United, American and Southwest—controlling 80 percent of domestic traffic.

During the initial stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, $25 billion was handed to the airlines through the bipartisan CARES Act bailout, Spirit among them. The carriers then issued 100,000 layoff notices, with Southwest demanding 10 percent wage cuts. The union bureaucracy, especially the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA-CWA), openly collaborated with management to lobby Congress for bailout money.

Workers have sought repeatedly to fight back. But they are under the discipline of the Railway Labor Act, which enforces years of mandatory rounds of mediation before workers are allowed to strike. The law was used in 2022 by Congress to impose a contract on railroad workers who had voted to strike.

*****

Spirit’s 17,000 workers must receive full compensation—jobs, pay, benefits, pensions and seniority—and the same must apply to every worker thrown out of work by the economic consequences of the Iran war. This must be financed through the immediate expropriation of the windfall war profits of the oil majors, banks and defense contractors enriched by the Hormuz blockade.

The US-Israeli war on Iran must end immediately. The airline industry—which has now demonstrated that private ownership and the profit motive are incompatible with the needs of workers and the traveling public—must be taken out of private hands and converted into a public utility, collectively owned and democratically controlled by the working class. The Railway Labor Act must be abolished and the unconditional right to strike recognized for transport workers.

4. Israel violently and illegally intercepts Gaza flotilla, kidnaps organisers

Israel, aided by Greece, has kidnapped hundreds of people sailing in the Mediterranean as part of the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF). The flotilla was bound for Gaza to protest the ongoing Israeli siege with a symbolic delivery of essential aid. Twenty-two of 60 boats were intercepted.

This was a violent act of piracy, carried out by Israeli armed forces 600 nautical miles off the coast of Gaza, in international waters, with the intent to commit grievous bodily harm and even murder.

Protesters report being fired upon by live and rubber ammunition and being manhandled with their hands tied. Three-dozen people suffered broken ribs and noses, serious neck injuries, and being knocked unconscious.  

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Last autumn, a flotilla was attacked by drones during its journey then intercepted roughly 65 nautical miles off the coast of Gaza, again with individuals seized and detained in Israel for multiple days.

That the latest seizure was carried out hundreds of miles further from its borders reflects the growing impunity with which Israel is allowed to act as an imperialist outpost—in the Gaza genocide and the war on Iran and Lebanon—above all on behalf of the United States.

US officials gave their full support for the attack on the flotilla, threatening European governments who did not do the same. State department spokesperson Thomas Pigott declared the protest “a pro-Hamas initiative and a baseless, counterproductive effort to undermine President Trump’s Peace Plan.”

5. United Kingdom:  Unite uses Barnsley May Day and 1926 General Strike centenary to proclaim “rebirth of the trade unions”

The final Barnsley rally, with Graham as keynote speaker, represented the very forces responsible for the betrayal of 1984-85 miners’ strike and every betrayal thereafter.

6. Socialist Equality Party intervenes at Unite event in Barnsley marking centenary of 1926 General Strike

An SEP stall next to Glass Works Square, where the rally assembled, promoted the party's public meetings this month across the UK.

7. Labor blocks return of Australian citizens interned in Syria

The Albanese government’s actions set a wider precedent for barring the return of citizens deemed to be lacking in respect for the “values” prescribed by the ruling capitalist establishment. 

8. From Port Huron to postmodernism: The class politics of the “New” Students for a Democratic Society

What later took ideological form as postmodernism and identity politics was already present in embryonic form within SDS. In practical terms, this perspective meant an orientation to the campuses, “communities,” identity-based movements and single-issue campaigns, all directed away from the independent political mobilization of the working class.

9. Federal appeals court issues nationwide ban on telemedicine and mail access to abortion pill mifepristone

Mifepristone was approved by the FDA in September 2000 as safe and effective for terminating pregnancies through 10 weeks of gestation. It is typically administered in combination with misoprostol, a second drug used to induce uterine contractions. More than one-fourth of all US abortions are now provided via telemedicine, according to Guttmacher Institute data. 

10. Two Prosecutors: A stubborn young lawyer confronts the criminal methods of the Stalinist bureaucracy

It is unusual to come across a Russian-language film dealing honestly, even if incompletely, with the tragic and horrific events of 1937, the height of the Stalinist terror in the Soviet Union. Many thousands of devoted revolutionaries, including most of the leaders of the October 1917 Revolution, were put to death between 1936-38 by the counterrevolutionary bureaucracy. 

Two Prosecutors, released last year, won the Francois Chalais Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, awarded to features dealing with social and political issues. The film was written and directed by Sergei Loznitsa and is based on a story by Georgy Demidov (1908-87). Demidov was a Soviet physicist, a victim of the purges who spent 14 years in the Stalinist prison camps, most of them in the notorious Kolyma region of Siberia. Later writings of his were based on this experience. 

*****

Two Prosecutors is a powerful depiction of the Great Purge in the USSR, when, by conservative estimates, hundreds of thousands of communists were killed. The first 40 minutes of the film are appropriately slow-moving, evoking the bureaucratic nightmare with gloom and long, pregnant pauses, as Kornyev speaks with the prison authorities. Following Stepniak’s testimony, the film proceeds steadily towards its grim conclusion. While the end is inevitable, it also effectively conveys the nature of the totalitarian regime.

Both Kuznetsov and Filippenko are outstanding in their roles. Anatoly Bely has little to do as a close-mouthed and duplicitous Vyshinsky. Watching the film, the viewer is reminded of the fact that many millions in today’s Russia, including possibly these actors themselves, number among their grandparents, or even their parents in some cases, victims of the Stalinist terror.

It is impossible to see Two Prosecutors without considering how the party that led the October Revolution was destroyed two decades later. Even a viewer who knows little about the history of the USSR is presented with evidence indicating that Stalinism was the antithesis of Bolshevism. 

*****

Only the Trotskyists were able to understand the Terror. As Leopold Trepper, the leader of the Red Orchestra Soviet spy network, wrote decades later, long after he had become disillusioned by Stalinism:

[The Trotskyists] fought Stalinism to the death, and they were the only ones who did. By the time of the great purges, they could only shout their rebellion in the freezing wastelands where they had been dragged in order to be exterminated. In the camps, their conduct was admirable. But their voices were lost in the tundra.

Today, the Trotskyites have a right to accuse those who once howled along with the wolves. Let them not forget, however, that they had the enormous advantage over us of having a coherent political system capable of replacing Stalinism. They had something to cling to in the midst of their profound distress at seeing the revolution betrayed. 

*****

The major weakness of Two Prosecutors stems from the fact that this historical background—the genuine opposition to the bureaucracy—is not supplied. The ideological basis of the bureaucratic dictatorship is not discussed: its rejection of internationalism in favor of the nationalist doctrine of “socialism in one country.” One must also consider the objective circumstances of isolation and defeats of revolutionary struggles of the 1920s and 1930s, the objective basis for the growth of the Stalinist bureaucracy. Furthermore, it is vital to understand how the ruling caste was strengthened by the successive defeats of the working class internationally, what Stalin represented and why he triumphed. 

In the absence of this context, the drama can be taken as evidence of the absolute futility of revolution, based on the reactionary conception that while Bolshevism and Stalinism were not identical, one led inescapably to the other. This may well be the view of both the filmmaker Loznitsa and the writer Demidov, whose story became the basis for the film.

*****

Two Prosecutors has been banned in both Russia and Ukraine, and that in itself speaks in its favor. In Russia, the regime of KGB veteran Putin has in recent years rehabilitated Stalin and the methods of the secret police. In Ukraine, Russian is banned as “the language of the aggressor,” so a Russian-language film is automatically excluded.

The symmetrical difficulties are a reflection of the fact that Two Prosecutors, with its reminder of the internationalist origins of the Russian Revolution, makes nationalists of all stripes uneasy. In any case, whatever the limitations of this film, Two Prosecutors is well worth viewing. It may be hard to find, however, following brief runs in a few US and European cities. Banned in Ukraine and Russia, its availability is very limited elsewhere. The cultural establishment is not eager to see an account of the actual history of the Soviet Union.

11. Ypsilanti utility board halts University of Michigan nuclear weapons data center

The U-M/LANL data center is an important element of the economic and military policy of the Democratic Party. Governor Gretchen Whitmer and the state Democratic establishment have worked to transform Michigan into an industrial, logistical and computational hub for the military-industrial complex.

Using the Michigan Strategic Fund and tapping into federal subsidies provided by the Biden administration’s CHIPS and Science Act, the state government is attempting to “reshore” critical military supply chains. Democratic local and state representatives, working closely with the trade union bureaucracy, have cynically packaged this militarization as a boon for the working class, touting the “creation of high-paying jobs” and “workforce development.” U-M promotional materials boast of creating 200 permanent jobs and 300 union construction jobs at the site.

This push to build the U-M/LANL data center is another step in the militarization of the university system and its political alignment with the ruling class’s drive toward authoritarian rule. US imperialism is preparing for war with rival nuclear-armed powers and for the suppression of internal dissent, while university leaders trade scientific principles, academic independence and worker protections for defense contracts.

Over the past year, the U-M administration has collaborated with a sweeping campaign of political repression. Five Chinese national scholars—Yunqing Jian, Chengxuan Han, Xu Bai, Fengfan Zhang, and Zhiyong Zhang—were fired by the university, charged by the Department of Justice (DOJ) with conspiring to smuggle biological materials, detained for months, and removed from the country. At Indiana University, Youhuang Xiang was deported to China after almost five months of detention. In all six cases, the DOJ elevated administrative lapses, which would ordinarily be handled with a fine, into felony conspiracy and smuggling charges carrying a potential 25-year prison sentence.

On March 19, Danhao Wang, a brilliant 30-year-old Chinese postdoctoral researcher in U-M’s College of Engineering, took his own life at the G.G. Brown Laboratory building. Wang was subjected to hostile interrogation by federal agents just a day prior to his death. He was a rising star in advanced materials science, co-authoring a landmark April 2025 Nature paper on wurtzite ferroelectrics—semiconductors that could form the basis for the next generation of microelectronics.

On March 26, just a week after Wang’s death, U-M President Domenico Grasso testified before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce at a hearing provocatively titled “US Universities Under Siege: Foreign Espionage, Stolen Innovation, & the National Security Threat.” Grasso boasted of U-M’s collaboration with the national security state, saying, “Safety and security is a team effort, and at Michigan, we know how important it is to be a team player.” [Grasso’s emphasis]

12. Break the isolation: Harvard graduate students’ strike must be expanded

Will Lehman, a rank-and-file Mack Trucks worker who is running as a socialist candidate for UAW president, is calling on workers to break the union's isolation of the nearly two-week walkout by 4,000 Harvard graduate student workers.

13. Sri Lankan SEP/IYSSE meeting against US-Israeli war on Iran

The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) held a public meeting on April 26 at Hatton Town Hall in Sri Lanka’s central plantation district, opposing the US-Israeli war against Iran and explaining the necessity of building an anti-war movement of the international working class based on socialist policies. It followed meetings in Colombo and Peradeniya and received an important response from plantation workers and others.

Workers and oppressed people in Sri Lanka, like their counterparts internationally, are bearing the brunt of the war’s economic fallout, with rising energy costs driving up the price of food and other essentials. Plantation workers, who are among the most exploited sections of the working class, are being severely affected by the escalating cost of living. SEP and IYSSE members campaigned extensively in Hatton and nearby Bandaranaike, going door-to-door to speak with plantation workers, teachers, state employees and youth.

Sri Lankan socialists protest against the US-Israeli war on Iran, April 26, 2026

Party supporters also held a protest at the Hatton bus station to denounce the devastating attacks on Iran and highlight the connection between imperialist militarism and the intensifying assault on workers’ living standards and democratic rights in Sri Lanka. The protest attracted hundreds of people, including plantation workers, teachers, and state and private-sector employees, as well as youth. Several media organizations reported on it.

14. Trump says US Navy will begin escorting ships out of the Strait of Hormuz

The latest announcement is evidence that Washington is preparing to launch military action against Iran’s control of the strait. While Trump’s post framed the escort plan as a means of safeguarding shipping, it is clearly a threat to escalate the war which began on February 28.

*****

Trump’s escort announcement came just three days after the US received Iran’s 14-point plan for an end to the war. According to reports, the proposal included a ceasefire, a broader regional de-escalation and measures tied to the withdrawal of US military forces from sensitive areas near Iran.

The plan also reportedly called for lifting sanctions, easing the blockade on Iranian ports, releasing frozen assets and establishing a new framework for the management of the Strait of Hormuz. It also proposed longer-term political and security conditions, including an end to hostilities in Lebanon and lifting sanctions.

Other reports said Iran was reviewing a US response to its plan, although Trump stated a day earlier that he had not yet reviewed Iran’s proposal himself. These contradictory reports suggest either disarray in the diplomatic process or a deliberate effort by the US to keep negotiations subordinated to military pressure.

 

*****

While the war against Iran intensifies, Israel’s offensive in Lebanon continues with no sign of abating. Strikes in southern Lebanon killed 13 people in one day, and a total of 41 people were killed since Saturday, including four women and a child. 

*****

Israel has also issued a new round of displacement orders in southern Lebanon. As of May 3, the  orders expand Israel’s area of operations to include towns north of the Litani River for the first time. The orders cover over 10 villages and towns, including several in the Nabatieh district that are outside of the previously established “Yellow Line” buffer zone. 

Lebanon’s Health Ministry reported that 2,618 people had been killed since Israeli attacks began on March 2, with 8,094 wounded. Those figures reveal that the war has already produced a humanitarian disaster of enormous proportions. The dead include not only combatants but also civilians, children and women, underscoring the indiscriminate nature of the violence. 

15. Strike of Little Lake teachers in California shut down after 10 days

The decision was taken before teachers were given access to the full terms of the tentative agreement and before any meaningful rank-and-file review could take place.

16. “May Day Strong” in Chicago: Labor bureaucracy, Democrats seek to smother growing resistance to war and Trump dictatorship

With thousands of workers and young people marching to oppose Trump, the AFL-CIO and Democratic Party is trying to prevent this movement from evolving into a politically conscious challenge to oligarchic rule and the capitalist system that both parties defend. 

17. Australia: Interim report provides no answers on Bondi terrorist attack

The section of the report dealing with the role played by the federal policing and intelligence agencies, about which so many questions remain, has been suppressed entirely. 

18. UK Labour Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood targets children for brutal treatment in asylum seeker crackdown

In a joint letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer on April 27, almost 150 organizations—including social care workers, refugee charities, and fostering groups—accused the government of a “sustained attack on children’s rights.” 

19. The Revolutionary Communist Party abandons Corbyn only to embrace Zack Polanski’s Green Party

Building socialist consciousness means fighting to bring the historical and international experience of the working class to bear on contemporary political issues, in order to break the working class from its potential misleaders.

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

A video reminder describes Syrotiuk's ongoing plight 

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

May 2, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Capitalist crisis, war and the international class struggle

 

Opposition to imperialist war, the unyielding defense of democratic rights and the fight against all forms of class oppression animate our celebration of May Day. This is the spirit in which we open today’s rally.

However, the celebration of May Day must not be limited to declarations of international solidarity. It must also be the occasion for an objective analysis of the present world situation, for it is on the basis of such an analysis that the strategy of the working class is formulated. This task acquires the greatest urgency today, as this May Day is being held in the midst of a critical stage in the crisis of the world capitalist system. 

*****

The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 was proclaimed by the American ruling class as a historic triumph of capitalism. The so-called “failure of socialism,” it claimed, cleared the way for the restoration of the capitalist world as it was before the socialist October Revolution. All that had occurred in the aftermath of the revolution—the upsurge of the international working class, the monumental global movement of the oppressed masses against imperialism, and the social advances that were won in the aftermath of the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945 and the victory of the Chinese Revolution in 1949—was to be reversed. 

However, this nightmarish perspective was based on a false appraisal of the causes of the dissolution of the USSR and its global significance. What had failed in the Soviet Union was not socialism but the Stalinist regime of anti-socialist nationalism, which was a repudiation of the Marxian internationalism that had inspired the October Revolution. The Stalinist program of “socialism in one country,” which detached the building of socialism in the USSR from the international struggle of the working class against global capitalism, had proven economically and politically bankrupt. 

*****

Gorbachev took the first road. The dissolution of the USSR in December 1991 was the consummation of that betrayal: The Stalinist bureaucracy, having begun as the gravediggers of the October Revolution, ended as the most venal and rapacious faction of the new Russian oligarchy, led today by Putin. 

For American imperialism, the same underlying contradiction produced a different response, but one no more a matter of free choice than the Stalinist collapse had been. Confronted with the irreversible erosion of its economic supremacy—the rise of Japanese and German industrial competitors, the emergence of China as a powerful economic and industrial force, the hollowing out of domestic manufacturing, the mounting burden of trade and budget deficits—American capitalism could not recover its position through economic means. The only instrument it still possessed in overwhelming preponderance was military force.

The following three decades of militarism shattered Iraq, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Ukraine and other countries. While costing millions of lives, destroying entire societies and creating the greatest refugee crisis since World War II, these wars ended in debacles and failed to reverse US imperialism’s fortunes.

*****

The most visible and ominous manifestation of the US-centered global crisis is the staggering growth of the national debt. It stood at roughly $5.8 trillion in 2001. It is now approaching $40 trillion. An even more historically and economically significant manifestation of the crisis of US capitalism is the price of gold. At the Bretton Woods conference of 1944, which established the status of the dollar as the world reserve currency, the value of an ounce of gold was set at $35. 

That price prevailed until the Nixon administration repudiated the Bretton Woods system in 1971. This set into motion a relentless rise in the price of gold, which during the last year has assumed an explosive character. The price of an ounce of gold now stands at approximately $4,600. In other words, the value of the dollar relative to gold, which has functioned for several thousand years as a measure of value, has declined by more than 99 percent in just over a half century. 

This is the framework within which the 35 years from 1991 to 2026 must be understood. They constitute a single historical process: the attempt by American capitalism to overcome, through the application of military violence, a contradiction that it could not overcome by economic means. The wars are component parts of a continuous trajectory, driven by the same unresolved contradiction between the world economy and the nation-state system that produced the two world wars of the 20th century. 

*****

The war against Iran has exposed not only the predatory aims of American imperialism abroad but the social and political reality of the regime that prosecutes it at home. Trump is the product, personification and culmination of a protracted process—economic, social and political—rooted in the breakdown of American capitalism and the putrefaction of its ruling class. 

The political structure of the United States is being brought into alignment with its social foundation: the domination of society by a tiny oligarchy that controls staggering wealth and regards all legal, democratic and moral restraints as intolerable impediments to its interests. The rise of Trump is the expression of this reality.

The war against Iran is being financed through a frontal assault on the social rights of the working class. Trump’s Fiscal Year 2027 budget requests roughly $1.5 trillion for “defense”—the highest military spending level in modern American history and a massive escalation of preparations not only for the war against Iran but for global war against China and Russia. This is, in the most direct sense, a budget for world war.

*****

What is taking place in the United States is not simply a national political crisis. It is a convulsion of world-historical significance. The United States, the former stabilizer of world capitalism, has become the greatest source of global instability. The breakdown of democratic forms in the United States, the turn to open gangsterism in politics, the subordination of all social life to the interests of the oligarchy, and the drive to redivide the world through military violence express the crisis of the entire capitalist order in its most concentrated and explosive form.  

The same underlying processes are evident in every major capitalist country. The crisis of capitalism is international, and so, too, is the turn toward dictatorship and war. The European ruling class is rapidly and shamelessly shedding its hypocritical pacifist phrase-mongering, reviving its long traditions of imperialist militarism, and proclaiming that the working class and youth must be prepared to fight and die as their grandfathers and great-grandfathers did in the two world wars of the last century. This is not mere rhetoric. The European NATO powers are already engaged in a de facto war against Russia. Ukraine has been transformed into NATO’s East European equivalent of Israel. 

In its analysis of the historical experiences of the last century, the International Committee has stressed that the same contradictions that produced World War I in 1914 resulted in socialist revolution in Russia in 1917. The same historical dynamic is at work today. The global crisis of capitalism that underlies the eruption of imperialist violence is also preparing the explosion of revolutionary struggle by the international working class. 

*****

The second half of the decade is being increasingly characterized by the eruption of the countervailing tendency of social struggle on an international scale. In 1845, Marx wrote: “With the thoroughness of the historical action, the size of the mass whose action it is will therefore increase.” In an initial confirmation of this insight, masses of working people are being drawn into social and political struggle. 

*****

There have been 458 strikes across just eight European countries in the first quarter of 2026 alone, including five general strikes at the national or regional level. This represents a measurable acceleration over comparable periods in 2025. The first quarter of 2026 has already produced national general strikes in Belgium (March 12) and Italy (March 9), regional general strikes in Spain’s Andalusia and Basque Country (March 8 and 17), a general strike in Northern Cyprus, and a national general strike in Argentina in February—a density of general strike actions in a single quarter that exceeds 2025’s already considerable pace. Approximately 1.7 million state employees went on strike in the Indian state of Maharashtra.

On objective indices—number of strikes, size of mobilizations, geographic distribution, sectoral spread, duration, strike authorization margins and frequency of confrontation with state forces—the early months of 2026 represent a clear and measurable escalation of class conflict beyond 2025 levels.

There have been mass anti-ICE demonstrations drawing millions in the United States, including 8 million in the March 28 “No Kings” mobilization. There have been strikes by 42,000 University of California workers and 31,000 Kaiser healthcare workers.

These struggles are an objective expression of an international working class entering into struggle against the conditions imposed by the same crisis that drives the oligarchy toward fascism and war. These struggles are unfolding across every continent and every major sector of the economy, simultaneously and increasingly in direct conflict not only with employers and governments but with the trade union bureaucracies that function as an anti-strike corporate police force. 

The decisive question of the present period is which of these two tendencies will prevail. The ruling class has answered the deepening crisis of its system with fascism and war, the militarization of society, the abrogation of democratic rights, the assault on immigrants and political dissidents, and the preparation of conflicts that carry within them the threat of nuclear catastrophe. The working class is answering with the only force capable of stopping this trajectory toward disaster—the mobilization of its own collective social power. The outcome is not predetermined. It will be settled by the struggles now underway and by the political consciousness, organization and leadership that the working class develops in the course of these struggles.

What can be stated with certainty is that the period of relative social equilibrium has ended. The objective conditions identified at the start of the decade—the breakdown of the post-war capitalist order, the impossibility of continuing the old methods of rule, the necessity of either revolutionary transformation or descent into barbarism—have not only been confirmed but have intensified. The first months of 2026 mark the point at which the resistance of the working class has emerged as a global force, contending against the offensive of the oligarchy on a scale that places the fundamental questions of the epoch—war or peace, dictatorship or democracy, socialism or barbarism—directly on the historical agenda.

*****

The demoralized cynics and skeptics of the middle class pseudo-left will dismiss this perspective as fantasy. Groveling before the ruling class, they are staunch believers in the invincibility and permanence of capitalism. Their attitude to the working class is a mixture of fear and contempt. 

But the revolutionary perspective of the Trotskyist movement, led by the International Committee of the Fourth International, is grounded in the most realistic appraisal of objective economic and social processes operating on a global scale.

The same globalization of production that has driven the contradictions of the existing order has produced—as an objective, structural fact—the largest international working class in human history. The figure must be grasped concretely. Since 1980, the development of the world’s productive forces has increased the size of the working class by over 2 billion people. For the first time in human history, a majority of the world’s population lives in cities, a figure that rises by the millions every week. 

More than 500 cities now have populations exceeding 1 million, accounting for roughly a quarter of humanity; at least 31 of them are megacities of more than 10 million people, and an estimated 90 percent of world trade flows through a few dozen of these centers. An estimated 1 billion African workers are expected to enter the global labor force in the decades ahead. The billions of workers who have moved from the backward countryside of India, China, Latin America and Africa into the globalized circuits of production have, as the WSWS has characterized it, “leapt forward centuries in a single lifetime.” 

Objective social and economic processes are generating revolutionary struggles. The daily deterioration of living standards, the staggering scale of social inequality, the grotesque corruption and crimes of the ruling class are provoking the indignation and anger of the masses. But this anger must be developed into a politically conscious and internationally unified struggle against capitalism.

And this brings to the fore the central problem of this historical epoch: the resolution of the crisis of revolutionary leadership in the working class. The grip of the old and reactionary instruments of capitalist rule—the existing capitalist parties, the trade union bureaucracies, the bourgeois nationalist organizations, the innumerable petty-bourgeois groupings—must be broken. The political independence of the working class from all the agencies of the ruling class must be established. 

This requires the building of the Fourth International, the world Trotskyist movement led by the International Committee. Concentrated in its program is a vast body of revolutionary experience spanning a century of struggle. 

*****

In May 1940, in the Manifesto of the Fourth International written by Trotsky just three months before his assassination by a Stalinist agent, the incomparable strategist of world socialist revolution explained:

In history, war has not infrequently been the mother of revolution precisely because it rocks superannuated regimes to their foundation, weakens the ruling class, and hastens the growth of revolutionary indignation among the oppressed masses.

Such a situation is emerging. The very fact that the American ruling class has placed a gangster in the White House and entrusted the management of its affairs to the underworld is irrefutable proof of its historical bankruptcy. 

In the face of the greatest obstacles, the International Committee of the Fourth International has worked tirelessly to prepare the advanced sections of the working class for the present crisis. We have created the World Socialist Web Site, which has for the last 28 years served as an incomparable instrument of political analysis and strategic orientation. It has waged an unrelenting struggle to preserve the heritage of Marxism and the historical continuity of the struggle for socialism.

The parties affiliated with the International Committee have spearheaded the fight against the pro-imperialist and corporatist labor bureaucracies through the development of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC). Its purpose is not to influence the existing trade union bureaucracies but to organize a rank-and-file insurrection against them and to transfer power to the factory, shop floor and workplace committees.

The International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE), guided by the ICFI, educates the younger generation as Marxists, provides a revolutionary alternative to the demoralizing policies of protest politics and directs their energies toward the struggles of the working class.

The ICFI has developed Socialism AI, which was launched on the World Socialist Web Site in December 2025. While the ruling class utilizes AI for the purpose of enriching itself, impoverishing workers and intensifying exploitation, the International Committee is utilizing the vast potential of this technology to advance and accelerate the struggle for socialism.

All the different elements of the work of the International Committee are directed to the goal of building the Fourth International as the World Party of Socialist Revolution that will defeat capitalist barbarism and secure the future of humanity. This party will be built by the workers, the youth and the socialist intellectuals who draw the necessary conclusions from the experiences of this epoch and take their place in its ranks. To the workers fighting ICE, to the strikers on the picket lines, to the students opposing genocide on the campuses, to the millions in the streets of every continent: The question now posed is not whether to fight but how to fight and under what banner. 

Our answer to these questions is this: The road forward is the conscious and organized struggle of the international working class for power. The banner is that of the Fourth International. We say: Build sections of the International Committee of the Fourth International in every country. Take up the fight for socialism. Forward to the world socialist revolution!

2. Democrats pave way for $70 billion infusion to ICE and Border Patrol

Congressional Democrats joined Republicans in ending the longest Homeland Security shutdown in US history while clearing the way for Trump’s immigration Gestapo to receive tens of billions of dollars, without any reforms, through a fast-track budget process requiring no Democratic votes.

3. Inside Amir: Tehran, before US and Israeli bombs rained down...

One can’t help but wondering after two months of war and countless waves of bombing, and thousands of civilian deaths: Does that neighborhood still look like this?

This is a first report from this year's San Francisco International Film Festival. 

4. US national debt surpasses size of the economy, as Trump administration demands surge in military spending

The US national debt has crossed 100 percent of gross domestic product for the first peacetime year since 1946, according to data released Thursday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)—a milestone that arrives as the Trump administration is demanding a $1.535 trillion Pentagon budget and preparing for conflict with nuclear-armed China and Russia.

5. World Bank details Iran war global commodity shock

The bank’s chief economist has warned that the war is hitting the global economy in a series of cumulative waves.

6. Swedish government commits to coalition with fascist Sweden Democrats after upcoming parliamentary election

Over the past two months, the Swedish political establishment has moved to consolidate the Sweden Democrats—the far-right party that emerged from the neo-Nazi milieu of the 1980s—as the dominant force in official politics.

7. United States:  UIC graduate workers launch third strike in seven years against poverty wages

The more than 1,500 graduate workers who have walked out teach courses, run laboratories, and generate the research revenue that makes the the University of Illinois Chicago function. 

8. Vote “no” on the SEIU sellout agreement for Los Angeles school workers!

The central fraud of this contract is that it conceals massive cuts just over the horizon. A new budget proposal for the next school year is expected in mid-May—days after the ratification vote closes.

9. Australia:  Victorian Labor leaks pay offer while teacher union prepares another sellout

The reported 28 percent pay rise offer reflects the fears of state and federal Labor governments that strikes in Victoria could become the starting point of broader action by teachers and others nationally.

10. Australian inflation soars as economic effects of Iran war bite

The official cost-of-living index rose 4.6 percent in the 12 months to March, up sharply from 3.7 percent in February. 

11. Homelessness among young people in Germany has almost tripled since 2022

The housing crisis is destroying the lives of tens of thousands of children and young people: The number of homeless minors has almost tripled nationwide. 

12. Stop the war against Iran!

The editor of the World Socialist Web Site German site explained the social, political and historical basis of the struggle against imperialist war. 

13. PSTU leader Zé Maria sentenced to two years prison in Brazil for criticizing Israel: a grave attack on democratic rights

The case is a politically motivated fabrication and an assault on the political conscience of millions of workers and young people in Brazil and around the world.

14. Disney announces full deployment of facial recognition at Disneyland Resort

Expansion of biometric surveillance raises concerns over privacy loss, data sharing with authorities and erosion of anonymity in public life. 

15. Executions in Florida and Texas: Condemned prisoners maintain their innocence

The twin executions of James Ernest Hitchcock, 70, and James Broadnax, 37, took place as the US death penalty machinery continues its accelerating pace in 2026.

16. South Africa’s ruling class incites pogroms against migrants

This scapegoating must be understood in the context of the social order the ANC has presided over since 1994. While the legal framework of apartheid was dismantled, the underlying class structures have been preserved. 

17. United Kingdom:  Golders Green attack used to launch ferocious right-wing campaign against democratic rights and anti-genocide protests

Prime Minister Keir Starmer responded by holding those who have protested the Gaza genocide responsible, and promising draconian attacks on demonstrations. 

18. Campaign begins for meetings on 100 years since British General Strike

Reports from SEP branches in London, Sheffield and Inverness are featured. 

19.  Workers Struggles: Asia and Australia

Australia:

Queensland rail workers resume industrial action
 
Downer EDI water mains plumbers strike in Victoria
 
Dorevitch pathology workers in Victoria strike for improved pay and conditions
 
Disability care workers in Victoria protest funding cuts
 
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology educators strike
 
Wilmar BioEthanol plant workers in Victoria strike
 
Victoria’s state school nurses demand wage parity

Bangladesh:

Candidate teachers demand immediate government school appointments
 
Rana Plaza building collapse victims demand compensation

India:  

Andhra Pradesh hospital sanitation workers at Vijayawada demand outstanding wages
 
School midday-meal workers protest privatization in Andhra Pradesh
 
Sportking India factory workers in Punjab protest for wages and permanent jobs
 
Haryana fire and emergency services workers’ strike enters fourth week

20. Defend and help free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk! Please add your name to our petition! 

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