Dec 16, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Trump threatens neo-colonial war of plunder against Venezuela

The US plan to seize Venezuela’s oil and natural resources targets both Russia and China. China is Venezuela’s largest creditor, having provided over $62 billion in loans since 2005, largely repaid through guaranteed oil sales, and currently purchases 80 percent of Venezuela’s exports. Russia has invested billions in Venezuelan energy infrastructure.

In its campaign against Venezuela, the Trump administration has dispensed with even the most flimsy pretenses to legality. In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which was itself criminal, the Bush administration at least attempted to construct some legal justification—however fraudulent—for its actions. No such effort has been made here. The administration has simply declared its right to murder people on the high seas, seize the property of foreign nations, and overthrow governments at will. There is no meaningful difference between the policy the United States is now pursuing toward Venezuela and Hitler’s invasions of neighboring countries in the late 1930s. 

2. Predator spying revelations rock Greek ruling elite

The trial proceedings around Greece’s spyware and phone-tapping scandal finally commenced on October 22 after repeated delays. At the center of the scandal is the use of the spyware Predator by Greece’s National Intelligence Agency (EYP) to hack the phones of leading politicians (including ministers of the ruling New Democracy party), journalists, government officials as well as high ranking military, police personnel and even EYP operatives.

With the witness list exceeding 50 people, the trial is expected to continue well into next year.

In June 2022 it was revealed that an attempt had been made to infect with Predator the phone of Nikos Androulakis, leader of the social democratic PASOK. Androulakis was then a candidate in the PASOK leadership election and the surveillance reportedly stopped shortly after he was elected party leader in December 2021.

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Predator was developed by North Macedonian start-up Cytrox in 2017 and was acquired in 2019 by Israeli cyber-security company Intellexa. Insight into how Predator works was provided by a report published this month—based on leaked internal Intellexa documents and a forensic analysis carried out by Amnesty International’s security lab.

The version of Predator at the center of the scandal uses a so-called “1-click” attack method. This requires a malicious link to be sent and then opened on a target’s phone, which installs the spyware. The report outlines the vast amount of data available once infection has occurred “including ability to access encrypted instant messaging apps like Signal and WhatsApp, audio recordings, emails, device locations, screenshots and camera photos, stored passwords, contacts and call logs, and also to activate the device’s microphone.”

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Despite efforts to absolve the government of any wrongdoing, the incriminating evidence is so overwhelming it has proved impossible to keep a lid on it during court proceedings.

On December 2, former Intellexa employee Panagiotis Koutsios contradicted the government’s narrative by testifying that Intellexa “collaborated only with state authorities,” given that “police and army officials were always present” in state premises where the company would showcase its products.

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 The picture that emerges is of a ruling elite deeply steeped in criminality and rapidly moving towards the dictatorial rule associated with the military junta that ruled Greece between 1967-74. This is a manifestation in Greece of a global phenomenon. Over a decade ago former National Security Agency (NSA) intelligence contractor and whistle-blower Edward Snowden revealed the vast scale of surveillance employed by the US government and its Five Eyes counterparts in the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

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As opposition grows to war and austerity policies, ruling elites in every major capitalist country are preparing to confront this by dispensing with democratic forms of rule. The spyware industry is tapping the growing demand for surveillance capabilities by governments that don’t have Washington’s resources to develop these in-house. According to a 2020 estimate by Moody’s the industry was worth $12 billion and the market growing at an estimated 25 percent a year. In a December 2021 report, Citizen’s Lab noted that its internet scanning for Predator servers across the world found “likely Predator customers in Armenia, Egypt, Greece, Indonesia, Madagascar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and Serbia.”

3. Australian governments, media target anti-genocide protests over Bondi Beach shooting

It is now clear from the location, planning and footage that the target of the two alleged gunmen, Sajid Akram, 50, and his son, Naveed Akram, 24, was a “Chanukah by the Sea” event for children at a beachside playground, marking the start of the eight-day Rabbinic Jewish festival of lights. Hundreds of children, their carers and volunteers, many elderly, were taking part in the festival.

The World Socialist Web Site has unequivocally condemned this attack, stating yesterday that Jewish people and their children living in Australia bear no responsibility for the ongoing slaughter by the Israeli Zionist regime in Gaza and the occupied West Bank of Palestine. In fact, many Jewish people have joined the massive, often weekly anti-genocide demonstrations in Australia, as part of the wider disgust and outrage.

Yet, those responsible for the continuing carnage in Gaza, above all the Israeli government and its backers, are seeking to exploit this reactionary and tragic killing spree to insist that all demonstrations and statements of protest against the genocide must be shut down.

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The actual perpetrators of the killings on Bondi Beach—Sajid and Naveed Akram—appear to have been associated with the Islamic extremist organization, Islamic State (IS), which is notorious for its acts of terrorism carried out under the false flag of defending Muslims and their faith.

However, the allegations being drip fed to the establishment media by anonymous police and intelligence sources—an IS flag, Naveed Akram’s past association with an Islamist group, and a trip last month to the Philippines—raise more questions than they answer. Such reports should be treated with suspicion. Naveed Akram remains in hospital under police guard after being wounded by police, while his father was killed.

Whatever the motivations of the two men, the mass shooting only plays into the hands of those responsible for the historic crimes in Palestine. To expose and combat this, workers and young people must reject ethnic division and scapegoating, defend Jewish, Islamic and other targeted communities, and oppose the assault on basic democratic rights and the plunge toward war.

4. “We were in a death trap”: Cyclone victims in central Sri Lanka speak out

On December 10, World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) reporters visited the Sogama settlement, located in the Udapalatha Divisional Secretariat (DS) Division, near Gampola—a town in the central hill district of Kandy—to speak with survivors of the disaster caused by Cyclone Ditwah.

The Kandy District is the worst-affected region in the country, with 237 confirmed deaths and 73 reported missing as of December 15. It ranks third in terms of total affected, with 51,168 families and 173,686 individuals impacted, following the Colombo and Puttalam districts.

Gampola, 16 kilometers from Sogama, experienced heavy rainfall and severe flooding that submerged homes and roads in surrounding neighborhoods, rendering key access routes impassable. The Sogama settlement comprises eight villages—including Ihalagama, Hunukotugama, Udagama, Millagaspitiya, Amuhena and Pallegama—and is home to about 500 families, totaling approximately 2,000 people.

Located in a mountainous area with unstable soil and scattered rock formations, the Sogama settlement is entirely unfit for human habitation. WSWS reporters observed that residents were living in constant danger, with their lives and livelihoods devastated—an assessment confirmed by villagers from Ihalagama.

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According to these residents, nearly 500 displaced individuals from 97 families in Ihalagama and two neighboring villages are now sheltering at the Atabage Udagama Maha Vidyalaya (school) in Gampola. 

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The reporters witnessed the dangerous conditions in which the people of Sogama live. The area lies on the slopes of the Central Highlands, where heavy rainfall can trigger deadly landslides. Most residents rely on dairy farming, vegetable cultivation and daily wage labor. They told the WSWS that no government has ever supported them. Many expressed the belief that, despite everything, they would rather face death than leave behind what they had built through years of hard work. 

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About 10 to 15 people took part in the discussion, listening attentively and participating with interest. The reporters explained the scientific causes of the disaster and the necessity of a socialist program as the only way to put an end to such catastrophes. The participants expressed their agreement and provided contact details for further discussion.

5. New Zealand navy vessel joins US-led provocations against China

The New Zealand Defense Force (NZDF) reported on December 8 that a NZ navy ship, the HMNZS Aotearoa, supported by a P-8A Poseidon maritime aircraft, carried out “surveillance and deterrence” activities in the international waters of the East China and Yellow Seas during November.

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Defense Minister Judith Collins declared that the provocative transit of the Taiwan Strait was done “in accordance with international law and best practice. By doing this, we are demonstrating our commitment to the international rules-based system in our near region—the Indo-Pacific.”

Collins’s statement was a pack of lies. The Taiwan Strait is not in New Zealand’s “near region,” but on China’s doorstep, some 9,000 kilometers from the southwest Pacific. The so-called “rules-based system” invoked by Collins is the set of post-World War II “rules” established by Washington to ensure its global hegemony.

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The US and its allies have militarized the region in preparation for war with China, deliberately staging exercises to provoke Beijing. Wellington has expanded bilateral and multilateral exercises and operational planning with allied forces, including the top-level Five Eyes spy network that involves the US, UK, Australia and Canada. 

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According to the NZDF, the Aotearoa “was shadowed by seven different People’s Liberation Army (Navy) (PLA) warships, which maintained a safe and professional distance throughout.” This admission drove a frenzied response from the New Zealand media, with headlines declaring that the Chinese had “shadowed” the NZ vessel “around East Asia.”

The hypocritical media responses aim to blame Beijing for the rising danger of war. In February, the NZ government and media joined their Australian counterparts in hysterically denouncing the activities of three Chinese naval vessels, using it to demand greater military spending to meet a supposed imminent “Chinese threat.” The Chinese ships were closely monitored by the NZ military as they conducted live-fire exercises in international waters in the Tasman Sea, which separates Australia and New Zealand by 1,500-2,000 kilometers. By contrast, the Taiwan Strait is about 180 kilometers wide.

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Responding to reports of the NZ navy’s activities, Chinese Ministry of Defense spokesman Jiang Bin stated on November 27: “We firmly oppose any country stirring up trouble in the Taiwan Strait or sending wrong signals to Taiwan independence separatist forces.”

China is concerned about growing naval activity in its close waters, particularly in the Taiwan Strait. The US and its allies, including New Zealand, have increasingly been using passages through the Taiwan Strait as one method of undermining the One China policy despite continuing to nominally recognize it. The policy regards Beijing as the legitimate government of all China including Taiwan. Beijing, which treats Taiwan as a renegade province, has warned that it will use force if Taipei declares formal independence from China.

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For 15 years successive US governments have built up the US military presence in the Asia-Pacific region. The Trump administration, driven by the historic crisis of capitalism, is sharply accelerating the warmongering against China, as it seeks to shore up its dominant global position. In May, US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth declared that China posed an “imminent” threat and demanded that US allies in Asia prepare for war over Taiwan by 2027.

New Zealand, a minor imperialist power allied to the US, is closely integrated into these plans—despite the fact that China is New Zealand’s major trading partner.

6. Australia: Tasmanian teachers strike again but unions block a unified fight

The crisis engulfing public education has again been exposed in Tasmania, where teachers and support staff have taken their second strike in two months. Last Friday, educators across the Australian island state walked off the job for half a day, closing most public schools in Hobart, Launceston and Burnie.

The Australian Education Union (AEU) has refused to lead a genuine fight against the minority state Liberal government’s austerity regime, which has driven educators to breaking point. While teachers have stopped work twice since October, the AEU leadership continues to isolate their struggle from those of other public sector workers and similar battles in Queensland and Victoria, blocking a national fight against low pay and onerous workloads.

The stoppage was held in support of school support staff, teachers’ assistants, cleaners, lab technicians, library and admin staff. They are among the lowest-paid workers and head into the Christmas break without a pay rise. These essential workers face weeks of unpaid stand-down over the holidays, unlike their mainland counterparts.

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Tasmanian teachers are now the second-lowest paid in Australia. This did not arise overnight. It is the product of decades of attacks by successive governments, including the Labor-Greens administration formed after the 2010 election, which enforced austerity budgets, closed schools and deepened the erosion of public education.

What is happening in Tasmania is part of a global offensive in which governments cut funding, push privatization and prioritize corporate profit and war spending. Educators from South Korea, the UK and the US are striking over parallel policies.

The core issues driving the strikes are intolerable workloads, under-staffing and unsafe classrooms. Teachers are forced to manage students with complex needs, such as those on the autism spectrum, and students traumatized by family breakdown, often without resources or assistance.

Teaching staff are working beyond school hours catching up on emails, wellbeing referrals, attendance and lesson planning. This is compounded by a rise in violence in schools, reports of which have nearly tripled since 2022, under conditions of a broader cost-of-living and social crisis. Educators report concussions and other injuries from student assaults.

One teacher stated on social media: “[I]t’s not just a pay dispute—it’s about conditions, especially the escalation of violence against staff by students. Things that are making staff leave in droves and that can’t just be fixed with a bit more pay.”

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The AEU bureaucracy is not opposing austerity but pleading for talks that will subordinate teachers’ demands to “budget repair.” Its aim is to dissipate anger through limited actions such as half-day strikes. Genford said AEU members “didn’t want to interrupt school at all” underscoring the bureaucracy’s opposition to any real fight. The union’s claims serve as bargaining chips to steer the dispute back into negotiations within the confines set by the government.

Conditions nationwide are marked by real wage cuts, relentless underfunding and impossible workloads. Labor and Liberal governments, assisted by the union apparatuses, enforce austerity dictated by corporate interests, including cuts affecting thousands of public sector jobs. The AEU and its state affiliates deliberately divide teachers by state, isolating each struggle.

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The lesson, confirmed by the current disputes in Tasmania, Queensland and Victoria, is clear: When teachers are diverted into negotiations and arbitration, pay, staffing and safety are sacrificed. Teachers must build new democratic organizations of struggle—rank-and-file committees in every school, uniting educators and support staff across state lines, and advancing demands based on the real needs of teachers, support staff and students, such as:

  • An immediate 40 percent wage increase, indexed to inflation, to make up for past losses.
  • Maximum class sizes of 15–20.
  • A minimum of eight hours of in-school planning time weekly.
  • Psychologists employed in every school.
  • Hiring thousands of teachers and support staff to end crushing workloads.

What the governments and union bureaucrats fear most is unified action across all states, a struggle that would challenge the capitalist agenda prioritizing war preparations, including AUKUS, and corporate infrastructure over public education. The fight for fully funded public education is inseparable from a political struggle against the private profit system defended by both major parties and the trade union apparatus.

7. United States: 30,000 LAUSD support workers must strike now and take control through Rank-and-File Committees!

On Wednesday, 30,000 Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) support workers are demonstrating against poverty and exploitation which the district is seeking to deepen in a new contract. The support workers include bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, teacher assistants, special education assistants, playground aides and other classified staff, and are members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 99.

These workers keep 1,000 schools in the country’s second-largest school district functioning for more than 400,000 students across the region, performing essential labor that makes public education possible on a daily basis. Yet despite their central role, the majority earn near or below $30,000 a year, with many making far less, condemning them to poverty wages in one of the most expensive metropolitan areas in the country.

There is enormous potential for a powerful statewide strike movement uniting educators across California. Workers in virtually every major school district have been working for months without a contract, while talks with the districts have gone nowhere. Recently, San Francisco teachers voted by 99 percent to strike. Educators in the West Contra Costa County Unified School District struck earlier this month, before the union officials abruptly shut the strike down.

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The union bureaucracy knows full well that a strike vote would pass by a landslide, just as it did in February 2023, when 96 percent voted to authorize strike action. Rather than allow workers to exercise their collective power, the union leadership chose to shut down the struggle, fearing that an independent movement would escape their control.

Local 99 has called Wednesday’s rally to let workers blow off steam before things get out of officials’ control. It has been deliberately timed with the tail end of the semester in order to prevent workers from building momentum to take action.

For educators, they must use the rally to start organizing with each other to enforce the will of the membership and prepare for a strike for inflation-busting raises, smaller class sizes, adequate funding for infrastructure, protection from immigration raids and other key demands.

LAUSD began negotiations by proposing a 0 percent wage increase, an open declaration that the district intends to impose further austerity on workers already living in poverty. This, in a city with 56 billionaires and the center of the world’s television and film industry!

The $18.8 billion district budget leaves classrooms without basic supplies. This is the outcome of a political and economic framework that systematically diverts resources away from students and school workers. The district enforces austerity through attendance‑based funding formulas, with layers of bureaucratic overhead and legally restricted spending mechanisms at the school level, particularly in working class communities.

California’s Democratic Party establishment oversees public education while subordinating it to the interests of finance and corporate elites. The union bureaucrats work with them to contain independent resistance and block effective organization by workers. This has produced decades of decline in public education.

While the Trump administration openly moves to dismantle public education at the federal level, Democrats in California pursue the same outcome through austerity, insisting that school districts and public universities “have no money” while refusing to challenge the vast concentration of wealth at the top of society. The same Democrats have readily voted for bloated military budgets that fund imperialist war and repression abroad. There is money for war, but not for schools.

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The SEIU has fully transformed into an instrument of corporate and state management. Local 99 Executive Director Max Arias, responsible for day-to-day operations and bargaining strategy, received $219,955 from membership dues in 2024. A privileged bureaucracy has emerged whose interests are bound up with institutional relationships, political access and budgetary constraints. Its function is to contain struggle, not to wage it.

The immediate priority is to call a strike. This is the essential first step in reclaiming the power that has been usurped by the union bureaucracy and demonstrating the strength of the workers’ collective force. A strike must be organized, sustained, and controlled by the rank and file, not by a leadership that has repeatedly betrayed its own members.

At the same time, rank‑and‑file committees must be established in every school. These committees, elected and controlled by workers themselves, should oversee negotiations and manage strike funds.

Most importantly, coordinate with teachers across the state, the country and the world. They must also link up with other sections of the working class. Their purpose is to link with teachers, parents, students and other public-sector workers to transform a single-district strike into a wider movement of the working class against inequality and oligarchy.

8. United States: New York nurses raise demands as contract expirations loom at year’s end

The contract expirations create the potential for a major, coordinated fight for safe staffing, raises that surpass inflation and the best possible healthcare benefits. They also create an opening for nurses to oppose management retaliation, such as the disciplinary measures taken against three nurses at Mount Sinai Hospital who raised safety demands after an attempted shooting at their workplace. 

New York nurses are also facing attacks by the administration of President Donald Trump on their profession and on public health itself. The US Department of Education’s declaration that nursing is no longer a professional degree will slash much-needed financial resources for students and worsen the problem of understaffing.

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A real struggle requires that nurses begin preparing to take the initiative into their own hands. This means forming a rank-and-file committee to formulate nurses’ demands, assert democratic control over bargaining to prevent a sellout, and to prepare for a strike, appealing for support from other healthcare workers and the working class across the city.

Reporters for the World Socialist Web Site spoke to nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital about their contract struggle and the broader political situation in which it is unfolding. Conditions at the hospital have changed greatly over time, according to an experienced catheterization lab nurse who spoke on condition of anonymity. “Our unit used to be very pro-patient,” he said. “And now, it’s all about business.”

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Many nurses are ready to strike, but the danger of a rotten last-minute agreement between management and NYSNA looms. When the union announced a sellout contract in 2023, many nurses objected to it. “But NYSNA went through with it anyway because they said the majority of people agreed to it,” said the the catherization lab nurse, adding that the vote count was never made public. Nurses continued to voice their complaints to the union. “They gave us the runaround, saying this and that. But we felt slighted.”

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To wage their contract struggle, which at bottom is a struggle against the system of for-profit healthcare, the nurses must form rank-and-file committees that are independent of the union and of both capitalist parties. Only by taking initiative from below the nurses can break out of the isolation that NYSNA is attempting to impose and reach out to other healthcare workers, as well as workers in other industries, for support.

9. Berlin state government to expand surveillance powers with the support of the far-right Alternative for Germany

The amendments to the police law adopted by the Berlin House of Representatives (state legislature) on December 4, with the votes of the Christian Democrats (CDU), Social Democrats (SPD) and the fascistic Alternative for Germany (AfD), undermine fundamental democratic rights. The more than 700-page revision of the General Security and Order Act (ASOG) was presented by the state Interior Ministry in mid-July this year. 

The ASOG reform not only creates expanded powers for observation and video surveillance in public spaces, but also legalises the covert entry into homes to install so-called “state trojans” spying software. This goes far beyond previous practice. With judicial authorization, police officers will in future be permitted to break into dwellings in order to install surveillance software on computers, smartphones and other networked devices.

The state spyware enables access to encrypted messages, the extraction of files, the activation of microphones and cameras, and the monitoring of running applications—all in real time.

At the same time, the reform expands the legal basis for the comprehensive monitoring of telecommunications. With judicial approval, not only ongoing communications but also stored content, metadata and the communications of “contact persons”—so-called bystander collection—can be accessed. In this way, anyone can become a target who happened to be in contact with a person being monitored.

The legislative amendment also grants the police far-reaching technical powers in public spaces. Under the new regulation on mobile phone cell data requests (Section 26e), the police can demand the traffic data of all mobile phones that were present at a specific time within a precisely defined transmission cell from network operators.

This mass data collection allows the retrospective creation of large-scale movement profiles—a measure that can be deployed not only against specific suspects but against thousands of innocent people who were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, such as participants in demonstrations.

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Video- and AI-based behavioral analysis, the expansion of biometric data collections and the merging of police and intelligence service databases create instruments with which strikes, demonstrations and critical networks can be criminalised and smashed. The reform therefore not only attacks individual rights, but equips the state in advance against any form of social opposition.

The state government justifies the measures by pointing to the need to combat “threats.” The police state is being expanded in order to suppress the resistance that austerity and pro-war policies will inevitably provoke. This is not a phenomenon isolated to Berlin, but is an international one. The police state is being expanded worldwide and endowed with authoritarian powers.

Particularly revealing is the role played by the AfD in the passage of the ASOG amendment. Although the parties governing the state of Berlin—SPD and CDU—possess a comfortable majority, they relied on AfD votes for the expansion of the police state. The boundaries between the establishment parties and the far right are increasingly disappearing. 

Built up by the ruling class to channel growing opposition into nationalist and racist channels, the AfD’s programme has by now become official policy. The attacks on immigrants, the abolition of the right to asylum, the gigantic armaments budget, the reintroduction of conscription and the assaults on the welfare state are entirely in line with the policies of the AfD. At the same time, mass layoffs in industry are sharpening class conflicts ever further.

Like its sister parties in Italy, Austria, the Netherlands and the United States—where the AfD maintains close relations with Trump’s Republicans—the AfD is needed to build an authoritarian police state and to proceed against the opposition of the working class and youth.

10. Modi greets Putin with pomp and ceremony as Trump demands New Delhi downgrade its ties with Russia

India’s demonstrative display of the “warmth” and “strength” of its decades-long strategic partnership with Russia was intended as a message to Washington that New Delhi will not allow the US to define its relationship with Moscow.

The Modi government, building on the Indo-US Global Strategic Partnership its Congress Party predecessor negotiated, has dramatically expanded India’s military-security ties with Washington during its eleven years in office, transforming India into a veritable frontline state in US imperialism’s strategic confrontation with China.

Yet to the dismay of Modi, his BJP government and the whole Indian ruling class, US President Donald Trump has repeatedly struck at India, demanding that it remove barriers to US exports and investment, cease Russian oil imports and otherwise downgrade its ties with Moscow.

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From the standpoint of the BJP government and the Indian ruling class, Putin’s visit for the 23rd India-Russia Annual summit was part of a precarious balancing act. India has long tried to straddle the growing geopolitical divide between Russia and the US and its NATO partners. But this has become ever more difficult, especially since the outbreak of the US-NATO-instigated Ukraine war.

Trump is a further complicating factor. In a desperate bid to arrest the rapid erosion of US imperialism’s economic and geopolitical power, he is lashing out against avowed US strategic enemies and ostensible allies alike.

Putin’s December 4-5 visit was his first to India since the outbreak of the Ukraine war. Eager to show that the western powers have failed to isolate Russia, Putin, like his Indian hosts, took every opportunity to play up the strength of Russo-Indian ties.

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The sixteen agreements India and Russia concluded during the summit covered a wide range of sectors, from trade and nuclear energy to health care, culture and counter-terrorism.

Putin and Modi set a target of raising the annual value of Russia-India trade to $100 billion, an increase of 50 percent, by 2030. They also reported progress on linking RuPay (India’s domestic card payment system) with Russia’s Mir payment system with the aim of circumventing US sanctions on Russian trade. The establishment of such a rupee-ruble payment and exchange is crucial if India is to continue to benefit from massive purchases of discounted Russian oil in defiance of Washington and the NATO powers.

Modi also highlighted progress toward a possible free trade agreement with the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), a Russian-led regional bloc of five-post Soviet states.

In respect to defense, India and Russia reaffirmed their longstanding close defense cooperation, and signed new agreements relating to joint weapons production, technology transfer, and expedited delivery of existing orders.

However, New Delhi clearly decided to adopt a wait-and-see stance in regards to major new weapons purchases from Russia, as it gropes to find a means to patch up relations with Washington.

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Under US pressure, New Delhi has reduced its dependence on Russian weapons purchases in recent years. However, Russia remains a vital defence partner, supplying a large portion of India’s existing weapon-systems—including fighter jets, tanks and missiles—through multi-billion-dollar contracts, and the parts needed to keep them operational. The BrahMos missile, a joint venture with Russia, is among India’s most advanced and widely exported missile systems.

Following India’s recent border war with Pakistan, India went on a crash program of restocking its war material, with Russia in many cases the only or best supplier.

At the same time, New Delhi, already wary of Washington’s long record of controlling its allies through arms dependency, has been shaken by Trump’s sudden turn on India. This has involved Trump not only making India a special target of his global trade war, and seeking to dictate its relations with Russia, but also a sudden thawing of Washington’s relations with Pakistan, which, to India’s dismay, has continued apace even in the aftermath of the recent Indo-Pakistani war.

The Indian ruling class is anxious to maintain its so-called “all-weather” alliance with Moscow, and therefore Modi and his Hindu supremacist BJP, hitherto notorious for theirs slavish courting of Washington, have been compelled to push back against the Trump administration.

This has included an outreach to Beijing. In late August, Modi traveled to China for the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit. This was his first trip there in seven years, and marked a significant de-escalation of the five-year border stand-off between India and China that began in May 2020 and saw both sides forward deploy tens of thousands of troops, tanks and warplanes along their disputed Himalayan border for years.

Nevertheless, the current array of conflicts with the Trump administration notwithstanding, the Indo-US strategic partnership remains the cornerstone of the foreign and geopolitical strategy of Modi, his BJP government and the Indian bourgeoisie.

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India also continues to strengthen its relations with Israel, whose genocide in Gaza it has staunchly backed alongside the US and the other imperialist powers. Israeli Prime Minster and war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu is set to travel to India later this month. While Modi’s Hindu supremacist BJP has a close affinity with Netanyahu’s fascist wing of the Zionist movement, the Israeli-India alliance is a corollary to New Delhi’s pursuit of closer ties with US imperialism. This includes supporting, and hoping to profit from, Washington’s drive to carve out through aggression and war a “New Middle East” and an Israeli-anchored India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor.

In the days prior to Putin’s visit to India there was a swirl of diplomatic activity surrounding Trump’s attempt to broker a so-called peace deal with Russia, over the heads and at the expense of Washington’s NATO allies.

India’s ruling class largely views the prospect of such an agreement favorably, believing that an improvement in Russian-US relations would be to its benefit and to the detriment of China, which it considers its principal obstacle to emerging as the regional hegemon of South Asia and a global power. It similarly viewed Trump’s return to office last January favourably, calculating he would prioritize American’s conflict with Beijing and close relations with India, including supporting India’s ambition to emerge an alternative production chain hub to China.

New Delhi is walking a tightrope, aiming to maintain strong relations with both Russia and the US without sacrificing its strategic interests. Nothing can be said with certainty, but even were a deal to freeze the Ukraine war reached, there is nothing to say Trump would back off in his attempts to leverage what he perceives as India’s economic and geopolitical weakness to force New Delhi to dramatically downgrade its relations with Moscow.

Putin’s visit to India underscores just how fluid, unstable and explosive global economic, diplomatic and strategic relationships are, and how perilous are New Delhi’s efforts to chart a “strategical autonomous” course to advance the Indian bourgeoisie’s own predatory global interests.

11. Washington state floods force more than 100,000 to evacuate

The series of floods across western Washington that began December 8 have exposed decades of infrastructure neglect and the class character of disaster response under capitalism. More than 100,000 residents faced evacuation orders as rivers shattered records, and Washington Governor Bob Ferguson declared a state of emergency on December 10. 

The immediate cause of the floods was an atmospheric river, a meteorological formation containing abnormally high amounts of moisture, that drifted over western Oregon, Washington and British Columbia, Canada. The storm system has dumped an estimated 5 trillion gallons on the region and also triggered an enormous amount of snowfall runoff from nearby mountains.

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A significant part of the cost forced on workers is the conscious refusal by insurance companies to insure against floods. Only 36,000 flood insurance policies exist in Washington, while more than 2 million residents live in flood-vulnerable areas. The National Flood Insurance Program’s maximum coverage of $250,000 has remained unchanged since 1994. Average annual premiums of $936 deter many working families from purchasing coverage, while standard policies explicitly exclude flood damage.

The official response has been anemic, from both the state Democratic administration and the Trump administration at the federal level. Reports indicate that only 300 state National Guard have been deployed to aid in disaster relief, with another 150 sent from California. Mount Vernon Fire Chief Bryan Harris acknowledged the inadequacy in a comment to Cascadia Daily News, stating, “We know that that is not enough for everybody.”

For its part, the Trump administration has gutted FEMA, cutting its staffing by 9.5 percent this year and canceling the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program. In addition, the administration has proposed quadrupling the damage threshold for public assistance, which would exclude many smaller communities.

The floods and landslides have also come amid the passage of a record $1 trillion military budget with mass bipartisan support. Compared to the sums allocated for flood prevention, it is clear that the destruction of human life is on the order of 1,000 times more important for the American bourgeoisie than projects to preserve life.

Similar to the floods in Texas over the summer and the recent floods in Sri Lanka, the floods across the Pacific Northwest are not a natural disaster but the direct result of all aspects of capitalist society being geared toward the accumulation of private profit and the waging of war both abroad and at home.

12. Trump administration ordered TSA to provide passenger travel lists to immigration Gestapo

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which conducts airport security screening, has been forwarding the names of all expected air travelers to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to assist in the Trump administration’s mass deportation operations.

The program, which has been operating since at least March 2025, includes lists of people flying both within the United States and into the country. The New York Times, which first reported the existence of the passenger data-sharing operation on December 12, wrote that ICE is using the TSA-provided lists to match names “against its own database of people subject to deportation.” ICE agents are dispatched to airports to seize anyone on its lists who is attempting to travel.

The TSA was created in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks to conduct airport passenger screening. It was incorporated into the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS), along with ICE, Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the Coast Guard and other internal security agencies, all except the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

*****

While the TSA has long collaborated with federal police agencies, including the FBI, in enforcing so-called “no-fly” lists, this is the first confirmed instance in which the agency has gone beyond airport security functions to directly serve as an arm of the deportation apparatus. 

*****

This TSA-ICE data-sharing operation is unfolding alongside a separate but closely related initiative by CBP, which has proposed requiring foreign travelers entering the United States under the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) to submit years of social media history, mandatory “selfie” photo uploads and a mobile-only Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) which would require travelers to download an invasive app on their phone as a condition of travel authorization. Taken together, these programs function in tandem to compile vast centralized databases of personal, biometric, travel and political information.

Under the CBP proposal, the new screening requirements would apply primarily to travelers entering the US under the VWP, which covers citizens of more than 40 countries, overwhelmingly in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. These include, among others, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland, Belgium, Austria, Ireland, Portugal, Poland, Israel, Singapore and Taiwan. Citizens of these countries are normally permitted to enter the United States for up to 90 days for tourism or business without a visa, provided they obtain authorization through the ESTA.

According to CBP, not every traveler from a VWP country would necessarily be required to submit the same volume of information. However, the proposal would make the disclosure of social media identifiers mandatory for many applicants, transforming what had previously been a nominally voluntary field into a de facto requirement for entry. CBP has indicated that the information could be used for automated vetting, risk scoring, and cross-referencing against law enforcement and intelligence databases, with little transparency regarding how determinations are made or how long the data is retained.

Canadian citizens occupy a partial exception within this framework. Canada is not part of the Visa Waiver Program, and most Canadian visitors do not require either a visa or an ESTA to enter the United States for short stays. As a result, Canadian tourists are not currently subject to the proposed ESTA social media disclosure requirement. Nevertheless, Canadians remain subject to questioning, inspection, and discretionary enforcement at the border, and are already affected by the TSA’s domestic passenger data-sharing with ICE when traveling by air within the United States.

*****

Under conditions in which the Trump administration is openly declaring broad layers of political opposition to be “antifa terrorists,” criminalizing protest and equating dissent with treason, the expansion of this domestic surveillance and policing apparatus is especially ominous. It constitutes a warning to the working class that mechanisms initially justified in the name of “security” are being repurposed to facilitate political repression, mass deportations and the suppression of opposition to the capitalist state.

12. Socialism AI answers the question: How can GM workers at Factory Zero in the US oppose layoffs?

Since its launch on December 12, Socialism AI has provided thousands of users throughout the world with access to the revolutionary perspective of Marxism, drawing from more than 175 years of historical material and nearly three decades of World Socialist Web Site coverage. With each interaction, it is helping workers and young people understand the world and how to change it.

This new feature will highlight selected questions and answers from Socialism AI—concise, clear and politically insightful responses to some of the most pressing issues of our time.

13. Departing SEC official warns of coming “winter” for US capital markets

The rise of Trump to the presidency of the US and his efforts to construct a fascistic dictatorship represent the violent realignment of the political superstructure to more openly and directly express the domination of the American economy and increasingly all aspects of life by a financial oligarchy.

In its mode of existence, its social being, this oligarchy, based on the endless accumulation of wealth through stock market speculation, financial market operations and parasitism, demands the abolition of all remaining restrictions on its activity.

One of the expressions of this process, which derives not from the personal characteristics of the individuals involved but from the objective logic of the system they head, is the evisceration of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the regulatory authority of the stock market.

The extent of this gutting operation was highlighted in a speech last week by Caroline Crenshaw upon her impending exit from the SEC. She first referred to the dismantling of the SEC block by block back in May and expanded on this assessment in her latest remarks.

Summing up what she called the “chaos” of the past year, Crenshaw said: “The appetite to deregulate has been rapacious; the analysis of the costs and benefits of our policies has been non-existent; and the repercussions… could be dire.”

*****

Crenshaw presented her remarks within the framework of what has functioned as the prevailing official mythology over many decades—that the SEC functions to ensure that the financial system and the stock market is a “system for everyone, and not for any special interest or market participant.”

The SEC was established in 1934 by the Roosevelt administration in response to the stock market crash of 1929. But from the outset it was clear that the SEC, while imposing some controls, was no inherent threat to the giants of Wall Street.

Its first chairman was Joseph Kennedy, father of the future president, John Kennedy. He was not a regulator—far from it. He had made his money in the very kind of speculation and dubious practices which the SEC was set up to curb. He was also accused during the prohibition era of being a bootlegger, though no charges were ever brought.

*****

During the Clinton administration, the regulations which had been introduced under the New Deal of Roosevelt were largely scrapped culminating in the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 in 1999.

The aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis saw a marked shift in the operation of the SEC under the Obama administration. Prosecutions were increasingly replaced by financial settlements and the “revolving door” through which individuals passed back and forth between Wall Street and the SEC was swung open with increasing frequency.

Most significantly, even though investigations, including a major report prepared for the US Senate, revealed that some of the biggest finance houses had engaged in criminal activity leading to the crash of 2008, not a single executive was charged, let alone convicted and jailed. Banks were provided with bailouts on the basis they were too big to fail while executives were considered too important to jail.

The activities of SEC chair Gary Gensler, appointed by the Biden administration, were aimed at trying to reintroduce some tightening of regulation after the first Trump administration but largely failed as a result of legal action.

*****

For years the SEC, like all the regulatory institutions of capitalism, operated behind a kind of mask, promoting itself as the guardian of the public interest. It has become increasingly tattered and frayed over the past decade and a half but today the remnants are being torn off.

14. Workers and youth in Australia and New Zealand urge the use of Socialism AI

Launched on December 12 2025, Socialism AI represents a transformational development for the political education of the working class. This new application of augmented intelligence is to make the scientific method and historical perspective of Marxism accessible on a mass scale, and facilitate the strengthening of socialist consciousness. Its inauguration opens the means through which workers, students and young people can engage directly with theory, historical experience and practical political questions in real time. 

15. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Police attack peaceful protest opposing mining project

Bolivia:

Workers mobilize against price increases

Canada:

Ottawa airport in-flight meal prep workers strike

Mexico:

Student strike at National Pedagogic University continues

United States:

Ohio teachers rally in wake of 10-day strike notice
Proposed school closings roil Minnesota school district

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

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

Dec 15, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. This week in history: December 15-21

  • 25 years ago:
Chinese security officials sequester strike leader in psychiatric hospital
  • 50 years ago:

Algeria deports 350,000 Moroccans

  • 75 years ago:

    Truman announces US national emergency

  • 100 years ago:

Fourteenth Congress of the Russian Communist Party formally adopts “socialism in one country”

2. Mass shooting in Sydney exploited to slander anti-genocide protests

The mass shooting at Sydney’s Bondi Beach yesterday evening, targeting a Jewish religious festival, has resulted in the deaths of at least 15 people and injuries to 42 people, some of whom are in critical condition. One of the alleged shooters has also been killed.

*****

From what the police and intelligence agencies have so far reported, the shootings were carried out by a father, Sajid Akram, 50, and son, Naveed Akram, 24, from Sydney’s working-class western suburbs, using rifles for which the father had held licences for a decade. The father was reportedly shot dead by police and the son is in a critical condition in hospital. No evidence has been suggested by the police of any wider involvement.

Those killed ranged in age from 10 to 87, including a young girl, a Holocaust survivor and a rabbi. The target was evidently a “Chanukah by the Sea” event for children that was scheduled to take place at a beachside playground from 5 p.m., and had begun, marking the start of the eight-day Rabbinic Jewish festival of lights.

While the motives of the alleged shooters remain to be determined, this is a reactionary and tragic event. Jewish people and their children living in Australia bear no responsibility for the ongoing slaughter by the Israeli Zionist regime in Gaza and the occupied West Bank of Palestine. In fact, many Jewish people have joined the anti-genocide demonstrations, in Australia and globally, as part of the wider disgust and outrage.

Police have remained tight-lipped about the two suspects, refusing to discuss anything about their motives, while saying that one was known to police and the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), and previously suspected of links to an Islamic State group.

As shown on widely broadcast video footage, further deaths were prevented, in part, by a 43-year-old fruit shop owner, Ahmed Al Ahmed, who crept up on a shooter and managed to wrest a rifle from him.

*****

This mass shooting only plays into the hands of those responsible for the historic crimes in Palestine, including the Australian and other Western governments that have backed and armed the Netanyahu regime and slandered and suppressed anti-genocide protests, falsely accusing them of antisemitism. In fact, Israel does not speak for the Jewish people, a lie promoted by the Israeli government and the imperialist powers that have backed the genocide in Gaza.  

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and NSW Premier Chris Minns last night declared their intent to take what Minns described as “massive” action to react to the shootings, including by large police mobilizations and new legislation, adding to the already extensive battery of “hate crime” and “terrorism” laws.

For more than two years, the NSW Labor government has repeatedly sought to have peaceful pro-Palestinian demonstrations banned.

*****

The Albanese government’s Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism, Jillian Segal, a Zionist lobbyist, sought to link the shootings to the large anti-genocide protests, from an initial one at the Sydney Opera House on October 9, 2023, to the mass march, joined by some 300,000 people, across the Sydney Harbour Bridge this August 3.

This rhetoric slanders the hundreds of thousands of people who have joined the Gaza demonstrations against Israeli atrocities and mass murder, and blames the protesters for the shootings. Segal called for even more repressive action by the Labor governments, which have repeatedly denounced the protests and sought to halt them.

Segal’s diatribe matched that of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Overnight he accused the Albanese government of doing nothing to stop the alleged spread of antisemitism in Australia. He said it had “replaced weakness with weakness.”

Netanyahu is a war criminal whose regime has killed more than 60,000 people in Gaza over the past two years, systematically violating international humanitarian law and committing crimes against humanity, backed and protected by the United States and other major capitalist powers. 

*****

Many people in Australia are shocked and distressed by what has happened at Bondi Beach, which is known as a place that attracts tourists and visitors from around the world. This is the worst mass shooting in the country since a mentally ill man killed 35 people at Port Arthur, south of Hobart, in 1996.

But efforts are being made to twist and manipulate these sentiments to demonize opposition to the continuing mass killings, displacement and oppression of Palestinians, and to support police-state measures that will be used more broadly against all forms of political dissent under conditions of staggering social inequality, austerity and US-led war preparations.

Under these conditions, it is essential that workers and young people reject ethnic division and scapegoating, defend Jewish, Islamic and other targeted communities, and oppose the assault on basic democratic rights and the plunge toward war.

Reactionary antagonisms are being generated and magnified by the crisis of global capitalism and imperialist interventions, such as the Gaza genocide and the underlying US drive to dominate the Middle East. The only solution is the building of a unified international working‑class movement for socialism to expropriate the oligarchs and ruling elites that profit from war, repression and division.

3. Two dead and nine injured in mass shooting at Brown University

At least two Brown University students are dead and nine 3others are wounded after a gunman opened fire inside a classroom in the Barus & Holley engineering building late Saturday afternoon.

On Sunday, police detained a “person of interest,” a man in his 20s from Wisconsin, whose identity has been widely reported but not officially confirmed, as the police investigation continues.

According to Providence police, the shooting began during an exam period inside a classroom in the large engineering and physics facility on Brown’s College Hill campus. Witnesses reported a burst of rapid gunfire as the shooter opened the classroom door and fired more than 40 rounds from a 9 mm handgun into students who had no possibility of defending themselves.

Law enforcement officials later stated that two handguns and loaded 30‑round magazines were recovered when the person of interest was taken into custody at a hotel roughly 15 to 20 miles from Providence, indicating preparation for sustained, indiscriminate killing.

*****

Police began receiving 911 calls shortly after 4 p.m. Saturday with reports of an active shooter and multiple victims inside a classroom. Brown’s emergency alert system ordered students and staff to “run, hide, and fight,” locking down the campus and parts of surrounding neighborhoods as terrified students barricaded themselves in labs, libraries and dormitories. 

Providence Police Chief Col. Oscar Perez told reporters that more than 400 law enforcement officers ultimately responded to the scene and that the incident produced a multi-agency investigation that extended through the night and into Sunday.

*****

The person of interest, identified by multiple media outlets as a 24‑year‑old man from Wisconsin, was detained early Sunday at a Hampton Inn in a Rhode Island community outside Providence, after what officials described as intensive overnight investigative work. Federal and local law enforcement used digital and geolocation tools to track the suspect, with FBI units and U.S. marshals assisting in the arrest in a hotel room that had become a temporary refuge for the alleged gunman.

While police have not publicly announced any charges, they have made clear that the individual is being held in connection with the Brown shooting and that further information will be released only as it does not jeopardize the case.

*****

The official reaction to the Brown shooting follows the line of previous campus mass shootings that have become so frequent that they now form a grim catalogue stretching back decades. This list includes:

  • Virginia Tech in 2007, 32 killed across multiple buildings
  • Northern Illinois University in 2008, five killed in a lecture hall
  • The University of Alabama in Huntsville in 2010, three killed during a faculty meeting
  • Oikos University in Oakland, California in 2012, seven dead
  • Santa Monica College in 2013, six killed after the shooter turned a domestic dispute public on campus
  • The University of California, Santa Barbara in 2014, six killed in the college town area
  • Umpqua Community College near Roseburg, Oregon in 2015, nine killed in a writing class
  • The University of Virginia in 2022, three killed on a returning charter bus
  • Michigan State University in 2023, three students killed across two buildings
  • Florida State University in April 2025, two killed and multiple wounded.

Each new atrocity is briefly described as “unthinkable” and “shocking,” as families experience the agony of loss and the event is normalized, training to treat lockdown drills and active-shooter protocols as a permanent feature of academic life.

Brown’s position in the elite Ivy League shows that no sector of higher education is immune from the carnage. Campus shootings have struck institutions ranging from small religious colleges to large public universities and private research institutions, indicating that the phenomenon is not rooted in any type of campus culture but in broader characteristics of American society.

The same government that oversees a vast apparatus of military violence abroad also presides over a domestic landscape in which young people cannot go to class or gather at social events without the ever-present possibility of being shot and killed.

The massacre at Brown University is also one more episode in the larger epidemic of mass shootings in the United States, which has no parallel in any other advanced capitalist country. Year after year, databases compiled by independent monitors and the media record hundreds of incidents in which four or more people are shot, with totals routinely exceeding one mass shooting per day.

*****

Within the mass shooter epidemic, school and campus incidents are especially revealing because they expose the inability of the existing order to guarantee even minimal safety for children and young adults. From Columbine High School in 1999 to Virginia Tech, Sandy Hook, Parkland, Uvalde, Michigan State and now Brown University, a full generation has come of age with the knowledge that death by gunfire is a possibility in the classroom, cafeteria or playground.

The bankruptcy of the capitalist political system is revealed both by what it refuses to address and by what it actively promotes. Successive administrations, Democratic and Republican, have poured trillions into war, surveillance and repression, while presiding over extreme social inequality, precarious employment, student debt and a mental health system gutted by budget cuts and privatization.

4. The backdrop to Putin’s negotiations with Trump: A deepening domestic crisis

Despite the Putin regime’s efforts to hide Russia’s internal contradictions during the war, doing so grows harder each year. Increasing censorship shows how desperately it tries to control public opinion. One of the regime’s main goals is to block access to information that reveals the political and class conflicts in other countries, especially in Europe and the US. 

Thus, the Russian media writes very little about Trump’s efforts to establish a fascist dictatorship in the US, the violent crackdown on immigrants, the military strikes on civilian boats in the Caribbean and Pacific or the domestic policies of the European powers. As a result, Russian workers are prevented from understanding the overall context of the global situation. 

In particular, this also applies to the so-called “peace plan.” Its prospects are, to put it mildly, murky. The propaganda gives the impression of superficial prosperity, that peace is about to be achieved in 24 hours, in a week, etc. These are attempts to blind the working class. In fact, behind this ostentatious negotiation process lies an attempt to strike a deal with the devil for the benefit of Russia’s oligarchs.

The continuation of the war in Ukraine has been increasingly centered on Europe. The main goal of the European imperialist powers is—if not the direct continuation of the war (Ukraine is less and less capable of this due to the crisis of the Zelensky regime and the disintegration of the Ukrainian army)—then an attempt to preserve Ukraine as a military springboard for a future war, when Europe’s armament program is more advanced. 

The regime, eager to preserve the illusion of social stability, may accept a more disadvantageous deal, provoking new tensions within the Russian oligarchy. The situation as a whole is becoming increasingly volatile and explosive.

*****

The transition from stagflation to recession is a telling example of how the Putin regime’s policy of maneuvering has failed to address the problems facing Russian capitalism. The state injections into the economy in 2022-2023 could not save it from the long-term consequences of sanctions and the war in Ukraine. The Central Bank’s policy failed to reduce inflation to target levels due to the decline of the rest of the economy.

The vicious circle is now closed. It is no longer a matter of the Putin regime’s individual maneuvers but of its political fate. Hence the shift of the Putin regime towards tightening tax policy, censorship and the repressive apparatus. The state seeks to suppress the class struggle, and to avoid that it associates itself with the class struggle in Europe and the US.

The fear of a social explosion and divisions within the oligarchy under the pressure of the worsening economic crisis are the principal reasons why Putin is so eager to negotiate a deal. But whatever may be agreed upon, it will not be a solution to the structural crisis of Russian capitalism and the imperialist efforts to carve up the entire former Soviet Union to bring its resources under the direct control of the imperialist powers.

It should be noted that, even on the most elementary level, the Kremlin is completely unprepared for a further escalation of the war and its impact on the general population. In particular, regions close to the front line have virtually no bomb shelters. It should be noted that dozens and sometimes even hundreds of Ukrainian drones are intercepted on Russian territory each day, and several people have been killed in Russian regions by Ukrainian drone strikes in recent weeks.

The Putin regime initially invaded Ukraine, believing that it could secure a quick victory in order to strike a deal with NATO. Clearly, it underestimated the enormous amount of support provided to Ukraine by the US and the European imperialist powers. As a result, 150,000 Russian troops, who were supposed to complete a “special military operation” back in 2022, found themselves facing a real war. The war dragged on and took on the character of a war of position, reminiscent of World War I, with new methods of destroying each other: drones, missiles and other military equipment. 

Today, we are indeed at a turning point. The initial resources that the parties had at their disposal have practically dried up. This is pushing them towards negotiations. But it would be wrong to view these negotiations outside their broader international context.

The Putin regime invaded Ukraine in response to the systematic encirclement of Russia by the imperialist powers since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 and, specifically, the 2014 coup in Ukraine. But this encirclement itself has deep objective roots. The imperialist powers, driven by a profound crisis of world capitalism, are vying for full control over a territory from which they have been cut off since the 1917 Revolution and which they failed to bring under their direct control even after the destruction of the Soviet Union by the Stalinist bureaucracy.

US imperialism, in particular, is simultaneously preparing for war against China and seeking to establish its direct control over Latin America. The war in Ukraine is only one manifestation of this broader imperialist explosion. In this context, any deal to settle the war in Ukraine would mark only a shift of the theater of war on a global level without resolving any of the deeper tendencies that have led to the war in the first place.

5. Trump says US will start ground attacks “soon” as US surges military assets near Venezuela

Trump’s threat Friday followed his declaration earlier in the week that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s “days are numbered.” When asked whether he would send ground troops into Venezuela, he refused to rule it out. The Wall Street Journal editorial board characterized Trump’s actions as a pledge to carry out regime change, writing that Trump is now “obliged to follow through” on his commitment to oust Maduro.

*****

The US media is actively promoting regime change in Venezuela. In a fawning interview on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, María Corina Machado—the Venezuelan opposition figure who recently fled the country under US military protection to collect a Nobel Peace Prize in Norway—openly called for the overthrow of the Maduro government and praised Trump’s military build-up.

“I absolutely support President Trump’s strategy,” Machado declared. “We, the Venezuelan people, are very grateful to him and to his administration, because I believe he is a champion of freedom in this hemisphere.”

When asked whether she would welcome US military action in Venezuela, Machado replied: “I will welcome more and more pressure so that Maduro understands that he has to go, that his time is over.”

Machado dedicated her Nobel Peace Prize to Trump and stated that she believes “the regime has its days numbered.” She has previously outlined a $1.7 trillion privatization plan for Venezuela’s economy.

The Democratic Party has refused to condemn Trump’s moves toward regime change in Latin America. Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, appeared on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. When host Martha Raddatz asked Warner “do you agree” with Trump’s “effort to oust the dictator” Maduro, Warner, replied, “I agree that the Venezuelan people want Maduro gone.”

Warner also justified the administration’s massacres of civilians on boats. Since September, US forces have killed at least 87 people in drone and missile strikes on vessels the administration claims are smuggling drugs. Democratic Representative Jim Himes of Connecticut said last weekend on “Face the Nation” that attacking survivors of destroyed boats “is a violation of the laws of war.”

Yet Warner declared that he is “reluctant to kind of reach the conclusion that some of my colleagues have that this was an illegal strike.”

*****

The administration’s claim that it is combating drug trafficking is a transparent fraud. Trump has threatened Colombian President Gustavo Petro, declaring “Petro is next”—making clear that the campaign extends to any Latin American government that fails to submit to Washington’s dictates.

The administration is also preparing an economic blockade of Venezuela. The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that the threat of further tanker seizures has already “paralyzed tanker traffic in and out of Venezuela.” On Thursday, a dozen ships waited outside Venezuela’s main oil port, but none moved to load crude. A Venezuelan port official told the Journal that employees around the country are calling in sick or skipping work as tensions escalate.

The tanker seized Wednesday was carrying roughly $80 million of oil, equivalent to about 5 percent of what Venezuela spends monthly on imported goods, “raising the prospect of shortages.” The Journal noted that the seizure “raises an existential crisis for a regime that runs on oil revenue.”

*****

The military buildup must be understood in the context of the administration’s National Security Strategy, which establishes the goal of “restoring American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere” while denying China “the ability to position forces or other threatening capabilities” in the region. Latin America is being targeted as a captive source of resources and a power base for US imperialism’s escalating confrontation with China.

6. United States: DHS claims over 400 taken as ICE agents continue lawless kidnapping campaign in Minnesota

In their latest update, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claimed that over 400 people have been taken in ongoing kidnapping operations led by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in the Minneapolis, Minnesota area.

As has been the case throughout the United States, federal immigration agents are not conducting targeted operations focused on alleged “criminals” but are instead going on fishing expeditions, targeting workers on the job in public settings.

In one of several flashpoints in the last week between ICE agents and local community members, this past Saturday, dozens of people responded to ICE agents attempting to kidnap construction workers building homes in Chanhassen, Minnesota, a city located about 15 miles southwest of Minneapolis. The two workers were trapped on the roof for hours leading one of them to be hospitalized.

In a video livestreamed on Facebook, dozens of workers and residents are seen confronting ICE agents who have surrounded a home currently under construction. Under sub-freezing temperatures and through bundled jackets, anti-ICE protesters cursed the agents and lent their support to two workers trapped on the roof. One man is heard in the video telling the Gestapo, “You are a fucking monster, you and all you people are fucking monsters. Putting people in concentration camps for being brown.”

One of the masked ICE agents replied to the man, “You don’t have to be like that,” which drew the quick retort, “No! You don’t have to be here!” 

Another woman told agents the workers, “They are our community. They are a part of us.” She added, “Thank you for building our houses! Thank you!”

Another man questioned the agents, “What crime did they do? You guys can’t tell us. You are not going after the real criminals.”

*****

Throughout the entire confrontation ICE agents rotated in and out of their warm vehicles while local police provided crowd control, protecting the ICE agents while at the same time preventing community members from providing aid to the trapped workers.

While the workers trapped by ICE on Saturday appeared to be Hispanic, the Trump administration has made clear that Somalis, regardless of immigration status, are being deliberately targeted by the government. For over two weeks, President Donald Trump and other top officials in his administration, have used racist and genocidal language to slander all people of Somali heritage, particularly those in Minneapolis-St. Paul, the largest concentration of Somali-Americans in the US.

Speaking from the White House on Friday, Trump said of Somalis, “they don’t have a country, all they do is kill each other.” Referring to Minnesota Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, a frequent target of Trump and the fascists due to her Somali heritage and Muslim faith, Trump said, “There is nothing worse than a person who comes in and does nothing but bitch. And comes from a place where she shouldn’t be telling us what to do.”

That same day, on one of his many Fox News appearances in the last week, fascist White House adviser Stephen Miller accused the entire “Somali community” of engaging in “massive, endemic, systemic fraud against American taxpayers for years.” Miller claimed that “90 percent” of Somali households with children “were on federal welfare, the real number is probably 100 percent.”

Encouraged by the fascists in the White House, immigration agents in Minnesota have been assaulting and kidnapping Somali Americans. On December 9, 20-year-old Somali-American citizen Mubashir was assaulted by ICE agents after he stepped outside during his lunch break while at work. In security footage, agents are seen grabbing and pulling on Mubashir for roughly a minute. Soon, members of the community come into frame and begin filming the ICE agents and blowing whistles.

The ICE thugs decide to drag Mubashir out into the street. Before shoving the handcuffed citizen into the back of their SUV with black tinted windows, one of the ICE thugs is seen putting Mubashir in a headlock and forcing him to the ground in the snow.

Speaking at press conference this past Wednesday, Mubashir said he told agents he was a US citizen and repeatedly asked what was going on. The agents, “didn’t seem to care.” Mubashir was not accused of any crime before ICE agents attacked him.

*****

After he was taken into ICE custody, agents demanded Mubashir allow them to photograph and scan his face, which he refused. Mubashir said he repeatedly offered the agents multiple ways to verify his citizenship, including providing his name, date of birth and a photo of his passport. The agents eventually accepted the fact he was a US citizen at which point Mubashir asked them, “‘Can you take me back to where you picked me up from?’ They said ‘No, you have to walk in the snow.’”

*****

In an interview that aired over the weekend, Rep. [Ilhan] Omar revealed that her son, an American citizen was also recently targeted by ICE. This past Friday, Omar sent a letter to DHS accusing the agency of engaging in “blatant racial profiling” and an “egregious level of unnecessary force.”

In the interview, Omar detailed how her son has already had two separate interactions with ICE agents. The first occurred last week when agents menaced a restaurant her 20-year-old frequently eats at, along with other members of the community. Omar said the agents came into the restaurant and then left.

Omar then revealed that roughly a week later, on Saturday, December 13, her son was pulled over by ICE after stopping at Target. Omar said agents briefly held him, but that “once he was able to produce his passport ID they did let him go.”

In response to Trump’s attacks on her, her family and other Somalis, Omar said Trump was “creepy” and accused him of scapegoating the community to “deflect from the failures of his presidency.”

Omar said Trump, “doesn’t want to answer for the possible war crimes of shooting down those boats in the Caribbean. He does not want any conversations about releasing the Epstein files, he wants to continue to protect pedophiles.”

The Democratic congresswoman did not propose any concrete actions to oppose ICE operations or remove Trump from the White House. In an op-ed published Saturday by MS Now, Omar detailed some of the many crimes ICE agents have conducted but did not call for any criminal investigations, much less a mass political struggle to take down the Trump government.

7. Anheuser-Busch to close 3 breweries in the US, affecting hundreds of jobs

Anheuser-Busch (AB), America’s largest brewing company, has announced plans to close three facilities across the country. AB will shut down the 50-year-old complex at Fairfield in the San Francisco area, cutting 238 jobs; its Merrimack, New Hampshire plant, cutting 124 jobs; and its its 75-year-old facility in Newark, New Jersey will be sold to the Goodman Group to be repurposed for industrial manufacturing and logistics, affecting over 110 employees.

Together, around 475 workers will be affected.

Beyond the immediate loss of jobs there will be ripple effects to other industries. The workforce development board for Fairfield stated that the brewery closure will cut more than $10 million in tax revenue to the city and contribute to an additional 306 job losses. Furthermore, as the largest water user in the city, local officials expect that the closure of the plant will disrupt water utility finances and result in higher rates for the rest of the community.

These brewery closures come as nationwide job losses for the year surge past 1.2 million in total. The holidays have seen no letup in the jobs massacre, three in 10 companies are planning layoffs before the new year, according to one poll. The capitalist class is using emerging artificial intelligence technology to lay off vast sections of the workforce, in an attempt to pay for unsustainable levels of debt and prop up financial bubbles by intensifying exploitation of the working class.

*****

AB InBev is seeking to pivot to emerging and developing markets, particularly in Latin America, Africa and China where it can leverage its market dominance to fuel growth. In developed markets such as North America and Europe, AB InBev is seeking to consolidate and streamline its infrastructure to adapt to trends of reduced alcohol consumption, especially among young people, and preferences for “beyond beer” products like hard seltzer and non-alcoholic drinks that are growing in sales.

Part of this strategy is the turn to “premiumization,” the cooling down of cheap, mass market beers like AB’s flagship Budweiser brands and increased focus on premium brands like Michelob Ultra. AB InBev plans to increase Michelob Ultra production at its Van Nuys facility in Los Angeles. Van Nuys is the target of millions of dollars in investment to increase production and absorb much of the capacity from Fairfield.

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AB InBev still posted profits in the billions this year, but has seen reduced profitability compared to recent years. By shedding what it deems to be suboptimal facilities, paired with modernization of its larger ones, AB InBev hopes to increase profitability by squeezing out profit growth and chasing higher yield markets. This will shift the cost of the transition onto workers who will either lose their jobs or be forced to move across the country with little to no guarantee of the quality of the job that awaits them.

Workers at AB InBev must fight against these closures and the near certainty of more to come. This fight will take place against both management and the Teamsters bureaucracy, which is doing nothing to fight layoffs.

To oppose brewery closures and job cuts workers must organize independently of the union apparatus, building rank-and-file committees to take matters into their own hands and return power to the shop floor. This struggle must connect with other sectors of workers facing layoffs in a global movement. Workers should contact AB InBev workers across the the company’s global footprint, to prepare for a worldwide counter offensive against the destruction of jobs and living conditions.

8. The anti–public health agenda and the resurgence of measles in America

The United States is experiencing its most severe measles outbreak in over 30 years, exposing the consequences of a sustained assault on public health. The rapid rise in cases in South Carolina, following earlier explosive outbreaks in Texas, threatens to end the country’s 25-year status of measles elimination—a milestone achieved in 2000 through universal vaccination.

As of mid-December 2025, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed 1,912 measles cases nationwide. This surpasses the peak of the 2019 outbreak and represents a staggering 571 percent increase over 2024 totals. While the resurgence is concentrated in areas where vaccination rates have sharply declined, its implications are national: the reestablishment of endemic measles in the United States would represent a historic public health failure.

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At its core, the South Carolina crisis is driven by widening immunity gaps. Measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccination coverage among students fell from 96 percent in 2020 to 93.5 percent in the 2024-2025 school year, below the critical 95 percent threshold required to prevent sustained transmission. Of 111 cases reported through December 9, 105, or 95 percent, occurred in unvaccinated individuals.

Children have borne the brunt of the outbreak. Seventy-five cases, or 60 percent, involved school-aged children between five and 17 years old, highlighting the central role schools play in amplifying transmission when vaccination rates fall. This pattern mirrors what has been observed repeatedly during COVID-19 and seasonal influenza waves, where policy decisions sacrificed children’s health to political expediency.

Despite active transmission, public health efforts to increase vaccination have met stiff resistance. Mobile vaccination clinics deployed by the state administered only a small number of doses, a failure Dr. Bell attributed directly to entrenched vaccine hesitancy. This hesitancy is not simply a matter of individual choice but the product of years of systematic misinformation, right-wing anti-vaccine campaigns and the erosion of trust in public health institutions.

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The return of measles is especially tragic because it is entirely preventable. The vaccine, developed and improved in the 1960s, is safe, effective and has saved millions of lives globally. What is unfolding is the deliberate assault on science by a social and political system that subordinates public health to ideology, austerity, and authoritarian impulses.

As with COVID-19, the danger lies not solely in the pathogen itself but in the social conditions that allow it to spread unchecked. The resurgence of measles is a warning. Unless the anti-public health trajectory is halted and reversed, measles will not be the last disease to reclaim territory once secured by decades of collective scientific and social progress.

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The Trump administration, in its rampage against science, represents a qualitative development, but in its assault on public health, as its assault on social programs and democratic rights, it is acting on behalf of the capitalist oligarchy. And it is building on decades of policy, under both Democrats and Republicans, to systematically dismantle protections against illness. The Biden administration’s “let it rip” policy during the pandemic—ending masking, testing and even basic data reporting—paved the way for the further normalization of mass infection and death. 

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The tools to prevent catastrophe exist. The science exists. The resources exist. Indeed, Socialism AI represents the opposite trajectory. It uses the most advanced technologies to arm workers and youth with the knowledge and scientific understanding necessary to fight capitalist exploitation and its consequences. It is a powerful tool for building a global movement to take control of society out of the hands of the oligarchy and place it into the hands of the working class.

What is required is the development of a mass revolutionary movement of the working class, aimed at ending a social order that subordinates life to profit—and building a socialist society that places public health, human need and scientific progress at its foundation.

9. United States: Postal employees say coworker died on the job at Morgan PDC in Midtown Manhattan

A 28-year postal worker died overnight in early December at the Morgan Processing and Distribution Center (Morgan P&DC) in New York City while working near an Automated Package Processing System (APPS) machine, multiple workers at the facility have told the WSWS. At the time of writing, neither the United States Postal Service nor the postal unions have issued any public statement acknowledging the worker’s death or explaining the circumstances surrounding it.

Workers told the World Socialist Web Site that the death occurred on Tour 1, the overnight shift, sometime around 2:30 a.m. The worker’s name has not been publicly released. Conflicting accounts circulated among workers as to whether the death was caused by a heart attack or an aneurysm, underscoring the absence of any transparent investigation or communication.

The Morgan Processing and Distribution Center is a major USPS facility serving the New York metropolitan area, including Wall Street and surrounding financial districts. Despite the size and strategic importance of the facility, workers report that the death was not formally announced, no meeting was held and operations continued as usual.

The death at Morgan follows a series of recent fatalities at USPS facilities across the country. On November 8, maintenance mechanic Nick Acker was killed inside a mail sorting machine at the Detroit Network Distribution Center in Allen Park, Michigan. His body was not found for another eight hours. One week later, Russell Scruggs, Jr., a mail handler assistant, died after falling and hitting his head at the Palmetto Processing and Distribution Center in Georgia. In each case, union officials have deferred to management-led or OSHA investigations, which will inevitably lead to whitewashes.

In response, the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee has launched its own independent inquiry. In a statement last week urging workers to come forward with testimony, the committee explained that the inquiry “will collect testimonies, inspect machine lockout/tagout records, document the bypassing of safety features, obtain grievance histories and witness statements, and preserve photographic and video evidence.

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Workers report they were given no explanation of what happened, no opportunity to ask questions, and no acknowledgment of the death beyond informal word of mouth. “The first thing the union does,” one worker said, “is take people off the clock. That’s the first thing they care about. It’s like we’re just numbers.”

Neither the American Postal Workers Union (APWU) nor the National Postal Mail Handlers Union (NPMHU) has issued a statement regarding the death at the Morgan facility. This silence mirrors the response to recent deaths in Michigan and Georgia, where union officials called for investigations to be handled by USPS management and OSHA, institutions workers say have repeatedly failed to protect them.

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The limited information currently available about the death at the Morgan facility—no confirmed name, no public timeline, no medical findings and no explanation of working conditions—raises urgent unanswered questions. Why did a postal worker with nearly three decades of service die overnight near an APPS operation? What conditions prevailed on the shop floor that night? What emergency protocols were in place? And why have postal workers been left to piece together the facts themselves?

10. United States: GM moves to permanently lay off 1,145 workers at Factory Zero amid record profits and UAW silence

Unless it is halted by collective action by workers themselves, the coming week could be the last for 1,145 workers at the General Motors Factory Zero assembly plant in Detroit. The automaker plans to slash production to a single shift beginning January 5, 2026. The permanent layoffs are being imposed on the eve of the holiday shutdown, which runs from December 24 through January 4, leaving workers to face unemployment and the loss of healthcare during the most financially precarious time of the year.

The job cuts follow a brutal year in which Factory Zero workers were subjected to extreme levels of overtime, routinely working between 72 and 80 hours a week for much of 2024. These conditions were followed by irregular temporary layoffs, creating a cycle of exhaustion and insecurity. Both shifts were placed on temporary layoff until November 24, 2025, before GM announced the move to permanently eliminate more than 1,000 jobs.

The United Auto Workers bureaucracy has not even made a pretense of opposing the mass layoffs, which will only deepen the social crisis in the city which houses the headquarters of both GM and the UAW. The official poverty rate in the Motor City is already 35 percent, with 51 percent of children living in poverty, according to the census report.

In the statement “Mobilize to stop GM layoffs at Factory Zero in Detroit—Build rank-and-file committees,” the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) has called on workers to form independent committees capable of organizing a real fight, unifying workers across plants and borders and breaking out of the isolation imposed by the union bureaucracy. Only the mass, collective action by workers can stop the layoffs and fight for the right to secure, good-paying jobs for all.

The layoffs are not the result of any financial losses for GM. In October, the company raised its projected 2025 net profits to between $12 billion and $13 billion, up from a prior estimate of $10 billion to $12.5 billion. This followed record profits of $14.9 billion in 2024. GM stock has risen approximately 55 percent over the past year.

According to an investor note published December 12 on the financial website Trevis, “In the last decade, General Motors (GM) stock has returned $45 [billion] back to its shareholders through cold, hard cash via dividends and buybacks.” This represents 58.4 percent of GM’s current market capitalization—more than double the median payout ratio for companies listed on the S&P 500.

GM is also indefinitely laying off 550 workers at the Lordstown, Ohio Ultium Cells battery plant. An additional 850 workers there will be placed on temporary layoff effective January 5. And 710 workers will be temporarily laid off at the Spring Hill, Tennessee Ultium Cells battery plant beginning the same day.

Hundreds of workers at the nearby Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn, Michigan, also remain on layoff, with company executives considering whether to scrap the F-150 Lightning EV pickup truck altogether.

This is part of a global jobs massacre in the auto industry. VW, Bosch, ZF and other German auto and auto parts companies have announced 50,000 job cuts in the first 10 months of 2025 alone.

Together, these cuts expose the fraudulent character of the claims by the automakers and the UAW that the electric vehicle transition would bring stable, high-quality jobs.

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Anger over the union’s complicity is widespread. A veteran worker at the Stellantis Toledo Assembly Plant told the WSWS, “The union just doesn’t back the people. We had this ‘Stand Up’ strike [in 2023], and Jeep was one of the few plants that were called out. That was stupid. We should all have been out at the same time.

“The union gives in to the company so much. There’s never a 40-hour week. It’s like my life is Jeep. You can’t plan anything for your family. We’ve got more than 1,000 guys on layoff, and they don’t want to go back to three shifts. That’s why we’re working all these hours, and guys are getting hurt.

“When I first hired in there in the late 1990s the union was still strong. But, man, how things have changed.” He voted against the 2009 concessions, explaining, “I wasn’t going to give up anything.

“I pay $100 to the UAW every month,” he said. “I don’t call it union dues anymore. I call it medical insurance. That’s the way you have to look at it, because it’s gotten so bad, and it’s just going to get worse.”

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Hundreds of thousands of workers have viewed World Socialist Web Site featuring Factory Zero workers, reflecting the depth of opposition. Online comments echo the same concerns. One worker wrote on Reddit, “GM is going to transfer the laid off workers to St. Louis or Texas and 90% will decline, resulting in being fired and disqualified from unemployment.” 

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The layoffs at Factory Zero are the predictable outcome of capitalist restructuring driven by investor demands, automation and profit maximization. Under capitalism, workers’ livelihoods are subordinated entirely to Wall Street.

The role of the UAW apparatus has been to facilitate this process. By refusing to mobilize the membership and by backing nationalist policies that divide workers by country and plant, the bureaucracy has functioned as an arm of corporate management.

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The fight to defend jobs at Factory Zero raises fundamental political questions. It is not simply a dispute with one company but a confrontation with the capitalist system itself that sacrifices workers’ lives and livelihoods for private profit. The transformation of the auto industry—automation, EV production and technological change—must be placed under democratic workers’ control and reorganized to meet social needs, not the further enrichment of wealthy shareholders.

The impending layoffs at Factory Zero are a warning. They demonstrate that without independent organization and collective action workers will continue to pay the price for the capitalist crisis. The growing anger among autoworkers points to the possibility of a broader movement—one that links the defense of jobs to the fight for political independence of the working class and the reorganization of society on socialist foundations.

11. Two longstanding Sri Lankan Trotskyists die

 Leela Balasuritya and R.M. Gunathilake

It is with great sadness that the Socialist Equality Party reports that two longstanding party comrades died on Saturday. We pay tribute to their intransigent fight over decades for the perspective of Trotskyism in the Sri Lankan working class. We extend our condolences to their family members.

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Comrade Leela Balasuriya passed away on Saturday morning, December 13, after losing consciousness. She had been bedridden for three months after a fall caused by a sudden complication due to high blood pressure. She was from Dompe, 32 kilometres from Colombo. Her funeral took place yesterday. 

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Leela joined the Revolutionary Communist League (RCL), the forerunner of the SEP, in 1974 and devoted herself to party work until she was prevented from doing so over the past six months because of her illness. She was a government employee who lost her job when the right-wing United National Party (UNP) government sacked 100,000 public sector workers to crush the 1980 general strike.

She played a significant role in the RCL’s political struggle against the 1970–1977 coalition government led by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), that included the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Stalinist Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL). She was prominent in opposing the bureaucratic leadership of the All Ceylon Government Clerical Employees Union, which was dominated by CPSL Stalinists. 

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Comrade R.M. Gunathilake also died on Saturday after suffering from chronic illnesses for some time, no doubt compounded a lifetime of the difficult conditions facing workers in Sri Lanka. 

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Gunathilake joined the RCL in 1970, just two years after the party was formed. He was a Ceylon Transport Board worker and faced witch hunts instigated by LSSP trade union leaders for seeking to mobilise opposition against the austerity policies of the SLFP-led coalition government. Gunathilake was a longstanding Central Committee member of the RCL/SEP.

Gunathilake was also among the 100,000 public sector employees sacked by the UNP government in its repression of the July 1980 general strike. He was reinstated after 14 years.

12. Luca Guadagnino’s After the Hunt: Zero net displacement on a flat plane

So, back and forth, back and forth, sometimes interestingly, sometimes not. Nobody’s right, nobody’s wrong. “Everyone has his reasons.” And everyone comes across as somewhat shabby, selfish, underhanded. After the Hunt apparently owes its title to a remark attributed to Bismarck, “There is never as much lying as before an election, during a war and after a hunt.” It’s odd for filmmakers to choose such a cynical title, which suggests we are going to watch liars tell lies for two hours.

#MeToo wasn’t primarily about who was making things up and who wasn’t. Nor was it about the basic right of women not to be assaulted in the workplace, classroom or anywhere else. It was an eruption in the upper middle class, manipulated by the Democratic Party, the New York Times, etc., as a diversion in 2017 from a genuinely left-wing movement against Donald Trump and, simultaneously, as a means for already privileged layers to settle professional scores and reorganize the executive suite (or staffroom), to gain privileges and milk positions.

Furthermore, it should be recognized by now that #MeToo’s systematic attacks on due process and the presumption of innocence, and its resorting to anonymous sources and unproven allegations to end careers, only smoothed the path for the extreme right in its assault on elementary constitutional rights.

13. Aggressive use by Australian Tax Office of private debt collectors

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) has referred more than 355,000 people to private debt collector Recoveriescorp since January 2024, the Guardian recently revealed. Among those targeted are low-income workers and welfare recipients with modest tax debts.

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During the first years of the COVID-19 pandemic, amid social upheaval and mass unemployment, the ATO paused some of its debt collection activities. Although the cost-of-living crisis has only worsened, since the 2022–2023 financial year the ATO has not only reinstated pre-existing debt-recovery measures, but stepped up its aggressive pursuit of debt.

As part of this, the ATO has awarded Recoveriescorp some $42.8 million in contracts since 2022, according to the Guardian. Initially these were for Recoveriescorp staff to work within the framework of the ATO, but, since 2024, debts have been directly handed over to the private collector.

A 2024 Guardian investigation exposed the insidious methods of collectors like Recoveriescorp: constant phone calls, pressure on friends and family members, and even direct threats. One victim said he received incessant phone calls—sometimes several a day—from Recoveriescorp over a $1,358 ambulance bill for an incident that had left him unable to walk for a month, let alone work.

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The ATO’s crackdown on working-class individuals and small businesses is occurring amid a historic cost-of-living crisis. A recent national survey shows a long-term decline in living and working conditions. Between 2019 and 2023, rents rose by 11.5 percent. Over the past decade, average house rents have soared by nearly 60 percent. 

The ATO’s heavy-handed tactics echo the infamous Robodebt scandal. Introduced in 2016 by the federal Liberal-National government, Robodebt used automated calculations to allege welfare “overpayments” and issued 900,000 debt notices by November 2019. Recipients were threatened with penalties and even jail if they failed to repay supposed debts.

Despite the exposure of the illegal character of Robodebt, governments have continued to use similar automated mechanisms to target welfare recipients and low-income workers. In 2022, the World Socialist Web Site reported that state debt collection agency Revenue NSW had—since 2016—unlawfully used automated systems to forcibly extract funds from disadvantaged working-class individuals. Banks were directed to identify and drain accounts to satisfy debts, often leaving people with a zero balance. 

While working-class Australians and struggling small businesses face aggressive debt collection, major corporations receive a starkly different treatment. In late 2024, the ATO revealed that more than 1,200 large companies pay no tax in Australia. Its latest corporate transparency report confirmed that multinational giants—including Netflix, Apple, Microsoft and Optus—continue to pay little or no income tax. Brazilian-owned JBS Global Meat Holdings earned $19.7 billion in Australia in 2023–24 but paid no tax.

The ATO’s punitive measures against ordinary Australians are part of a broader assault on the working class, intensifying under the Albanese Labor government. Since Labor came to power in 2022, wages have nominally increased by 11.5 percent, while official inflation figures show a 13.9 percent rise in the cost of living. The cost of housing, however, has risen by more than a third, while electricity bills have increased at an even faster rate. This will be exacerbated by Labor’s decision to scrap household energy rebates from December 31. 

Multiple rounds of tax changes by the federal government, including the $300 billion “Stage 3” tax cuts, have favored the wealthy, handing tens of thousands of dollars to individuals in the richest layers of society, while students, jobseekers, and low-income workers received meager reductions, far outweighed by the soaring cost of living.

Simultaneously, Labor governments at federal and state level have diverted billions of dollars away from education, housing, health, and welfare to fund corporate subsidies and pay for a massive military expansion in preparation for a US-led war against China.

The ATO’s use of private collectors, known for their aggressive tactics, against individuals with small debts, is a stark expression of how the working class is being forced to pay for the deepening crisis of capitalism. Workers are being hit with rising financial stress, declining living standards and an escalating assault on their basic rights, while corporations and the wealthy pay little or no tax on their vast profits.

14. Stellantis relies on unions to set pay scales based on nationality at Serbian plant

Under conditions of deepening crisis in the European auto industry, Stellantis has constructed a multi-tier workforce in the Republic of Serbia explicitly organized by nationality, residency and legal jurisdiction. This regime has been established not in opposition to the unions in Serbia, Italy and elsewhere but with their active collaboration. This labor policy concentrates in a single workplace the broader global strategy of driving wages to the bottom by pitting workers of different nationalities against one another.

At the center of the operation is the Kragujevac plant, formerly the Zastava factory, then Fiat Chrysler, now Stellantis. The facility produces the electric and hybrid Grande Panda as well as the Citröen New C3. The factory employs roughly 1,000 workers drawn from multiple countries, each layer paid according to different contracts, laws and currencies.

Before the breakup of Yugoslavia, Kragujevac was a major hub for heavy industry, cars, weapons and machinery, employing tens of thousands. Although the city remains an industrial center, workers have suffered a massive decline in the living standards and working conditions since the collapse of Yugoslavia and subsequent privatizations.

Stellantis’ initial wage offer to local Serbian workers reportedly stood at approximately €597 (US$700) per month. Even in Serbia, where average wages are lower than in Western Europe, this level is inadequate. Living costs (housing, food, utilities and transportation) have risen sharply in recent years, driven by inflation and Serbia’s integration into global markets. For workers in Kragujevac, these wages barely cover basic necessities, leaving no margin for savings, family support or emergencies.

The sharp decline in the social position of the working class was presented as the unavoidable price of “competitiveness,” with the threat that production would otherwise be curtailed or relocated. The union apparatus accepts this framework, treating poverty pay as a given rather than a point of struggle.

In August, Stellantis escalated this policy by recruiting hundreds of workers from Morocco, Algeria, Nepal, India and Poland to work in its Kragujevac plant. In October, this was supplemented with another 200 foreign workers. These workers were hired through agencies and often had to pay between US$300 and US$800 simply for the chance to obtain the job, a form of legalized extortion that binds them to the employer through debt.

Many of these workers receive far less than Serbian workers. Nepalese workers reportedly earn as little as €300 (US$350) per month. They are housed in controlled accommodations, dependent on the employer and intermediaries, and often isolated by language barriers. This is the most brutal layer of the wage pyramid, designed to exert downward pressure on all others.

The unions have raised no principled opposition to this system. There has been no demand for equal pay for equal work, no call for unified action, and no exposure of the agency system as a mechanism of super-exploitation.

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Crucially, Italian workers are not celebrating the fact that they earn more than their Serbian, Moroccan or Nepalese colleagues. On the contrary, they are acutely aware of the injustice. One worker told RAI tv network that when he saw a Serbian worker’s paycheck, “my heart cried out.” Another said that the difference in compensation “causes damage,” referring to resentment and division created by this, which undermines solidarity on the shop floor.

Italian workers understand that their higher wages are not a gift from Stellantis but the result of legal constraints the company is attempting to evade or dismantle. Despite the treachery of the Italian union bureaucracy, the efforts by the right-wing Meloni government to eliminate such legal restraints has been slowed by worker militancy and popular resistance. So Stellantis simply circumvents current laws by offering temporary jobs abroad, where it can experiment with lower standards and fragmented contracts.

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In Serbia, the Confederation of Autonomous Trade Unions of Serbia (SSSS) plays a parallel role. As the heir to the Stalinist structures of the Yugoslav state, it has long acted as a stabilizing and collaborationist force. During mass privatizations, factory closures and the influx of foreign direct investment, including Fiat/Stellantis in Kragujevac, it accepted low-wage competitiveness as Serbia’s “development” model.

At the Kragujevac plant specifically, the SSSS-affiliated union is the recognized bargaining partner. It accepted extremely low base wages under the guise of securing production and did not oppose massive state subsidies, wage stagnation or the introduction of de facto wage tiers. Despite meetings with Italian unions in October, it never advanced a demand for international wage parity or joint action across national lines.

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The union bureaucracies have no intention of waging a struggle against the governments and corporations forcing workers to migrate. Migrant workers are subjected to prejudice and attacks in host countries, while artificial divisions are created between nationality and wage levels. This, of course, is immensely profitable for the corporations.

The Kragujevac experience demonstrates why workers must build new organs of struggle: rank-and-file committees independent of the trade unions and political parties of capital. American Stellantis workers, like their counterparts in Europe and Asia, have endured decades of plant closures, mass layoffs, two-tier wage systems, layoffs and the systematic dismantling of what remained of the postwar boom.

These attacks were imposed with its active participation of the United Auto Workers bureaucracy, whose corruption scandal exposed the union as an arm of corporate management and the state. US workers confront the same essential reality as those in Kragujevac: a global corporate system that treats workers as wage slaves for exploitation and profit.

The way forward lies in the development of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC), uniting Serbian, Italian, Moroccan, Nepalese, American and all Stellantis workers on the basis of common class interests. The struggle is not against one company alone but against an entire profit system that depends on wage suppression, forced migration and national divisions. Only through conscious international unity and independent organization can workers oppose the race to the bottom imposed by global capital and assert their collective social power.

15. Uncontrolled global warming causes devastating storms and floods

If there were any doubt that climate change is real and having a devastating impact on millions of people, this year’s hurricane season should put that doubt to rest. Only those with a powerful material interest in doing so will continue denying  the reality, along with those who have fallen victim to the ensuing right-wing, anti-science propaganda.

Three Category 5 hurricanes were generated in the Atlantic alone, only the second time this has happened in recorded history. These included Hurricane Melissa, which ravaged Jamaica, Hispaniola and Cuba, plus hurricanes Erin and Humberto. In the Pacific basin, two major typhoons struck the Philippines in a week and cyclone Ditwah devastated Sri Lanka. (Note: similar cyclonic storms in different regions are known under a variety of names: typhoons in Asia, hurricanes in the Atlantic and tropical cyclones in the Indian and Pacific Oceans). 

What is particularly remarkable is their intensity in both wind speed and quantity of rainfall. 

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It is clear that the rise in extreme weather is the direct result of global warming due to the release of greenhouse gases caused primarily by the burning of fossil fuels. As the oceans warm, more water vapor is released into the atmosphere. This provides both increased energy driving the storm and a greater supply of moisture which is subsequently released as rain, thus increasing the storm’s impact. This link has been identified in numerous scientific studies, for example, “Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change Assessment: Part II: Projected Response to Anthropogenic Warming” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, March 01, 2020, Vol. 101, Issue 3). 

The extreme weather conditions caused by climate change are not only evident in the intensification of tropical cyclones but also in rainfall from non-cyclonic storms. Scientific studies have found that for each degree C. of global warming, the quantity of rain from a storm will increase by 14 to 21 percent. The earth has already experienced a rise of 1.55 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels last year and this will continue unless determined measures are undertaken. The devastating effects are already evident.

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Interior areas, not adjacent to ocean coastlines, are also being affected by enhanced rainfall due to global warming. For example, the flash flooding in Ingram, Texas early in July, during which the Guadalupe River rose 31 feet in 90 minutes, took nearly 300 lives, confirmed dead or missing. This event was not unforeseen. Indeed, eight years before the disaster, the county’s application for a federal grant to build a flood warning system had been rejected by the first Trump administration. This was by no means an isolated incident. One study found that extreme rainfall events in the United States could become three times more likely and up to 20 percent more severe within the next 45 years.  

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n addition, to torrential rainfall and high winds, storms near coastal areas can cause tidal surges, especially if the storm’s arrival coincides with lunar high tide. This is further exacerbated by sea level rise, due to glacial and continental ice sheet melting, also a consequence of global warming. 

Major urban areas near shorelines are of especial concern due to high population density, sensitive infrastructure and poor options for mass evacuation in a short time. One prime example is New York City. The devastating effects of a major storm’s impact on the city was already seen when Superstorm Sandy hit in 2012. A new study by First Street, a climate risk group in Manhattan, reported in the New York Times—“The Disaster to Come: New York’s Next Superstorm”—paints a dire picture of what today’s even more powerful storms could cause.

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Another dangerous consequence of global warming is catastrophic flooding due to the accelerating melting of mountain glaciers.

Beyond the immediate impact, flooding also has major longer-term negative effects on human health. New research estimates that in the year following major floods, the United States saw more than 22,000 excess deaths. Among the causes are respiratory illnesses due to residual dampness which promotes the growth of mold, not to mention loss of housing, infrastructure and food resources. On a world scale, this translates into many millions of avoidable deaths. 

Paradoxically, global warming can also starve some areas of rainfall, resulting in severe drought

Trump has shut down any federal programs addressing climate change and effectively banned research into global warming. At the same time, he is doing everything possible to increase the burning of fossil fuels. His vulgar and ignorant dismissal of climate change as a “hoax” is only the most overt expression of the world ruling oligarchy’s willful belittling of the overwhelming evidence of its reality in favor of its own immediate interests and the system which it supports.

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The international capitalist ruling class, which values profit over human life, is criminally responsible for the mass destruction and catastrophic loss of life caused by the uncontrolled global warming and consequential climate change which has already occurred and will continue to worsen unless the working class takes power and establishes a rational, socialist world system.

16. Germany’s Left Party attacks its own youth organisation over Gaza resolution: Why young people need a genuine socialist alternative

In early November, Linksjugend [Left Youth], the youth organization of Germany’s Left Party, adopted a resolution at its federal congress under the title “Never again remain silent in the face of genocide.” For the first time since the beginning of Israel’s war of annihilation against Gaza, it explicitly described the mass murder of the Palestinian people as genocide, criticised the “colonial and racist structure” of the Israeli state project, and described Israel as an apartheid state.

These formulations describe reality. They correspond to the situation in Gaza, where Israel has massacred tens of thousands of civilians since October 2023, and to the assessments of numerous international human rights organizations.

With this resolution, Linksjugend has not moved “to the left”; it is merely reacting to the enormous political opposition within the population, above all among young people, who are becoming radicalized and are being attacked for this by all the establishment parties and the media.

Hardly had the resolution been adopted when almost all major media outlets—from the tabloid Bild to leading newsweekly Der Spiegel to the pro-Green taz—launched a hysterical campaign against the youth organization. The resolution was denounced as “antisemitic,” and the congress was portrayed as a hotbed of extremist activities, where pro-Israeli delegates were allegedly openly threatened.

However, at the forefront of this right-wing campaign was not the extreme right Springer press, but the Left Party itself. Instead of defending its own youth organization, it launched a sharp attack and made clear that support for Israel’s war policy was non-negotiable.

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The message is unmistakable: the Left Party tolerates no serious criticism of Israel—and certainly not the identification of its policies as genocide. In the days following the youth congress, the party resorted to aggressive censorship measures:

  • In Saxony, the Left Party parliamentary group denied its own deputy Nam Duy Nguyen rooms in which to mobilize against arms deliveries to Israel.
  • In Hamburg, it openly defended the censorship of a lecture by political scientist Helga Baumgarten on the history of the Palestinian liberation struggle.
  • In Berlin, it withdrew a venue at the last minute from its French sister party, La France Insoumise, for a Palestine conference.

This constitutes a systematic attempt to purge criticism of Israel from the party, thereby demonstrating that despite occasional cosmetic criticism of the government, the Left Party fully supports the foreign policy course of German imperialism.

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Young workers and students who want to fight against fascism, militarism and social austerity face fundamental political questions and tasks. They need to understand the role of the Left Party and its youth organization, which do not represent their interests and goals, but instead play a key role in enforcing anti-working-class government policies. 

*****

Workers and young people should draw the necessary conclusions from this. The struggle against genocide, war and capitalism cannot be waged within this party. It requires a conscious break with the Left Party and all its appendages, an orientation to the international working class and the building of an independent socialist movement against the capitalist system—the source of war, oppression and social inequality.

The Socialist Equality Party (SGP) and its youth organisation, the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE), are the only political force that consistently fights against all forms of imperialism and militarism—whether in Gaza, in Ukraine or in the Indo-Pacific. We stand for:

  • the immediate halt to the genocide in Gaza and all arms deliveries,
  • the international unification of the working class against war,
  • the overthrow of the capitalist system that produces these crimes,
  • the building of a socialist society based on equality, freedom and international solidarity.

For young people seeking an honest, consistent Marxist response to war, genocide and social injustice, there is no path through the Left Party or Linksjugend, but only through the conscious building of a revolutionary movement under the leadership of the SGP and the IYSSE.

17. US-UK medicines deal could lead to over 15,000 deaths per year in the UK

The US-UK trade deal on medicines signed this month is touted by the Labour government as a “world-beating deal,” under which “tens of thousands of NHS patients will benefit”. Far from the rosy picture, the deal could cause over 15,000 deaths a year, leaving the National Health Service with additional annual debt of up to £3 billion.

US President Donald Trump’s global trade war threatened to impose tariffs on drug imports of up to 100 percent, including from UK firms, if the NHS did not pay higher prices to purchase US drugs and relocate and invest in US pharma companies. Pharmaceutical giants themselves threatened to withdraw investment from Britain if Keir Starmer’s government did not agree to pay more for medicines.

On December 1, the UK agreed a deal which will increase the upper threshold for which it can buy new medicines by 25 percent. The deal allows for more expensive drugs to be approved such as breakthrough cancer medicines, but, without additional funding, will mean non branded medicines that millions rely on may not be affordable due to anticipated increase in NHS budgetary demands.

Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle claimed the deal “guarantees UK pharmaceutical exports worth at least £5 billion a year will enter the US tariff-free” for a three-year period.

The repayment rates on NHS drug spending will be lowered from 22.9 percent to 15 percent from 2026. This is the amount drug firms pay back to the NHS to ensure it does not overspend its allocated budget for branded medicines. 

Karl Claxton, professor of health economics, and a National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) representative, responded to the deal stating: “If the NHS ultimately picks up the bill, we can expect 15,971 additional deaths and 352,000 years of life in good health to be lost each year.”

*****

In his “General Terms for the U.S.-UK Economic Prosperity Deal” tariff pact agreed to in May 2025 with Trump, Starmer pledged to “improve the overall environment for pharmaceutical companies”—that is to funnel more money into the pockets of global corporations at the expense of patients’ lives and well-being. Trump has now called in Starmer’s offer, with the pharmaceutical giants sniffing an opportunity to boost their already vast profits.

Starmer has rejected repeated protests, opposition and research from the health and scientific community in order to cement his relations with the Trump administration. In November, experts from across health, academia, and civil society penned an open letter to Keir Starmer calling for an “urgent pause” on the plans.

The signatories stated they were “extremely concerned that the widely reported relentless pressure from multiple pharmaceutical corporations and the White House will lead to a deal that worsens patient outcomes, damages the NHS, and fails to serve the economic and scientific interests of the UK”.

They continued: “Big Pharma is attempting to create a false equivalence between the prices the NHS pays and whether the UK is a good place to invest. The reality is there is no connection and pharmaceutical companies are using this as a cynical attempt to drain yet more billions from our NHS. This money should be invested into our healthcare systems, frontline workers and staff, and lifesaving research – not used to make rich shareholders richer.”

For the Starmer government the US trade deal was an attempt to secure an advantage over Europe in its dealings with America. The pharmaceuticals scandal makes clear that any favorable treatment secured by Labour was won by selling the working class down the river.

18. Europe’s governments plot abrogation of immigrant rights

Discussions began on Wednesday in Strasbourg among representatives of Europe’s governments on abandoning key provisions in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

From Social Democrats to fascist parties, all are pushing towards an agreement by the spring of 2026 that will spell the end of any commitment to the universalist principles proclaimed in the ECHR in the immediate aftermath of the horrific crimes against humanity perpetrated by the Nazis during World War II.

Underlining the unanimity within the political establishment, the talks were initiated by Denmark’s Social Democratic Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Italy’s fascist Prime Minister Giorgia Melloni. In May, the pair issued an open letter—signed by seven additional European Union (EU) member states—that denounced the European Court of Human Rights for interfering with national political decisions and demanded freedom from the restraints of the ECHR.

In a manner little different from the Trump administration’s recent declaration that Europe faces “civilizational erasure” due to “illegal” migration, the open letter railed against “criminal foreigners” and “hostile states” seeking to “instrumentalize” immigrants against Europe.

The letter is one expression of a decisive shift by Europe’s ruling class to break with the constraints of international law as it seeks to ruthlessly assert its interests against the working class and its imperialist rivals. Its pursuit of a massive rearmament program to enable European imperialism to fight its global competitors, and support for Israel’s genocide of the Palestinians and bloody war between Ukraine and Russia, underscore the criminal character of this agenda. It demands an unrestrained onslaught on the living standards and rights of the working class, of which immigrants are a key component.

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Europe’s governments have long pursued vicious anti-immigrant policies to establish “Fortress Europe.” These find their most murderous expression in the Mediterranean, which has become a mass grave for thousands of people due to the blocking of all legal routes to reach the continent and prohibitions on sea rescues. According to the Missing Migrants Project by the International Organisation for Migration, some 33,220 migrants have been recorded as missing in the Mediterranean since the project began in 2014. The total for 2025 is approaching 2,000.

However, the present turn marks something new, with governments of all political stripes breaking explicitly with even the semblance of international law. They openly declare that the basic democratic rights the bourgeoisie was forced to grant in a previous period due to the horrors of World War II are no longer appropriate and must be abrogated from national and international legal systems. At the same time, political parties in all the major European countries are working systematically to integrate fascist forces into power, a process they have already achieved in Italy and the Czech Republic.

*****

The attacks on the working class planned by governments across the continent in the coming years to make European imperialism “war-ready” are so sweeping that no opposition can be tolerated, even when expressed through the highly managed framework of bourgeois legality. In Germany, an all-party coalition has approved €1 trillion in war spending, which must now be squeezed out of the working class through the destruction of public spending and social programs, summed up in the declaration by Merz that the current welfare system is no longer affordable. French President Emmanuel Macron is committed to tens of billions in spending cuts to fund a massive increase in the military budget.

EU member states have agreed to a shared €850 billion military spending program, funded by austerity measures. In every country, thousands of workers are being thrown out of their jobs as civilian industry is converted to war production and the capitalists offload the deepening crisis produced by decaying capitalism onto the backs of the workers. The same ruthless methods perfected by the ruling class against immigrants and refugees, the most vulnerable sections of the working class, are now to be turned against all workers who try to resist this vicious class-war agenda.

*****

The struggle against imperialist war and militarism requires a socialist and internationalist program, aimed at the abolition of the obsolete nation-state borders and repudiation of nationalist tropes employed by ruling elites in every country to block working-class unity. Workers must build a mass political and industrial movement against war and capitalist austerity and make the words of Marx and Engels’ Communist Manifesto their battle-cry: “Workers of the world, unite!”

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk holds a copy of John Reed's Ten Days That Shook the World 

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.