Jun 9, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Donate to the WSWS! Build a mass socialist movement of the working class!

Donate today to strengthen the World Socialist Web Site—the indispensable voice and organizing center of the international working class—so it can expand its coverage, deepen interventions, and build a movement of the working class for socialism.

2. David Attenborough at 100, an appreciation

Attenborough continues to explore new scientific opportunities and discoveries in covering all aspects of the natural world. His series are distinguished by a systematic approach, to groups of organisms or specific eco-systems, grounded in the history of science.

3. United Kingdom: Construction workers at Hinkley Point C nuclear plant locked out after safety protest

The lockout was reinforced by a major police presence, with photographs shared by workers showing a fleet of police vehicles stationed around the site.

4. European powers pledge arms to Ukraine while issuing ultimatums to Russia at London summit

The E3, represented by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz gathered in Downing Street and issued a joint five-point declaration.

5. Postal workers demand investigation into Demarcus Little’s death, fourth in two years at Palmetto facility

An ongoing inquiry by the USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee has documented the absence of written safety protocols, the lack of defibrillators and medical personnel, blocked cell phone signals and dangerous emergency-response failures at the Palmetto Regional Processing and Distribution Center.

6. Canada’s Liberal government preparing massive onslaught on worker rights with revision of Labour Code

Carney has his eye on a far-reaching re-write of labour laws that will deeply erode what remains of federally regulated workers’ right to strike and their precarious ability to bargain independently of government interference.

7. Modern slavery in Italy: four migrant farmworkers burned alive in a minivan

The workers were massacred in Calabria by gangmasters in a system of hyper-exploitation whose conditions were created by Italy’s government and “opposition.”

8. Renegotiation of US-Mexico-Canada trade pact faces hurdles

The USMCA (US-Mexico-Canada) trade pact is due for review on July 1, with negotiations likely to run past the deadline.

9. Sri Lankan police arrest Tamil rapper under draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act

The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party condemn the arrest of Sangeethsan Ganeskumar—a blatant attack on freedom of expression—and demand his immediate and unconditional release. 

10. As its contract expires, the Detroit Federation of Teachers hands its podium to the school superintendent

The DFT invited the school superintendent to the union meeting in order to stump for a millage vote, endorsing Proposal S, which will fall on Detroit renters to pay.

11. Prominent New Zealand entertainer Lynda Topp denounces government’s military budget

The speech by one of the country’s foremost entertainers fiercely denounced government cuts to the arts budget amid soaring military spending.

12. Three women dead in 25 days: Social murder in Michigan prisons

Four women have died in seven months at Michigan’s only women’s prison, where toxic mold, privatized medical neglect and bipartisan austerity have created deadly conditions. 

13. Gordon S. Wood, 1933-2026: Leading historian of the American Revolution

Gordon S. Wood, 92, a leading historian of the American Revolution, died Sunday after being struck by a car. His career spanned more than half a century, most of it at Brown University, where he trained generations of early Americanists and helped shape modern interpretations of the Revolutionary era.

14. Fired “60 Minutes” journalist reveals pro-Trump censorship at CBS News

In a lengthy interview with the New York Times, Scott Pelley details the demands by newly installed corporate bosses for a pro-Trump slant in coverage.

15. Debate blocked at Australian Education Union “briefing” on sellout deal in Victoria

At an AEU meeting, officials declared out of order a resolution opposing their agreement with the state Labor government. 

16. Israel bombs Iran on the 100th day of the US-Israeli war as fighting spreads across Lebanon and Gaza

Israel bombed Central and Western Iran before dawn Monday, striking air defenses, missile launchers and a petrochemical complex used by the Revolutionary Guard, hours after Iran fired a barrage of ballistic missiles at Israeli cities.

17. United Kingdom: The way forward for resident doctors: Unite all NHS workers against Starmer government

The BMA and other health unions—Unite, Unison, the GMB and the Royal College of Nursing—are suffocating a unified fightback by National Health Service workers.

18. Homeless Congolese man Yves Sakila killed at hands of security guards outside Dublin department store

A homeless Congolese man, Yves Sakila, resident in Ireland since childhood, was killed last month in Henry Street, Dublin. He had been chased and forced to the pavement by private security guards of Arnotts department store.

 19. Pseudo-left parties support new Danish government committed to massive war budget and tax cuts for the rich

That the decision was ultimately taken to integrate the Socialist People’s Party and Red-Green Alliance into government, or at least some form of support for it, speaks to the recognition within the ruling class that they require a political cover to proceed with their agenda.

20. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Canada:

Nova Scotia care home workers to vote on tentative contract

Guatemala:

Protests against rising cost of public transportation

Honduras:

Public hospital system doctors strike against government’s pro-business policies

Mexico:

Striking educators reject government offer, prepare for 2026 World Cup protests

United States:

Chicago nurses to strike June 11 over firings of colleagues involved in organizing
 
Picket line clash injures two as strike continues against Charleston, West Virginia beverage operator
 
 

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.

Jun 8, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. This week in history: June 8-14

  • 25 years ago:
 Workers rally for framed-up South Carolina longshoremen     
  • 50 years ago:

Jimmy Carter emerges as Democratic Party nominee for president

  • 75 years ago:

    “Trenton Six” frame-up trial concludes; four defendants acquitted, two convicted

  • 100 years ago:

     Students protest in Korea against Japanese colonialism 

2. One Hundred days of the US-Israeli war of aggression against Iran

The “negotiations” currently being carried out by the Trump administration at gunpoint are a fraud. In an interview this weekend, Trump declared that if Iran does not accept his demands, “I’m going to blow the hell out of them.” Even if the Trump administration agrees to a “ceasefire,” any agreement with the gangsters in the White House will just be as meaningful as the “peace” deal in 2025 that set the stage for this year’s war.

On Sunday night, Israel attacked Tehran. In Lebanon, the Israeli bombardment, escalating even amid the supposed negotiations, has killed at least 3,593 people and driven over a million from their homes—a toll that exceeds the 3,468 Iranians killed, among them seven infants and 376 children, with more than 26,500 wounded.

In the course of the war, imperialism plumbed new depths of barbarism. Trump’s threats to extinguish “a whole civilization” and Hegseth’s vow to wage war with “no quarter, no mercy” will go down in history as expressions of an oligarchy that has abandoned all pretense to legality. The imperialist powers now wage wars of oppression and subjugation in the open, with methods pioneered by the Nazis.

Despite the brutal and murderous character of the US-Israeli onslaught, however, imperialism has failed to achieve a single one of its aims. It has not overthrown the Iranian government, broken Iran’s military or seized control of the Strait of Hormuz. 

The war has had two major effects: a deepening of the global crisis of the capitalist system and an enormous escalation of the global class struggle, not least within the United States. 

*****

The fight against war cannot be waged through appeals to the governments and parties that are waging it. In the US, the Democratic Party greeted the murder of Iran’s leaders with cheers and financed Trump’s military budget. The European imperialist powers have backed the war and politically justified it, while pouring €800 billion into rearmament as they escalate the proxy war against Russia, which they arm and direct.

Opposition to imperialism requires developing struggles of workers in the United States, Europe and across the world—against war, austerity and dictatorship—into a conscious political movement armed with a socialist program. To put an end to war and barbarism, the capitalist system must be abolished.

3. United Kingdom: Gary Stevenson and the dead end of wealth-tax reformism

Stevenson’s broad appeal is not difficult to understand. For millions of workers and young people, official economics has become an open fraud. They are told that the economy is improving while rents soar, house prices remain out of reach, public services decay and secure work disappears.

Stevenson captures this experience sharply. In a 2024 Financial Times (FT) interview, he mocked the complacency of the political and media establishment, saying rich people sit together, their lives improve, while “ordinary people’s lives are collapsing.” He has insisted that without addressing inequality, society faces only a deepening fall in living standards and mounting political instability.

“Insider” status has helped boost his authority, with his 2024 memoir The Trading Game turning him into a major media personality. In the book, he explains how he made millions by recognizing that rising inequality would suppress demand, hold down interest rates and inflate asset prices. 

*****

After more than a decade of austerity, wage suppression and asset-price inflation, millions confront conditions once associated with the poorest countries. According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), some 6.8 million people in Britain now live in “very deep poverty,” while 4.5 million children are officially in poverty. Workers in Britain have experienced the longest era of wage suppression since the Napoleonic Wars.

Housing has become a mechanism of mass dispossession. The average UK private rent reached £1,381 a month in April 2026, rising to £2,290 in London. Rents have increased 40 percent since 2020, and mortgage repayments by 40-60 percent. Housing stress affects 67 percent of the population—45 million people.

Homelessness has reached staggering levels: the charity Shelter estimates more than 354,000 people are homeless in England on any given night, including 161,500 children.

At the same time, the UK, along with every other capitalist government, faced with economic stagnation, explosive social tensions and the sharpening struggle for markets, raw materials and spheres of influence, is rearming. Young people today can only look forward to war and social devastation under capitalism. 

*****

Stevenson correctly points out that mainstream economics systematically obscures inequality. He is likewise right that hoarding wealth at the top has driven asset-price booms, social decay and political reaction.

In marked contrast to other economic commentators, Stevenson has also pointed to the danger of world war as a consequence of extreme wealth inequality, pointing out that, as assets become more expensive, it is more “cost-effective” for the super-rich to use the militaries of their respective states to seize the assets of their rivals. 

*****

But what does Stevenson propose the working class do about this global crisis?

His concrete proposal is a 2 percent annual wealth tax on assets above £10 million, designed to be “watertight” with no exemptions, enforced across borders through international cooperation, and used to fund public investment in housing, healthcare, and other social services. He views this as a form of “defense” to stop the rapid transfer of assets from ordinary people to the super-rich.

This places Stevenson within a broader political phenomenon: figures who speak in a language of anger against the oligarchy, attract a mass audience because capitalism is visibly breaking down, but redirect this energy into political dead ends. 

*****

The question of ownership is central. Stevenson presents the concentration of wealth primarily as a problem of distribution: the tax code has been systematically rigged to allow the rich to accumulate without limit, and the solution is to un-rig it by adopting progressive tax measures.

But this raises a deeper question: why has the tax code been systematically rigged in the first place, across every major capitalist country, under governments of every nominal political stripe? Stevenson attempts to explain this by pointing to economists’ faulty models, their dogmatic thinking and the corruption of individual politicians. These phenomena exist, but they do not, by themselves, explain anything.

The Marxist analysis goes deeper. The capitalist state is not a neutral instrument that can be picked up and aimed at the wealthy by a sufficiently determined government. It is an organ of class rule. The billionaires do not merely influence governments; in any meaningful sense, they are the government. The Trump administration reflects this basic tendency to the nth degree, but it is the basic dynamic of contemporary imperialism. 

*****

Global competition between states has become so fierce that it is now outgrowing the confines of pure economics and spilling into the political and military spheres. The only area in which contemporary capitalist governments are eager to spend tax money is the military, at the expense of social programs.

*****

A renewed imperialist redivision of the world is already underway, evident in Ukraine, the Middle East and Latin America. Global military expenditure reached a record $2.72 trillion in 2024, with the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) warning that governments were increasingly prioritizing military security over other budgetary choices. 

*****

Even the most minor reforms will therefore be fiercely resisted by the oligarchy. History confirms this at every turn. Thomas Piketty, whose data on inequality Stevenson draws upon, proposed a global wealth tax over a decade ago. As Nick Beams has noted in the WSWS, not a single government anywhere in the world has implemented it.

Where popular movements have developed against inequality, they have been cruelly betrayed by those who promised reformist solutions through parliament and other institutions of the capitalist state. 

***** 

All in all, Stevenson’s call for a “relentless and aggressive pursuit of common ground” between the various “left” bourgeois parties sums up his role: to corral popular anger over inequality back into the channels of pursuing parliamentary reform, where they can be safely suffocated.

*****

Social inequality is baked into the structure of capitalism. Its noxious consequences can only be ended along with the rule of the capitalist class. No solution can come from lobbying the capitalist state, pleading with ministers or waiting for enlightened technocrats in the Treasury and civil service.

The major banks, finance houses, energy corporations, transport systems, logistics chains, housing monopolies, real estate empires and war industries must be taken into public ownership without compensation to the oligarchs and placed under the democratic control of the working class.

The wealth created by the international working class can then be redeployed according to social need, not profit. The enormous social surplus currently wasted in speculation, self-aggrandizement, rent extraction and militarism can be turned towards guaranteed employment, a massive housing program, free high-quality healthcare and education, full access to culture, the cancellation of oppressive debts, and the reduction of working time without loss of pay.

*****

Stevenson correctly senses that global inequality, militarism and far-right reaction are inseparable. But one cannot fight them through a tax accord among capitalist governments. The same ruling classes presiding over austerity are rearming at breakneck speed. The struggle against war and social collapse demands the global unification of workers against every national bourgeoisie and its state. 

4. Attendees speak on Socialist Equality Party public meetings marking 1926 British General Strike

World Socialist Web Site reporters spoke to some of those attending the lecture series held by the Socialist Equality Party (UK) last month marking the centenary of the 1926 general strike.

5. Germany: No to the censorship of anti-war meetings! Against the militarization of the University of Stuttgart!

The university is to be brought into line, critical voices are to be silenced, while the campus is being transformed into a military research facility and recruitment ground for war.

4. United States: Ann Arbor public school teachers enter sixth month without a new contract

Ann Arbor Public Schools teachers have now gone nearly six months without a contract following their near-unanimous rejection of a tentative agreement. 

6. The Philippines engulfed in acute political and constitutional crisis

Three weeks after gunfire rang out in the Philippine Senate, the political standoff it expressed has deepened into a constitutional crisis. The legislature sits under two competing leaderships, each denying the other’s legitimacy. A senator wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) remains a fugitive; a second senator has been jailed for plunder. The executive is steadily accumulating the powers being vacated by the paralyzed upper chamber. Ferdinand Marcos Jr., son of the former dictator, governs by emergency decree, directs the Senate’s reorganization, and is preparing to convene Congress in special session to pass legislation of his choosing.

The crisis emerges out of the conflict between the Marcos and Duterte factions of the Philippine ruling class that has been expanding and sharpening for years. Rodrigo Duterte, the former president whose six-year rule was defined by a drug war that killed tens of thousands, opposed deepening the Philippine military integration with Washington’s war preparations against China—an alignment that Marcos, firmly in the US camp, has pursued without restraint. Sara Duterte, his daughter and current Vice President, became the focal point of that conflict after her political alliance with the Marcos family publicly collapsed. Rodrigo Duterte himself is currently in ICC custody in The Hague, where the court confirmed charges of crimes against humanity against him in April, sending his case to trial.  

*****

The 1987 Constitution contains explicit provisions restricting foreign military basing and requiring Senate ratification of treaties—provisions written against the US military presence that sustained the previous Marcos dictatorship of the president’s father. These provisions are the primary constitutional obstacle to the full formalization of Washington’s forward base architecture in the Philippines, which now includes nine EDCA sites with further expansion announced, and which was on full display at Balikatan 2026 in May: 17,000 troops, the first live Tomahawk firing on Philippine soil, the first Japanese combat deployment since the Second World War. Marcos has made it clear he wants these constitutional restraints loosened, but every move toward Charter Change has so far been blocked in the Senate by the Duterte camp—a resistance that has included his own sister, Senator Imee Marcos. With that bloc now stripped of its Senate positions, the path to a constitutional convention has opened for the first time. 

7. Australia: Poor communities hit by largest diphtheria outbreak on record

Most cases have occurred in the Northern Territory, with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, among the poorest and most oppressed layers of the Australian population, the hardest hit. 

8. Scientists expelled by police at the diabetes conference as Trump administration accelerates dismantling of biomedical research

The expulsion of leading researchers from the American Diabetes Association conference by armed police exposes the capitulation of medical institutions to the Trump administration’s fascistic anti-science agenda. 

9. Australia: Gold mining company handed meager fine for worker’s amputation

A 23-year-old laborer's arm was ripped off by a drilling machine at the Cadia East mine near Orange, New South Wales. Almost three years later, the company was fined just $750,000. 

10. Medicaid work requirements threaten coverage for millions as Trump escalates class war on the poor

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the work requirement provisions in Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill will reduce federal Medicaid spending by $326 billion over 10 years—the single largest source of savings in the legislation—and strip coverage from an estimated 5.2 million adults by 2034. 

11. Court rules that Trump’s name must be removed from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

A Washington DC federal district judge ruled that the president’s stacking of the board with his loyalists and placing the Trump name on the Kennedy Center was a “procedurally defective and substantively unlawful action.” 

12. Stellantis in Germany: 650 engineering jobs at Opel in Rüsselsheim on the line

In April 2026, Stellantis announced elimination of 650 of the remaining 1,650 jobs at the Rüsselsheim, Germany development center, without hiring replacements, in open violation of an ongoing “Future Collective Bargaining Agreement.”

13. Trump denounces California election, defends January 6 attackers

Trump’s unrestrained hatred of anyone who either opposes him or questions him—even in the mild tones of a Kristen Welker—is not merely the characteristic of an increasingly unhinged authoritarian personality. The sweeping claims of vote fraud are an ominous warning of what is to come as the midterm elections unfold amid growing popular opposition and mounting global crises involving war, financial chaos and environmental disaster. 

Trump’s popularity continues to plunge, with polls suggesting he has reached the lowest point for any president since the depths touched by George W. Bush during the Iraq War. The White House has no intention of submitting placidly to a popular repudiation at the polls. On the contrary, with its wild claims of vote fraud and its embrace of fascist claims that millions of “illegal aliens” will go to the polls in November, the Trump administration is preparing either to challenge the results of the election or suspend elections altogether.

14. Who stands to lose: Future faces of the Medicaid work requirement cuts

The Trump administration and its ideological allies have constructed an elaborate fiction around the Medicaid work requirements embedded in the “One Big Beautiful Bill” signed into law July 4, 2025—that the policy targets lazy, able-bodied adults who prefer leisure to labor, and that only those who fail to “prove that they matter”—in the words of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz—will lose their coverage.

The reality documented by researchers, advocates and the experience of earlier state-level implementations is categorically different. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that work requirements will strip coverage from 5.2 million adults by 2034. More expansive analyses from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities warn the number at risk could reach nearly 15 million. In every prior implementation—most comprehensively in Arkansas in 2018 and 2019—the majority of those who lost coverage were already working, were legally exempt, or were victims of administrative failure rather than genuine noncompliance. 

*****

... the people who will lose Medicaid under the new work requirements are not people who refuse to work. They are people for whom the work requirement’s documentation regime is incompatible with the actual conditions of their lives—the unpredictability of gig work, the seasonality of agricultural and construction labor, the invisibility of caregiving, the bureaucratic inaccessibility of rural and under-resourced communities, the complexity of exemption processes that assume a level of institutional support most low-income workers do not have.

This is not an accident. It is, as the experience of Arkansas and Georgia has already demonstrated, precisely how work requirements function. They do not encourage work; they terminate coverage. The administrative maze is not a bug in the design; it is the mechanism by which the savings are generated and the rolls are reduced.

The CBO projects that the work requirements will account for the largest share of the $793 billion in Medicaid cuts over the next decade. That money does not disappear. It flows upward—through the tax provisions of the same legislation, to corporations and the wealthy—while the people whose labor makes American society function are left to manage illness, disability and economic precarity without the most basic guarantee of medical care.

Their stories are not exceptional. Instead, they will become the reality in 21st century America. 

15. “We need to join hands in a common fight!”: Open letter from Nexteer Workers Rank-and-File Committee to our brothers and sisters on strike at American Axle

Nexteer workers who have voted down three UAW-backed contracts are fighting to join American Axle workers in a common strike.

16.  Four workers dead at Palmetto—the consequence of decades of cuts and the drive to privatize USPS

Meeting announcement

Four workers have died at the Palmetto Regional Processing and Distribution Center in Georgia in the past two years. The most recent, Demarcus Little, told a supervisor he felt unwell last week, collapsed, and died. 

*****

Postal workers have been dying across the country. Management is being let off the hook. USPS was recently fined only $26,481 for the death of Nick Acker, who was crushed to death in a mail sort machine in Allen Park, Michigan.

The deaths are part of a broader assault on the postal workforce. Utilizing a manufactured deficit, USPS Postmaster General David Steiner has proposed ending six-day mail delivery, closing “unprofitable” local post offices and ending the Universal Service Obligation. They have already suspended payments into workers’ pension system. The proposals would mean the effective abolition of USPS as a public service and placing it under control of private corporations.

The union bureaucracy has told workers there is nothing to worry about. They have already endorsed the pre-existing “Delivering for America” restructuring, signed below-inflation contracts and backed binding arbitration to strips workers of the right to vote on their own agreements. It will not fight the coming attacks on jobs and services. That must be organized from below.

The USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee has been conducting an independent investigation into conditions across the postal network. This meeting will report on what we have found, discuss the threat to USPS as a public institution, and take up how workers can build the organization needed to fight back.

Join us this Sunday at 3 p.m. Eastern. Register here, send in your testimony and join the committee. 

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

"Peace for the world! Down with war!" 

Jun 6, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. United Kingdom: Who is prospective Labour Party leader and prime minister, Andy Burnham?—Part Two

Elected Greater Manchester Mayor in May 2017, Burnham sought to reinvent himself as the “everyman”, pledging to give 15 percent of his £110,000 salary to homelessness-related causes. This was part of his pledge to “end rough sleeping in Greater Manchester by 2020”.

Almost 10 years on rough sleeping and homelessness in general remain rife in Manchester and across the wider conurbation of 3 million people. The Manchester Evening News reported last December: “New data provided by Shelter through Freedom of Information requests has shown which areas of Greater Manchester are hardest hit by homelessness. Manchester is the highest—with 9,589 people rendered homeless, 4,678 of whom are children. This means that one in every 61 people are homeless. This is followed by Salford, with a rate of 2,327 people as of 2025.”

Such a pledge was always incompatible with the mayor’s burgeoning relationship with big business in Greater Manchester, based on central Manchester being turned into a haven for property developers—who got Peter Mandelson-style “filthy rich” from the taxpayer funding Burnham has soaked them in for a decade.

Under Burnham’s tenure, in close collaboration with a Labour-run, pro-corporate Manchester City Council—which has worked with Tory and Labour governments for almost four decades around a “private-sector led” regeneration strategy—around 30–40 luxury skyscrapers have been completed or begun since 2017.

Dominating the skyline in central Manchester, even the Financial Times looks on in awe. Its chief UK business columnist, John Gapper, wrote last month in a piece titled “Inside the luxury towers behind Manchester’s revival” of the “breathtaking view across its rejuvenated city centre from a £2.5mn penthouse at the top of the 40-storey Viadux tower.”

No workers will ever step foot in these developments. Gapper writes that “much of its appeal to the residents, who mostly rent its apartments, lies at the foot of the building. The pool, yoga and fitness studios, and cinema room under the arches of the old railway viaduct on which it is built are part of the package. In return for an annual service charge for each owner of about £5,400 for a 1,000 sq ft flat, residents enjoy amenities rivaling top developments in global capitals.”

The FT notes that the Viadux developer, Salboy—owned by a gambling industry billionaire—“sold about 70 percent of the Viadux apartments between 2020 and 2023 to Chinese and Asian buy-to-let investors. Asian enthusiasm for UK property has since diminished but about 20 percent of the W Residences have more recently gone to buyers based in the Gulf and Middle East, some as second homes.”

The main property developer profiting from Burnham’s largess, Renaker, has built seven skyscrapers, with five more having planning permission and a further four being considered. So far Renaker, owned by billionaire Daren Whitaker, has received £615 million from the mayor’s Greater Manchester Housing Investment Loans Fund (GMHILF).

GMHILF was set up by the Tory government in 2015 to enable the Greater Manchester mayor to hand out an initial £300 million in loans to property developers. Since then, its use has exploded, with around £1 billion in loans given to Renaker and 45 to 50 other property companies across 70–75 developments.

The FT wrote of the plethora of luxury apartment blocks, “This is as much ‘Manchesterism’ as the public bus network overseen by Andy Burnham, Greater Manchester’s mayor and prime ministerial contender.” Burnham has presented the Bee Network of integrated bus and tram services brought under the control of local authority–run Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) as his greatest victory over Thatcherism.

But as the WSWS has established, this centerpiece policy: “retains outsourcing. While fares and timetables are coordinated, the system remains a privatization framework reliant on state subsidy and maintained on the backs of transport workers exploited to the hilt by private operators.”

The private bus companies, owned by global transnationals, continue to extract their returns from the same public subsidy stream Burnham guarantees. Franchise bidding continues to drive down wages and conditions. Bus drivers in Manchester are no strangers to the cost cutting carried out by the bus profiteers, such as those imposed at Go North West in 2021, as franchising was being finalized by Burnham, TfGM and the bus firms.

*****

As the WSWS has argued before: “The decisive question for the working class is not which carbon-copy Labour leader is at the head of the country when struggles erupt, but developing its own socialist leadership in the fight against them.” Thatcher knew what New Labour was. Workers and youth should know what Burnham is. The task is to build a party of their own—the Socialist Equality Party. 

2. Nexteer workers call for walkout to join with American Axle strikers

The UAW bureaucracy is seeking to impose a fourth sellout tentative agreement after autoworkers at the Saginaw steering plant rejected the first three and voted by 86 percent to authorize a strike.

3. Madison, Wisconsin nurses facing harassment over unionization effort after hospital calls union pin "Equivalent to a KKK Pin"

Nurses at SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin have filed for a union election with the SEIU amid management intimidation, but the fight for safe staffing and patient care requires rank-and-file organization independent of a union whose history is one of isolating and betraying workers.

4. How the Democrats enabled the allocation of an extra $70 billion for Trump’s immigration Gestapo

Early Friday morning, the US Senate passed the Secure America Act, a nearly $70 billion funding package for the Department of Homeland Security, providing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) with funding through 2029, the end of Trump’s second term.

The bill passed 52-47. Every Democrat present voted “no,” joined by Republican Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, while Democratic Senator Michael Bennet of Colorado missed the vote. The measure now heads to the House, where Republicans are expected to pass it.

The bill provides billions for hiring, training, paying and equipping additional immigration agents and support personnel, expanding detention capacity and building out the technological infrastructure of the police state. One section appropriates $3.45 billion for “new nonintrusive inspection equipment,” “artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other innovative technologies,” border surveillance systems and the biometric entry-exit system.

This comes on top of the roughly $170 billion provided last year for the immigration Gestapo under Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” Act, which included $45 billion to construct new detention camps across the United States.

The passage of the bill is not simply a victory handed to Trump by the Republicans. It is the outcome of a political process in which every institution of the existing order, above all the Democratic Party, played its assigned role in strangling the mass movement that erupted in January following the murders of Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. 

*****

Across the country, ICE and CBP continue to kidnap workers from their homes, job sites and communities. In South Carolina, 48 workers were taken by ICE while on the job at Burnstein von Seelen, a metal casting business.

The trade union apparatus and the pseudo-left organizations around the Democratic Party have played their role in this process. During the Minneapolis protests, the trade union bureaucracy told workers to remain on the job and respect “no strike” clauses negotiated by the union bureaucracies themselves. The pseudo-left, including the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) as well as groups like Left Voice, worked to contain opposition and promote the fiction that the agreement between Trump and the Democrats represented a fundamental retreat.

“Abolish ICE,” once promoted by DSA figures such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, has become forbidden language within the Democratic Party, just as “abolish the police” was buried after the mass protests following the murder of George Floyd. Ocasio-Cortez has not issued a statement concerning the DHS funding bill or the continuing crimes of ICE, though she has found time to post repeatedly about the New York Knicks. Bernie Sanders has likewise refused to comment on the funding and ongoing operations of the immigration Gestapo.

Their silence expresses the political reality that the Democrats are collaborators in Trump’s police state agenda. The Democratic Party, a party of Wall Street and the military-intelligence agencies, is terrified above all of a growth of opposition to Trump from below.

This is a critical experience for workers and youth. The conclusion that must be drawn is that the defense of democratic rights is a class question. It cannot be waged through either capitalist party, the union apparatus or the pseudo-left organizations attached to them. The entire state apparatus, including ICE, CBP, DHS, the police and the military, exists to defend the wealth and power of the oligarchy. 

The Socialist Equality Party calls for the abolition of ICE, CBP and every police agency; the closure of all detention camps; and the immediate freeing of all detainees. The defense of the most vulnerable immigrant worker is the defense of the democratic rights of the entire working class. 

5. Fourth death in 2 years at Palmetto, Georgia, USPS facility: Demarcus Little dies after reporting feeling unwell

Little’s death is the fourth at the Palmetto RPDC in the last two years. Whatever the cause of Little’s death may have been, this is a staggering toll that exposes conditions not only inside the one-million-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility, but across USPS as a whole.

Workers took to social media to express outrage and grief on social media. On Facebook, one worker wrote: “The stress level is real at USPS and UPS which I retired from. The management doesn’t care about employees’ health or safety.” Another commented: “This is happening way too often. How many of the USPS employees have to die before action is taken.” A third reported: “Working there really messed with my son’s mental health. It’s toxic!” Yet another wrote simply: “All they care about is getting the mail out, not the employees.”

At the same facility, Russell Scruggs Jr., 44, died last November when he suffered a cardiac event, fell and struck his head. A supervisor had denied Scruggs’ request to go, who reported he was not feeling well.

Coworkers told the WSWS that supervisors stood around him without administering CPR, that no defibrillator was available and that it took over an hour for an ambulance to arrive after initially going to the wrong entrance. While the autopsy classified the manner of death as “natural,” the circumstances were entirely preventable. 

Eric Smith, 59, collapsed and died of a heart attack in the lunchroom on June 3, 2025. Another worker died at the facility just one week later; their name and cause of death was never made public.

Shannon Barnes, 48, collapsed during her night shift on August 18, 2024, after telling a coworker she wasn’t feeling well. Because there is no cell phone service inside the building, someone had to run outside to call 911. It took 30 minutes for paramedics to reach her. She was already dead when she arrived at the hospital.

As the WSWS wrote after Smith’s death, a medical emergency in this facility “becomes a test of a system already at its limits.” The USPS Office of Inspector General’s July 2025 report documented disregarded safety issues, broken equipment left unrepaired and chronic absenteeism.

The USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committees, a nationwide group of workers formed in opposition to both management and pro-corporate union bureaucrats, is carrying out an independent investigation. Citing a source, it reported that the Palmetto facility “has never had written safety protocols.” Billions were spent on automated equipment, the committee found, “yet there is no money for medical equipment, on-site health professionals, or even basic safety procedures,” the investigation concluded.

These conditions are the product of USPS’s 10-year “Delivering for America” (DFA) restructuring program. Since its launch in 2021, DFA has produced chronic understaffing, inadequate training, operational failures and service disruptions at new Regional Processing and Distribution Centers (RPDCs) across the country. The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) audits repeatedly identified serious problems at all of the new RPDCs. Palmetto is among the worst. 

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The union bureaucracy has responded with silence. The APWU has issued no statement on the Palmetto deaths or on Acker’s death in Detroit. The National Postal Mail Handlers Union has been equally silent. At Manhattan’s Morgan PDC, workers reported that management and union officials focused on taking employees off the clock after a worker died rather than informing them about what had happened.

Having endorsed Delivering for America and collaborated in its implementation, the postal unions function not as organizations of struggle but as partners of management while conditions continue to deteriorate and the death toll mounts.

Workers are fighting back. In April, postal workers at the Springfield, Massachusetts, NDC formed a local committee affiliated with the national USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee, citing the APWU’s failure to enforce contractual rights or respond to safety hazards.

The Springfield committee’s founding statement declared: “USPS is a public service, not a profit-making enterprise. Hundreds of thousands of living-wage jobs, employment for veterans, and a national lifeline for seniors and those living in rural communities are at stake.” It asserted “the right of postal workers to take decisions affecting our jobs, safety and the public interest into our own hands.”

A statement by the National USPS Rank and File Committee issued earlier this year advanced immediate safety demands: defibrillators and nurses in every facility, an end to the blocking of cell phone signals, written emergency plans subject to workers’ oversight and strict enforcement of lockout/tagout procedures. It stressed that these are “inseparable from broader demands needed to protect both jobs and lives by ending overwork.”

As the committee warned: “The only way we will see justice is if we reveal the truth, hold accountable those responsible for the conditions that put us in harm’s way, and set up our own shop floor organizations to take control.” 

6. Israel escalates assault on Lebanon and drives to annex Gaza

The Lebanon strikes are an escalation of the Israeli war, waged in coordination with the US-Israeli war against Iran, that has killed at least 3,516 people and wounded 10,674 since March 2, the Lebanese health ministry reported. The United Nations counted at least 88 killed over the May 30-31 weekend, and Israeli attacks killed at least eight on Tuesday, nine on Wednesday and four on Thursday. Among the dead was a paramedic, one of more than 130 medics killed since March.

On Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared the occupation of Southern Lebanon permanent. Israel needs “security zones: separation and security areas on the other side of the border,” he told mayors in Northern Israel. “This is a fundamental change.”

While the US media remains focused on “peace” negotiations between Trump and Iran, events in Lebanon, Gaza and the West Bank make clear that any “ceasefire” is merely a cover for ongoing mass killing. 

7. Australia: Vote No to AEU-Labor sellout! Build independent rank-and-file committees! Fund education not war!

The Committee for Public Education urges educators and workers to join the meeting to discuss how to develop the fight against the sellout deal between the Australian Education Union and the Victorian state Labor government, and the underlying austerity and war agenda of the federal Labor government. 

8. Australian unions celebrate real wage cut for 3 million workers

The Fair Work Commission admitted that the meagre 4.75 percent increase to award wages would not “be sufficient to close the real wage gap entirely.” 

9. Germany fails to gain seat in UN Security Council election

Germany lost the vote for a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council to Portugal and Austria, reflecting growing global opposition to its imperialist foreign policy and militarism. 

10. More warnings on the state of the US and global financial system

As Wall Street powers ahead and major banks go all out promoting the initial public offering (IPO) of the Elon Musk-owned SpaceX and those to come of the AI companies Anthropic and Open AI, collecting fat fees running into hundreds of millions of dollars, warning bells on the state of the US economy and the global financial system are growing louder. 

There is increasing focus on the narrowness of the stock market boom, which is concentrated in the handful of AI companies amid a slowing of the rest of the economy. Profits as a proportion of GDP are rising, but rather than leading to a “trickle down” effect in which workers receive higher wages, real wages are falling, and the most profitable companies are those which shed the most labor as they seek to cut costs, increasingly through the use of AI.

The overall data show that consumption spending in the US is holding up in the aggregate, but an increasing proportion of this is coming from higher income groups while millions of families are struggling to make ends meet as inflation, above all in necessities, surges.

And there is growing concern about the way in which the economy and the financial system are resting on the growth of debt. 

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The US has been able to finance its debt because of the dollar’s pre-eminent role as the global currency, enabling it to raise money from international capital markets. But there is a shift underway as investors are coming to regard the US as “overstretched.” 

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The holding of US Treasuries, as well as the debt of other governments, by central banks has played a crucial role in the global financial system following the global financial crash. In the period 2008 to 2021, central banks bought up 63 percent of the debt issued by the major powers in the G7. In other words, one arm of the capitalist state issued large amounts of debt, the majority of which was then bought by another arm. 

11. Bolivian workers’ insurrection enters sixth week defying Paz-Trump counterrevolutionary conspiracy

Thirty-six days into Bolivia’s indefinite general strike, the government of Rodrigo Paz has not broken the uprising. Road blockades—which peaked at more than 100 active points earlier this week before a partial reduction during the Corpus Christi holiday—continue to strangle access to La Paz and extend well beyond the capital.

Demonstrations are reported across the country, with Cochabamba having become the new epicenter of protests. In Santa Cruz, mobilized peasants occupied the Humberto Suárez Roca oil field on Tuesday and were brutally repressed. A 21-day blockade in San Julián has paralyzed one of the country's main agro-industrial corridors. The cocalero federations of the Chapare have announced a mass march converging on El Alto.

On June 2, the Departmental Federation of Neighborhood Associations of La Paz (Fejuve) organized a massive popular assembly in El Alto, the working-class city on the plateau above La Paz where major class battles of this century have been waged. The assembly declared a “permanent mobilized state of emergency” and ratified the single demand of Paz’s resignation. After military clearing operations, protesters retook El Alto’s industrial zone of Senkata and occupied the surrounding streets that drivers had been using as alternative routes.

One week ago, Paz signed the revocation of Law 1341, clearing the legal path for a military crackdown against the mass uprising. However, the immensely demoralized Bolivian bourgeois regime has not yet felt in a position to frontally clash with the working masses.

With the backing of US imperialism and every dirty and illegal method at its disposal, the Paz administration has spent the last days focused on bridging that gap.

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A clear expression of the mood prevailing among the working class masses came after a court suspension of the terrorism arrest warrant against COB executive secretary Mario Argollo—the condition the confederation had itself set for entering dialogue with the government. The rank-and-file rejected negotiations regardless, ratified the blockades, and declared the permanent mobilized emergency. As former COB leader Jaime Solares summarized after the confederation's own internal deliberations: “They don't want dialogue, they don't want anything. The only demand the people have now is that the president has to go.”

The Bolivian working class has sustained this uprising for 36 days against everything the government and its imperialist backers have thrown at it. The counterrevolutionary conspiracy being assembled is a measure of this uprising’s strength, not its weakness. But the government is not standing still, and the gap between the determination of the masses and the political leadership they have at their disposal is the most dangerous terrain of the conflict.

The power of the working class in Bolivian society lies in the international nature of this class. It must understand its own insurrection as part of an unfolding international revolutionary crisis that poses directly the question of the world socialist revolution. Only by strategically orienting its struggle in that direction and by appealing to its international class brothers and sisters can it defeat Paz and the reactionary national bourgeoisie and their imperialist patrons. 

12. “Saxophone Colossus” Sonny Rollins dies at 95

Rollins was indisputably one of the major figures of 20th century American music. His passing has been widely covered by the US media and has triggered an outpouring of respectful, well-deserved accolades, including glowing references in his New York Times obituary to “the greatest living jazz improviser” and “the greatest virtuoso ever produced by jazz.”

Notably, Rollins was the last survivor of the 57 musicians in the iconic 1958 photograph by Art Kane known as “A Great Day in Harlem.” The image has been frequently invoked as capturing the “Golden Era” of jazz, a period that coincided with the emergence of the US as the leading capitalist economic and political power but riven by social contradictions.

Rollins’ breakthrough 1956 album for Prestige Records was aptly named Saxophone Colossus, also the title of Aidan Levy’s extensive but somewhat uneven and tedious 2022 biography. While not the last surviving bebopper—the superlative vibraphonist Terry Gibbs is very much alive at 101—Rollins deserves consideration among such pioneers as alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, trumpeters Dizzy Gillespie, Fats Navarro and Miles Davis, pianists Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell, and drummers Max Roach, Art Blakey and Roy Haynes.  

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Rollins was raised in Harlem by his mother Valborg and her sister Mirium, an eclectic left-wing activist, in a family profoundly affected by the Harlem Renaissance afterglow cast by  W. E. B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes and Paul Robeson but also the shadow of black nationalist, charlatan and swindler Marcus Garvey , an immigrant from Jamaica who formed a “Back to Africa” movement in Harlem before being convicted of mail fraud and deported.

As a youth, Rollins attended Camp Unity in Wingdale, New York, described by his biographer Levy as “an interracial, antichauvinist, anticapitalist summer camp,” established by the New York branches of the Communist Party. Many black artists turned toward the CP as the supposed continuator of the 1917 October Revolution and a beacon in the struggle against oppression. Tragically, the Stalinized Communist Party had shifted sharply to the right, doing everything in its power to subordinate the working class to the Democratic Party and the liberal sections of the ruling elite.

Rollins later recalled, “It was considered a communist camp, … a bad word to some people but a good word to the people in my community because it offered a lot of the black Americans intercourse with some of the other activities that you otherwise would be prohibited from engaging in.”

One activity available to everyone in Harlem, of course, was music, with the major big bands of  Duke Ellington, Jimmie Lunceford and Chick Webb based in the neighborhood, along with innumerable individual performers such as Fats Waller. Rollins took up the saxophone at age eight and by his mid-teens was proficient enough to start working around New York City, just as the clubs on 52nd Street were becoming the ground zero for bebop. 

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Rollins made outstanding records during the 1950s in groups led by Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis, including one notable session with Charlie Parker switching to tenor saxophone. Unfortunately, like too many of his peers, Rollins became addicted to heroin. He spent time in custody before breaking the habit mid-decade, leading to the most creative and productive years of his career.

In 1955, Rollins joined the Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet and began recording prolifically under his own name, including the classic Saxophone Colossus, Tenor Madness, featuring a “battle” with the up-and-coming John Coltrane, and a daring trio album—only bass and drums, no piano or guitar—in Los Angeles for Contemporary Records, Way Out West.

Rollins followed up with A Night At the Village Vanguard, also with only bass and drums, and several other albums for Blue Note, before 1958’s remarkable Freedom Suite for Riverside Records, using the same spare instrumentation for an unusual four-movement composition based on a recurrent motif. Intended as a political statement, the liner notes by Rollins express his inexhaustible spirit of struggle and optimism but also the undoubted influence of black nationalism. 

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Rollins’ style remained instantly recognizable, sometimes fusing elements of his previous periods with rock instrumentation and increasing doses of calypso. Rollins provided three saxophone tracks for the Rolling Stones’ 1981 Tattoo You but declined their invitation to tour.

As an elder statesman, Rollins won multiple awards and honors from the music industry, academia and the political establishment. He was always gracious and modest in interviews and with aspiring musicians.

On September 11, 2001, Rollins was in his apartment a few blocks from the World Trade Center when the buildings were struck by airliners and collapsed. Toxic particles infested the area, and he could not be evacuated until the next day, when he had to descend 39 flights. While no causal link was proven, Rollins subsequently developed pulmonary fibrosis, which ended his career. Rollins’ last public performance was in 2012.

A notable episode in 2014 highlights Rollins as a victim of the general decline of American culture. The New Yorker magazine published a piece purportedly quoting Rollins that jazz is “the stupidest thing anyone ever came up with.” Not clearly marked as satire—and not remotely amusing—the piece shocked and confused fans. Rollins responded graciously, stating that the article “hurt his feelings” and that it felt like someone being kicked “when he is down.”

The legacy of Sonny Rollins embodies the best traditions of jazz and art in general—democratic, rooted in tradition, disciplined and yet expressive of individual freedom and expression. It is a legacy worth fighting for—against the cheapening of popular taste, the racialist reduction of art and the postmodernist and irrationalist currents that sometimes drove Rollins inward or away from performing music altogether. 

13. Turkish CHP leader Özel’s Newsweek article: How to fight for democratic rights and against imperialism

Özgür Özel, the elected leader of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), published an article on June 1 in the American Newsweek magazine, addressing the political crisis in Türkiye. The piece is directed at Türkiye’s imperialist NATO and European Union (EU) allies, framing the government’s pressure on the CHP as a security threat to the imperialists.

Özel warns that the obstruction of what he terms a “peaceful democratic means to change” under CHP leadership by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government will plunge the country into instability—to the detriment of NATO and the EU.

By implying that the CHP is capable of containing the mounting social opposition to the Erdoğan government, Özel seeks to win over NATO and EU powers—and in doing so, lays bare the CHP’s class character and its organic ties to imperialism.

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In his article, Özel argues that the Erdoğan government has seized control of most of the state apparatus and is working to eliminate “the last meaningful democratic alternative.” Yet he is unable to explain why this is happening; his sole stated reason is that the CHP came first in the 2024 elections.

Attacks on democratic rights, however, are an international phenomenon that cannot be reduced to the ambitions of one-man. The WSWS wrote:

What is unfolding in Türkiye is not a purely national event but a manifestation of an international collapse of democratic forms of rule rooted in the deepening crisis of the capitalist system. US President Donald Trump, having lost the November 2020 elections, mounted a failed coup on January 6, 2021, seeking to remain in power illegally. Erdoğan, for his part, is attempting to forestall a likely defeat in the next elections by neutralizing his principal rival.

The authoritarianism of governments is not a subjective choice by individual rulers; it is the product of the objective contradictions of capitalism. The escalating imperialist wars and aggression across the Middle East and around the world, alongside unprecedented levels of social inequality and class tension, are manifestations of this.

In Türkiye, the ruling class is sitting atop a social powder keg. Türkiye ranks among the most unequal societies in Europe, and the polarization between the working class and the bourgeoisie has reached extraordinary dimensions. 

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Whatever the factional conflicts between Özel, Kılıçdaroğlu and Erdoğan, all three are representatives of the same ruling class, bound organically to imperialism. That is why Özel’s article did not address the social and democratic rights of the working class, but rather the security concerns of the imperialists.

Özel’s central argument runs as follows: the political crisis in Türkiye could trigger a social explosion; that explosion would destabilize NATO and the EU; the CHP is therefore the democratic alternative best equipped to contain such an explosion—more effectively than Erdoğan. The fact that the CHP prevented the spontaneous mass protests by young people and workers that erupted following İmamoğlu’s arrest in March 2025 from becoming radicalized and managed to bring them under control and bring them to an end, serves as a concrete and significant example.

In making this case, Özel emphasizes Türkiye’s geopolitical significance: a gatekeeper of the Black Sea, NATO’s second-largest military power, a crossroads of Europe and Eurasia. He warns that Türkiye risks becoming “a strategically indispensable [NATO] member that no longer functions as a democracy.” This posture is a continuation of Kılıçdaroğlu’s approach—who declared NATO “the guarantor of democracy in the 21st century.”

The claim that NATO leaders have any interest in democratic rights—in Türkiye, in their own countries or anywhere else—is a fraud of the first order. Since its founding as a bulwark against the Soviet Union, NATO’s history has been defined not only by imperialist aggression but by military coups and regime-change operations. The September 12, 1980 and July 15, 2016 coups in Türkiye, as well as the 2014 coup in Ukraine—a pivotal moment in provoking the present war against Russia—were all carried out with the backing of leading NATO powers. 

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It is impossible to defend democratic rights and NATO and the EU simultaneously. These institutions are the instruments not only of their ruling classes’ imperialist wars of plunder abroad, but of the class war waged against the working class at home. They are incompatible with any democratic form of governance.

The struggle for democratic rights therefore cannot be separated from the struggle against imperialism and NATO. That struggle requires a radical political break—from bourgeois parties, and from the Stalinist, Pabloite and pseudo-left parties that channel the working class and youth behind a pro-imperialist party like the CHP. Not one of these parties has made an accounting for its support for Kılıçdaroğlu in the 2023 presidential election—despite his openly pro-NATO and anti-immigrant platform. They are now forming up behind Özel’s leadership to play the same role.

This is the Turkish expression of an international phenomenon: bourgeois and petty-bourgeois political forces, together with the trade union apparatus, are joining hands to neutralize a working class that is beginning to mobilize against war, genocide, austerity and political repression. The only revolutionary response to this offensive is to build an independent political movement of the working class—one that stands against all these forces. The developing independent workers’ movement provides the social foundation for building an alternative outside the political establishment.

This movement must be armed with an international perspective rooted in Trotsky’s Theory of Permanent Revolution. A democratic regime based on social equality and anti-imperialism can only be established as part of an international socialist revolution, under the leadership of the working class.

14. United Kingdom: Workers must reject far-right campaign exploiting Henry Nowak’s killing

The brutal murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak by 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa, a British Sikh, is being used to advance the far-right agenda of Reform UK and smaller far-right groups. Workers must reject attempts to use this killing to drag them behind their class enemies.

Nowak’s death is being used to promote the bogus right-wing “two-tier policing” narrative, claiming whites are penalized because of “woke” attitudes and “political correctness”. 

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This week, Digwa received a life sentence with a minimum of 21 years for the murder of Nowak. Police bodycam footage, made available to the media, has gone viral and the story has led newspapers and sites for days.

Millions are appalled at the callous negligence of the police, of which every working-class community has some experience. There is also great sympathy with Nowak’s family, who have said they “do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred or tensions.”

In contrast, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and the gang of far-right thugs and provocateurs orbiting around the party saw a young man’s death at the hands of a criminal family and a stupid, sneering police force as an opportunity to claim anti-white prejudice and paint all “non-whites” as a potential threat.

In what he described as “Emergency Address”, “to the nation”, Farage seized on the event to “suggest” in a video message that people respond with “pure, cold rage”, warning that “Britain’s historic way of life is being thrown away.” 

Every fascist leader in Britain heeded the call and traveled to Southampton where Nowak’s murder took place to speak at what rapidly became a violent protest of a few hundred people. Farage’s clear intention was to recreate the far-right riots of July 2024, when mobs attacked buildings accommodating asylum seekers after the murder of three children in Southport. 

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That the far-right was able this week to hang its nationalist, xenophobic campaign on a case where a white man died horribly thanks to the actions of the police is incidental. They rove from one scandal to the next—whether real, embellished or totally unsubstantiated—as fuel for their violently divisive agenda.  

15. Workers Struggles: Asia and Australia

Australia:

INPEX LNG production workers in the Northern Territory walk out for improved pay and conditions
 
Public sector medical scientists in Victoria set strike date
 
Catholic school educators in Victoria rally for improved conditions and fair bargaining rights
 
Workers at eight Melbourne councils to strike again over wages
 
Parks Victoria field staff to resume industrial action for pay rise
 
Adelaide nurses and midwives strike for better pay and conditions 

India:  

Maharashtra women workers rally in Mumbai to demand government status
 
Municipal auto tipper drivers in Kolhapur strike for wage rise and benefits
 
Dibrugarh district tea estate workers protest over long-outstanding demands
 
Punjab state-operated service centers remain on strike

Korea:

Kakao platform workers to strike over wages and bonuses
 
 Hyundai Group subcontract workers hold second rally demanding negotiations

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

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