Feb 9, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

 1. This week in history: February 9-15

  • 25 years ago:
USS Greeneville sinks Japanese fishing vessel, killing 9
  • 50 years ago:

Nigerian head of state assassinated

  • 75 years ago:

    Dockworkers begin largest industrial action in New Zealand’s history

  • 100 years ago:

Mussolini issues threats to Germany over South Tyrol

2. Attacking the WSWS, the Communist Party Marxist–Kenya salutes the gravedigger of the revolution, Stalin [article in full]

The Communist Party Marxist–Kenya (CPM-K) has issued a filthy diatribe in response to a series of polemics published by the World Socialist Web Site, culminating in an exposure of their groveling endorsement of their “comrade” Delcy Rodriquez’s alliance with the Trump administration in Venezuela.

In “Trotsky’s Stock-in-trade: A Counter-Revolutionary Export Unfit for the Kenyan Market!!!”, National Chairperson Mwaivu Kaluka writes that the WSWS “have called us ‘STALINISTS’ and ‘MAOISTS’ in bold letters as if these are things to be ashamed of. We embrace these labels with pride,” adding that “Stalinism is nothing but the defense of Leninism against Trotskyism.”

With these words, Kaluka proudly proclaims his unrestrained backing for the monstrous crimes of Stalinism that destroyed the Bolshevik Party, annihilated workers’ democracy, liquidated revolutionary Marxism through terror, and subordinated the international working class to the interests of a privileged bureaucratic caste.

Stalinism emerged out of the isolation of the October Revolution, the devastation of the civil war, and the material exhaustion of the working class. On this basis, a conservative bureaucracy consolidated power within the Soviet state and party in the 1920s,—reinforced and maintained due to the disastrous policies pursued by the Comintern under Stalin’s leadership internationally that led to historic and, in China, bloody defeats of the working class. The maintenance of bureaucratic privilege over the needs of the international revolution was codified in the adoption of the program of “Socialism in one country” and the political war waged against the Trotskyist Left Opposition for its defense of the struggle for world socialist revolution. Stalin’s policy culminated in Hitler’s coming to power in Germany in 1933 and the final transformation of the Communist International into a consciously counter-revolutionary force.

The defense of bureaucratic privilege required above all the physical destruction of the living continuity of Bolshevism. This counter-revolutionary task was carried out through the Great Purges of the 1930s, in which the entire leadership of the October Revolution, including Grigory Zinoviev, Lev Kamenev, Nikolai Bukharin, and Christian Rakovsky—following show trials in which the defendants, subjected to torture and psychological coercion—were compelled to deliver false confessions.

A campaign of mass murder, directed above all at the Trotskyists, saw nearly one million people killed in a wave of counter-revolutionary violence including the finest representatives of several generations of Marxist workers and intellectuals. It was the Trotskyist movement which took up the defence of these revolutionaries and the exposure of the lies used against them, most famously in The Red Book: On the Moscow Trials, published by Trotsky’s son Leon Sedov—murdered by Stalin’s agents in 1938—and in the staging of the Dewey Commission. The Stalinist purges culminated in the assassination of Trotsky, while in exile in Mexico on August 21, 1940.

This slaughter sought to consciously inflict a catastrophic blow to the political consciousness of the Soviet and international working class in order to eliminate a revolutionary threat to the bureaucracy as it pursued a policy of political accommodation with imperialism. 

Across the Communist International, countless militants who had fought for the October Revolution and who were pioneers in the founding of Communist Parties in their respective countries were eliminated. In Germany, leaders forged in the revolutionary struggles of 1918–23 were destroyed; in Poland, Hungary, and the Balkans, Marxists were purged; in China, cadres who resisted subordination to bourgeois nationalism were crushed. Albert Nzula, the Communist Party of South Africa’s first Black secretary general, was killed in Moscow after showing sympathy for Trotsky and voicing criticisms of Stalin.

Through the Communist International, Stalinism functioned as the principal instrument for the political disarming of the proletariat, subordinating mass revolutionary movements throughout the 1930s to the defense of bourgeois rule in the name of “anti-fascism” and “democracy” through popular frontism.

During the Spanish Civil War, the Communist Party became the chief pillar of the bourgeois Republican state, bloodily suppressing every initiative by workers and peasants and hunting down Trotskyists, anarchist militants, and members of the POUM [Workers’ Party of Marxist Unification] who were then imprisoned, tortured, and murdered.

The throttling of the Spanish working class was carried out to reassure the imperialist powers that a proletarian revolution would not threaten their interests. The sheer cynicism of this policy was exposed shortly thereafter in the Stalin-Hitler Pact. Having justified its crimes in Spain as a defense of “democracy” against fascism, the Stalinist bureaucracy openly allied itself with fascism.

The Stalin-Hitler Pact, which CPM-K today hails as a nationalist masterstroke that supposedly defended the Soviet Union, disoriented workers in the Soviet Union and internationally at the very moment when Hitlerite military aggression was erupting across Europe. It was concluded in the immediate aftermath of the systematic decapitation of the Red Army. Its founder, Leon Trotsky, who led it to victory against the wars of intervention launched against the fledgling workers’ state, was in exile; three of the five Soviet marshals, 90 percent of all Red Army generals, 80 percent of Red Army colonels, and 30,000 officers had been purged.

The Soviet Union was left gravely weakened and unprepared when Hitler launched his invasion in June 1941. The Soviet Union ultimately emerged victorious not because of Stalinism, but in spite of it, and at the cost of a staggering 27 million Soviet lives.

Leon Trotsky

Summing up the impact of Stalinism, Trotsky wrote:

No one, not excluding Hitler, has dealt socialism such deadly blows as Stalin. This is hardly astonishing, since Hitler has attacked the working class organizations from without, while Stalin does it from within. Hitler assaults Marxism. Stalin not only assaults it but prostitutes it. Not a single principle has remained unpolluted, not a single idea unsullied. The very names of socialism and communism have been cruelly compromised, from the day when uncontrolled policemen, making their livelihood with a “communist” passport, gave the name socialism to their police regime. Revolting profanation! The barracks of the GPU are not the ideal for which the working class is struggling.

Socialism signifies a pure and clear social system which is accommodated to the self-government of the toilers. Stalin’s regime is based on a conspiracy of the rulers against the ruled. Socialism implies an uninterrupted growth of universal equality. Stalin has erected a system of revolting privileges.

Socialism has as its goal the all-sided flowering of the individual personality. When and where has man’s personality been so degraded as in the USSR?

Socialism would have no value apart from the unselfish, honest, and humane relations between human beings. The Stalin regime has permeated social and personal relationships with lies, careerism and treachery. It is not Stalin, of course, who determines the road taken by history. We possess the knowledge of the objective causes which prepared the path for reaction in the USSR. But it is no accident that Stalin rode on the crest of the Thermidorian wave. He was able to invest the greedy appetites of the new caste with their most vicious expression. Stalin does not bear any responsibility for history. But he does bear responsibility for himself and for his role in history. It is a criminal role. It is so criminal that revulsion is multiplied by horror.

Trotsky concluded:

Moral sensibility finds its highest satisfaction in the immutable conviction that historical retribution will correspond to the scope of the crime. Revolution will unlock all the secret compartments, review all the trials, rehabilitate the slandered, raise memorials to the victims of wantonness, and cover with eternal infamy the names of the executioners. Stalin will depart from the scene laden with all the crimes which he has committed – not only as the gravedigger of the revolution but as the most sinister figure in the history of mankind.

(Leon Trotsky, “The Beginning of the End,” June 12, 1937, in Writings of Leon Trotsky [1936–37] (New York: Pathfinder Press, 1978), pp. 378, 382.)

More than eight decades later, long after Stalinism has completed its counter-revolutionary mission, the CPM-K’s only reference to the restoration of capitalism is its claim that Trotskyists “celebrated the fall of the Soviet Union.”

This grotesque lie is meant to conceal the fact that Trotsky and the Trotskyist movement warned consistently that the bureaucracy would seek to liquidate the gains of the October Revolution. Capitalist restoration was not imposed by Trotskyists, who had been hunted down, exiled, imprisoned, and physically annihilated by the Stalinist bureaucracy. It was carried out by the Stalinist apparatus, which dismantled state property, destroyed what remained of the planned economy, and integrated themselves directly into the structures of world capitalism. The oligarchs who emerged from the ruins of the USSR emerged from the bowels of the Stalinist state and party apparatus.

Significantly, the CPM-K refuses to acknowledge the restoration of capitalism in China—where the Communist Party of China rules on behalf of a billionaire oligarchy intimately fused with global finance capital—because this cuts across its efforts to cultivate lucrative relations with China on behalf of its own leading members and in the interests of the Kenyan bourgeoisie.

History has delivered its verdict. Stalinism did not defend socialism; it destroyed it. Trotskyism alone fought to prevent that outcome and continues to provide the only revolutionary perspective capable of guiding the working class in the struggle for world socialist revolution. 

It is in the political context of the CPM-K’s open hailing of the crimes of Stalinism and its own political alignment with bourgeois nationalist regimes that collaborate with the murderous CIA that its fixation on this author’s use of a pseudonym is politically sinister. Coupled with the vile slander that the Trotskyist movement is funded by the CIA, it is a demand to mark out individuals for political targeting, repression, and even murder. It comes from an organisation whose top leadership, including National Chairperson Mwandawiro Mghanga and General Secretary Benedict Wachira, openly joined the Ruto regime, a government responsible for mass killings, enforced disappearances, and thousands of arrests.

The CPM-K’s efforts to rehabilitate Stalin and Stalinism is an agenda shared by a host of similar tendencies internationally. This includes Neo-Stalinist parties that emerged from the former affiliates of the Third International such as the Communist Parties of Greece, Turkey, Brazil and the Russian Federation, who now ally themselves with Maoist groups such as the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Vietnamese Communist Party in denouncing as “revisionism” the efforts of the Kremlin to repudiate Stalin’s crimes.

They are joined by layers of the petty-bourgeois, pseudo-left milieu, whose hatred of the Trotskyist movement and wish to re-enact the purges and assassinations of the 1930s is rooted in their hostility to socialist revolution. This is reinforced by their embrace of “multipolar alliances” with the Russian and Chinese bourgeoisie as a means of containing US imperialism while defending the interests of their own bourgeoisie.

The WSWS will continue to wage a merciless political struggle against all such tendencies. And by clarifying the essential historical lessons of the Twentieth Century against all those who seek to silence it through lies and threats of repression, create the basis for winning the young vanguard of the working class to the ranks of the International Committee of the Fourth International.

3. United States: Kaiser lawsuit exposes Labor Management Partnership as conspiracy against healthcare workers

Five days before the strike began, Kaiser Permanente sued the Alliance of Health Care Unions, alleging violations of the Labor Management Partnership (LMP). The 10-union alliance includes the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals (UNAC/UHCP), United Food and Commercial Workers, Teamsters, UNITE HERE and other striking unions.

The purpose of the lawsuit is to fragment negotiations, get unions to sign separate agreements and shut down the strike piecemeal. It is also a shot across the bow to the labor bureaucracy with an implicit threat that the stream of money the union apparatus receives through the Labor Management Partnership may be turned off if it cannot get its membership back in line.

Kaiser’s primary demand is to be released from any obligation to negotiate a national agreement. Instead, it is seeking to end the strike on a workplace-by-workplace basis. 

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Most significantly, the lawsuit suggests that the strike itself is a violation of the unions’ partnership with Kaiser. “The Defendants’ conduct deprived Plaintiffs of the benefit of labor stability, operational continuity, and business reputation the LMP agreement was intended to protect.”

In other words, the unions’ participation in the LMP, and the raison d’etre of the LMP itself are expressly to suppress strikes (“labor stability” and “operational continuity”) and defend the reputation of Kaiser Permanente. One must ask: what kind of organization claiming to represent workers would agree to such terms? Furthermore, can workers have confidence in such an organization to lead a struggle for workers’ interests?

As the World Socialist Web Site explained in a 2021 article, titled, “What is the Kaiser Permanente Labor Management Partnership,” the LMP, established in 1997, was modeled on the corporatist schemes established by the United Auto Workers, the United Steelworkers and other industrial unions in the early 1980s. Corporatism “preached unrestrained class collaboration and promoted the lie that workers have no interests that are separate from, let alone hostile to, those of the corporate bosses.”

In exchange for collaborating in the destruction of millions of industrial jobs and the gutting of workers’ wages, pensions and working conditions, the UAW, USW and other union bureaucracies were handed positions on company boards and a portion of the hundreds of billions stolen from workers’ income in the form of corporate stocks and other bribes. Over the last four decades, the artificial suppression of the class struggle by the labor bureaucracy resulted in an even further transfer of wealth to the top. At the same time, workers’ share of the national GDP fell to the lowest level since the Labor Department began collecting statistics in 1947.

As reported earlier, Kaiser reported $115.8 billion in operating revenue, $12.9 billion in “net income,” and nearly $67.4 billion in financial reserves in 2024. Executive compensation was approximately $93 million. These massive sums of money were made possible by the “labor stability” protected and ensured by the LMP. 

Kaiser is invoking the LMP as the basis for its lawsuit, exposing any claims that the LMP works for the “mutual” benefit of healthcare workers as a complete fraud. The LMP, and the unions in particular, bear responsibility for the deterioration of the working conditions of nurses and healthcare workers, having sanctioned the inflation of patient-staff ratios and suppressed struggles for improvements to working conditions. 

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Rank-and-file workers have no interest in defending the Labor Management Partnership, which was created in response to recurring strikes. It imposed the burden of the financial pressures affecting Kaiser onto the employees. Framed as “employee involvement,” it was designed to transform the union leadership into an arm of management, and secure deep concessions from the workers rather than empower workers.

Left in the hands of the labor bureaucracy, the current struggle will be betrayed like countless battles before. That is why it is necessary for Kaiser nurses and other healthcare workers to immediately form rank-and file committees to transfer power and decision-making from the union apparatus to the workers on the hospital and clinic floors. Strikers must be on guard against every effort to divide them with separate deals and instead fight for the expansion of the struggle. This includes uniting with New York nurses and other sections of workers entering into struggle, including San Francisco teachers, oil refinery workers and others.

As enumerated, hundreds of thousands of workers across the country are voting to strike or face contract expirations in the coming weeks and months, opening up the prospect for sustained, coordinated strike action, as a part of a broader working class upsurge against the attack on social and democratic rights by the Trump administration and the corporate oligarchy that both parties defend. Central to such a struggle will be securing the right to free, high quality healthcare for all by ending the subordination of medical care to corporate profit.

4. Online meeting: The Nurses’ Strikes and the Movement Against Dictatorship

The World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) will host an online meeting on the way forward for the 15,000 striking New York nurses and the 31,000 striking healthcare workers in California and Hawaii at 7:30 p.m. EST on Tuesday, February 10. 

14. Workers at BYD’s Xi’an plant in China strike over poverty wages

On February 5, workers at BYD’s high-voltage electrical equipment factory in the Jixian Industrial Park of Xi’an’s High-tech Zone walked off the job in a collective strike against savage cuts to their piece-rate bonuses. Under BYD’s ongoing cost-reduction drive, the maximum monthly piece-rate bonus—a critical component of workers’ meagre incomes—was slashed from 2,400 yuan to as little as 300-600 yuan. 

After mandatory deductions for social insurance and housing fund contributions, many workers reported that their monthly take-home pay had fallen below 2,000 yuan (approximately $US290). To put this figure in perspective: 2,000 yuan per month amounts to roughly $3,480 per year. 

Meanwhile, BYD founder, chairman and CEO Wang Chuanfu commands an estimated personal fortune of $28.5 billion, according to Forbes last year. A single BYD factory worker earning 2,000 yuan per month would have to work for more than 8.2 million years to accumulate the wealth that Wang possesses today. 

This huge disparity is not an aberration but the very foundation of BYD’s business model, in which base wages are deliberately set barely above—and sometimes scarcely at—local minimum wage levels, forcing workers to depend on overtime, bonuses, and performance supplements that can be withdrawn at management’s discretion.

The Xi’an strike is far from an isolated event. It is the latest eruption in a pattern of escalating labor unrest across BYD’s vast manufacturing empire that stretches back years and spans multiple countries and Chinese provinces. 

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The pattern of exploitation extends beyond China’s borders. In December 2024, Brazilian authorities rescued at least 163 Chinese workers from what prosecutors described as “conditions analogous to slavery” at a construction site for a new BYD plant in Camaçari, Bahia. The site was shut down, delaying the opening of the facility—the company’s first passenger car plant outside Asia—last year.

According to HK Labour Rights Monitor website, “The investigation revealed shocking abuses: some workers slept on bare beds, with 31 people sharing a single toilet. Food and personal items were stored in unsanitary conditions. Workers were reportedly forced to wake as early as 4 am, endured excessive work hours without rest days, and in some cases worked for 25 days straight.”

Workers had their passports confiscated, up to 60 percent of wages withheld and were forced to work shifts of up to 12 hours a day, seven days a week, for as many as 25 consecutive days. Federal prosecutors subsequently filed a lawsuit seeking 257 million reais (approximately $US45 million) in damages, which has since been settled for just 40 million reais.

For 17 years, from 2008 to 2025, BYD’s labor regime has been tacitly backed by multi-billionaire speculator, Warren Buffett, one of the richest men in the world. Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s investment vehicle, held a major stake in BYD, originally acquired for $230 million in 2008 at the urging of his late partner Charlie Munger, who described Wang Chuanfu as “a combination of Thomas Edison and Jack Welch.” 

At its peak, Berkshire’s BYD stake was worth over $9 billion—a roughly 40-fold return. The investment generated an estimated $7 billion in profit. Throughout this period, as BYD workers endured poverty wages, police crackdowns on strikes, passport confiscations abroad, and systematically broken promises, Berkshire Hathaway remained a prominent shareholder, lending its prestige and that of Buffett personally to the company. 

Berkshire began selling in August 2022 and completed its full exit by early 2025. Buffett offered no criticism of BYD’s highly exploitative labor practices. His only public comment in 2023 was that BYD was “an extraordinary company” run by an “extraordinary person,” but that he would “find things to do with the money that I’ll feel better about.” 

The recurring strikes at BYD expose the character of capitalist exploitation in China and BYD’s rise as the world’s dominant electric vehicle manufacturer. BYD reported revenue of 777.1 billion yuan in 2024 and net profit of over 40 billion yuan. Wang Chuanfu’s personal fortune places him among the wealthiest individuals on the planet—he was listed by Forbes last year as the 9th wealthiest of China’s billionaires.

Yet the workers who produce this wealth—now numbering over 900,000, making BYD the largest publicly traded employer in China—are paid wages that, in many factories, leave them unable to meet basic living costs without grueling overtime.

The All-China Federation of Trade Unions, the only legally permitted union body, functions not as a representative of workers but an arm of management and the state, suppressing independent organization and channeling discontent into harmless outlets. Workers who attempt to organize or protest rapidly face police repression, dismissal, and detention.

The Xi’an strike, like those before it in Wuxi, Chengdu, and Changsha, demonstrates that the Chinese working class is not prepared to accept these conditions. While the Chinese state media and bureaucracy provide no statistics publicly on industrial action, wildcat strikes and protests have markedly increased since 2023, particularly over unpaid wages and wage cuts, according to organizations that attempt to monitor strike activity from outside China.

5. The Guthrie kidnapping, the US media and the thousands of ICE abductions

This is a frightening and tragic situation for the Guthrie family, no doubt affecting dozens of people at this point and perhaps for the rest of their lives. One can only hope that it ends with Nancy Guthrie’s safe return to her family.

The response in the American media to this event, however, is vastly disproportionate to the significance of the event itself. The media has gone into full saturation mode on the Guthrie kidnapping. The evening and morning news television programs have been dominated by the latest developments, which sometimes occupy nearly half of the total coverage. The print media has responded likewise, insisting furthermore that their obsession is shared by everyone else. 

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The American media is undoubtedly mesmerized by the episode. First of all, this has happened to one of them or to one of their family members. The media personalities assume the general public is as fascinated by them and their lives as they themselves are.

USA Today claims “we know that it is an incident that is deeply, horrifically sad and frightening. And we can’t stop watching and waiting for news. … When tragedy hits the lives of the rich and famous, the American public can’t help but tune in.” Such a comment removes events from their social and cultural context. “Celebrities” are endlessly marketed to the American public as the people that count, the only people that count, and the relentless bombardment, under conditions in which so many millions lead bleak and uninviting lives, has its impact.

But this should not be overstated. A mass movement of opposition to the establishment and the status quo generally is developing. The president, many of his officials, law enforcement and the rest are increasingly held in contempt by large numbers of people, who are openly standing up to and resisting their dictates. A considerable number of “celebrities,” individuals who have actually earned popular respect for their genuine talents in many cases, are loudly denouncing the actions of their own government and its agencies. A healthy disrespect for the rich, for authority and for the official political system and culture is emerging. In other words, the stagnant, suffocating “celebrity culture” is beginning to fall apart.

In the overwhelming media response to the Guthrie case, there is also the inevitable element of deliberate social distraction. The various bourgeois news organizations welcome an incident like this, with its socially “neutral” character, a story that holds “human interest” for “everyone,” as a means of removing the focus from the Trump administration’s drive to war and dictatorship, the Democratic Party’s complicity, ICE’s crimes and killings, as well as the desperately painful economic conditions facing tens of millions. The American media always has the need to “change the subject,” because the “subject” is always threatening and ominous.

Moreover, we need to point out the vast difference in the depth of the coverage of the Guthrie kidnapping and that devoted to the thousands of abductions (and often deportations) of ordinary people by ICE and the rest of the fascist paramilitary apparatus set in motion by the Trump administration. These go largely unreported or vastly under-reported by the official outlets. 

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In addition to the thousands of immigrants who have been assaulted, ProPublica found that 170 US “Citizens Have Been Held by Immigration Agents. They’ve Been Kicked, Dragged and Detained for Days.”

Among the detentions in which [ICE] allegations have not stuck, masked agents pointed a gun at, pepper sprayed and punched a young man who had filmed them searching for his relative. In another, agents knocked over and then tackled a 79-year-old car wash owner, pressing their knees into his neck and back. His lawyer said he was held for 12 hours and wasn’t given medical attention despite having broken ribs in the incident and having recently had heart surgery. In a third case, agents grabbed and handcuffed a woman on her way to work who was caught up in a chaotic raid on street vendors. In a complaint filed against the government, she described being held for more than two days, without being allowed to contact the outside world for much of that time.

These events are “sickening and deeply uncomfortable.” The society is indeed “supposed to protect the young and the old,” but it has ruthlessly and cruelly declared war on many of them. “How safe is anyone” under those conditions?

The cases noted here are only a few of the countless horror stories. Under which conditions will the US media become “captivated” by these frightening and tragic situations? 

6. Ruling right-wing party in Japan wins general election in landslide

Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) secured victory in Sunday’s general election, winning more than two-thirds of the seats in the lower house of parliament and ensuring that far-right Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi stays in power. The election results are part of a major shift even further to the right for the Japanese establishment, which is planning for war abroad and the suppression of opposition at home. 

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The LDP’s victory comes after two disastrous elections in which the party lost its lower house majority in October 2024 and then its upper house majority in July of last year. It has now rebounded, with Takaichi using the election results to claim a mandate for constitutional revision in order to wage war overseas and to strengthen the military, formally known as the Self-Defense Forces (SDF). 

Constitutional change requires approval by two-thirds of both houses of parliament and acceptance by a simple majority in a national referendum and has never succeeded in the post-World War 2 period.

Takaichi stated Sunday night, “We (the LDP) have advocated policies facing significant opposition, including a major shift in economic and fiscal policy, strengthening our security policy, and enhancing intelligence capabilities. If we receive the people’s trust, we must work diligently on these matters.”

Yet voter turnout is estimated to have reached only 55.68 percent, making it the fourth lowest rate in the post-war period. Since 2012, when Shinzo Abe became prime minister, voter turnout has been at historic lows in each general election, reflecting widespread disillusionment with the political establishment, rather than “mandates” from the public. 

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Takaichi’s agenda follows that of her predecessors, in particular her political mentor Shinzo Abe, who carried out significant attacks on the working class while pursuing remilitarization as prime minister from 2012 to 2020. Quite telling about her agenda, Takaichi also received the endorsement of fascistic US President Trump last Thursday. 

The so-called opposition Democrats have consistently bowed before the far-right in Japan. Ahead of this election, they accepted many of the LDP’s policies so as to form its alliance with Komeito, including openly backing military legislation rammed through parliament in 2015 that allows Tokyo to wage war overseas alongside an ally. 

The CRA did not put forward any serious measures to address the economic crisis that the working people face. Nor did it pledge to oppose remilitarization, but instead declared that it will hold “responsible” discussions on issues like constitutional revision to make it easier for Japan to wage war.

Faced with the crisis of capitalism at home and internationally, Japanese imperialism is seeking to independently reassert its interests through all means. This includes removing any remaining post-war constraints on Japanese militarism, most notably Article 9 of the constitution which formally bans Tokyo from maintaining a military or waging war overseas. In practice, Article 9 has been effectively ignored by successive governments through the establishment of a Japanese military cloaked as Self-Defense Forces and maintaining huge US military bases within Japan. 

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At the same time, the ruling class seeks the passage of anti-democratic and pro-military measures because they foresee working class opposition. This includes passing new legislation such as an anti-espionage law. 

The purpose of such a law would be to clamp down on information spreading to the public by expanding what would constitute a “national secret.” Such a law could easily be used to target whistleblowers, journalists, or anyone seeking to expose the ruling class’s attack on workers or plans for war. 

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Takaichi’s cabinet also plans to revise Japan’s National Security Strategy, the National Defense Strategy, and the Defense Buildup Program by the end of this year. These three documents were last revised in 2022 and were intended to cover a 10-year period. A key component of the documents was the raising of military spending to 2 percent of GDP by 2027. 

The government reached this 2 percent level early through a supplementary budget at the end of last year. The revision of the three military documents will almost certainly include an even higher spending threshold, the cost of which will have to be extracted from the working class.

7. United Kingdom: Corbyn’s anti-socialism, Sultana’s reformism and the necessary revolutionary alternative

[Jeremy Corbyn] and his faction, “The Many”, have... set about waging a right-wing assault on any program for Your Party which makes even a verbal declaration of anti-capitalism and anti-imperialism. 

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From the beginning of his time as Labour leader in 2015, the Socialist Equality Party identified Corbyn as the chief political obstacle to the development of a socialist movement in the UK, in opposition to every other left tendency that presented his time as leader as an opportunity for the socialist transformation of the Labour Party.

As leader, Corbyn betrayed the mass support he had won and capitulated on every political issue to the Blairite right, including accepting NATO membership and the Trident nuclear weapons system. He turned a blind eye while Labour’s Blairite apparatus purged left-wing members, then colluded in the expulsion of many of his leading supporters on lying charges equating anti-Zionism with antisemitism.

This was met with one apologia after another insisting that Corbyn was a well-intentioned victim of the Blairite right-wing—which he had, in fact, protected from all efforts to expel them from the party. When he was finally driven out and replaced by Starmer, tendencies such as the SWP, SP and the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) still upheld him as the natural leader of a left breakaway party—a course of action he opposed for years.

Under the pressure of mass hostility to the Labour Party and the government of Keir Starmer, Corbyn finally accepted his coronation as leader of what became Your Party in July last year. He did so only to mount a vicious campaign against his nominal co-leader Sultana and her backers, employing the full playbook of the Blairites to ensure that Your Party would function as a tame electoral vehicle whose sole purpose is the election of a handful of MPs to act as Labour’s “conscience”.

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That Corbyn now leads Your Party—supposedly offering a “left” alternative to Labour—has not made a jot of difference to his political loyalties or his bankrupt politics.

Corbyn’s latest performance continues his historic role of refusing to wage any struggle against the Blairites and the Labour Party apparatus, confirming him as a loyal defender of British imperialism.

8. International opposition to Trump and ICE shape opening of Milan Olympics

Italy’s fascist prime minister, Georgia Meloni, welcomed U.S. Vice President JD Vance to Milan and placed the city on lockdown. Nearly 6,000 heavily-armed Italian police and military officers are patrolling the streets. Snipers are deployed on the rooftops, no-fly zones have been established across the city and a special decree allows police to jail people in Milan for 12 hours on the flimsy grounds that police suspect they might engage in violent protest.

Nonetheless, what has attracted world attention to the Games, beyond the athletic feats performed by the Olympians, is not the machinery of police-state rule but expressions of the growing political opposition to fascist policies on both sides of the Atlantic. Protests have shaken Milan, expressions of anti-war sentiment marked the Games’ opening ceremony and US Olympians publicly criticized the Trump administration.

Illegal ICE occupations of US cities, deportations of immigrants and the executions of Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis are shocking and radicalizing masses of people across Europe and beyond. It is becoming evident to working people around the world that they confront, in the Trump administration, a US government unlike any they have ever seen: an utterly lawless regime that brazenly announces and enacts fascist policies. 

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Anti-war or veiled statements of opposition to Trump made their way even into the scripted proceedings of the opening ceremony. Milanese rapper Ghali performed Gianni Rodari’s famous 1948 anti-war children’s poem Promemoria, while US/South African actress Charlize Theron read a quote from former South African President Nelson Mandela opposing racial prejudice.

The 60,000-strong crowd at the opening ceremony booed US Vice President Vance when, during the applause for the US Olympic delegation, footage of Vance and his wife Usha arriving at the stadium was broadcast on the stadium screens. The crowd ignored appeals from Olympic organizers not to boo while US athletes were marching.

Finally, the Trump and Meloni governments have been deeply shaken by statements made by Olympic athletes themselves. These are in many cases individuals of extraordinary athletic talent, who have devoted years of their lives to rigorous training. Many live in the Olympic Village during the competition and meet athletes from around the world, fostering international camaraderie and respect. Their statements make clear that the nationalism and flag-waving that saturate the media coverage of the Olympics is not something they embrace voluntarily but something that is imposed upon them.

Asked whether he felt comfortable representing his country during ICE operations, US freestyle skier Hunter Hess replied: “Just because I’m wearing the flag doesn’t mean I represent everything that’s going on in the US.”

His fellow US freestyle skier Chris Lillis said he was “heartbroken” about ICE actions and broader events in the United States: “I think that, as a country, we need to focus on respecting everybody’s rights and making sure that we’re treating our citizens, as well as anybody, with love and respect. I hope that when people look at athletes competing in the Olympics, they realize that that’s the America that we’re trying to represent.” 

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Statements like those of Hunt and Lillis reflect a growing hostility among broad layers of the world’s population to what governments like those of Trump and Meloni represent. A deep-rooted social and political radicalization has begun against reactionary governments that are isolated and despised. Despite censorship and police-state repression, this mass sentiment has begun to force its way to the surface of events. 

Unsurprisingly, Trump and Meloni have responded with degraded denunciations of athletes and protesters opposing them during the Games. While Trump attacked Hunter Hess on Truth Social as “a real Loser, says he doesn’t represent his Country in the current Winter Olympics,” Meloni attacked those protesting during the Olympics as “enemies of Italy and of Italians.”

But it is not hard to see who the “enemies of the people” are. It is the fascist representatives of the ruling capitalist oligarchy who resort to war, genocide, stoking anti-immigrant racism, austerity and police-state repression—not workers and youth protesting against them.

Moods of opposition are growing internationally in line with a resurgence of class struggle and an activation of the social force that can take economic and political power out of the hands of the capitalist oligarchy: the working class. The mass protests in Minneapolis in January against the police murders of Good and Pretti are expressions of a developing social upheaval in the United States and internationally.

Indeed, the day of the Olympic opening ceremony—amidst ongoing strikes by 46,000 nurses in the US—port workers in Italy and across the Mediterranean launched a one-day “Dockworkers do not work for war” strike. Their strike delayed the arrival of arms headed for the Middle East and the genocide in Gaza, blocking ships bearing weapons in ports where union officials kept dockworkers on the job.

These events point to the possibility and necessity of the international unification of the struggles of the working class. The conscious goal of such a movement must be the mobilization of workers’ social and industrial power to bring down capitalist governments pursuing policies of austerity, imperialist war and dictatorship and to transfer power to the working people—building a socialist society in which social and economic resources are used to meet social need, not private profit.

9. Türkiye imprisons 77 members of the Socialist Party of the Oppressed (ESP), puts six members of Left Party under house arrest

Last week, 77 of the 110 people detained in police operations targeting members of the Socialist Party of the Oppressed (ESP) across Türkiye were arrested and sent to prison. This was the most comprehensive attack to date on the party, which was legally founded in 2010 and has frequently been subjected to political repression by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government. In a separate wave of state crackdown, six members of the Left (SOL) Party were sentenced to house arrest.

The Sosyalist Eşitlik Partisi – Dördüncü Enternasyonal, the Turkish section of the International Committee of the Fourth International, has condemned state repression in its statements and demanded the release of those arrested. In its first statement about the ESP, it said, “Democratic rights cannot be defended without principally opposing increasing state repression against freedom of expression and the right to protest, as well as political detentions and arrests.”

10. Morenoites and Stalinists form reactionary bloc in Venezuela: The betrayal of the working class continues!

The Chavista government headed by “interim president” Delcy Rodríguez, far from being the main target of US imperialism, is closely collaborating with Trump and his fascist cabinet in the plundering of Venezuela.

Instead of the promised “Latin American liberation from the Monroe Doctrine,” history has proven Chavismo to be a midwife for a neocolonial order proclaimed by US imperialism as it confronts its deepest historical crisis.

These events are having a deep impact on the consciousness of masses of people in Latin America and internationally and adding to an ongoing process of radicalization and political reorientation.

The organizations of the pseudo-left, directly responsible for the catastrophe in Venezuela, are now working desperately to prevent the working class from breaking from the demoralized nationalist bureaucracy and its apparatus.

With this reactionary purpose, the different Pabloite and Morenoite tendencies, the Stalinist Communist Party of Venezuela (PCV) and other dissident currents of Chavismo have launched a rotten political bloc to confront the “grave situation” in Venezuela.

These organizations – either affiliated to or supporting the “National Meeting in Defense of the People’s Rights” led by the Stalinists – issued a joint statement calling for opposition to “the military aggression and imperialist offensive” and to “the neocolonial collaboration of the national government with the Trump administration,” and demanding “democratic liberties.”

Covered under radical phraseology, this reactionary pseudo-left coalition is aimed at carving out space for these organizations in the new bourgeois setup being established under imperialist siege. Vindicating their position as the official “left opposition,” their central task is to prevent the working class from drawing the historical lessons from the crisis of Chavismo and developing its independent political movement. 

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The manifesto’s signatories, while proclaiming themselves to be above any “factor of oppressive power,” don’t bother to discuss their own political origins and records. In fact, no political event dating from before January 3, 2026, is mentioned in the document’s five pages of conjunctural analysis and action demands.

Any historical balance sheet would expose the direct complicity of these pseudo-left organizations in the massive betrayal against the Venezuelan population. 

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Intentionally blurring the conflicting class interests within Venezuela, the statement’s calls for the “rescue of national sovereignty” and to “overcome the imperialist domination” is aimed at deceiving the working class and ensuring its subordination to the national bourgeoisie.

None of the demands raised by the Morenoite-Stalinist bloc are oriented to the working class and for the development of its political consciousness and independent organization. They direct all their appeals to the bourgeois state itself, illegitimately presenting themselves as spokesmen for the Venezuelan workers. 

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The central lesson of the catastrophic experience with Chavismo and other forms of petty-bourgeois nationalism in Latin America is precisely the need to forge revolutionary leadership on the basis of an intransigent struggle for the political independence of the working class.

The historical role fulfilled by Stalinism, aided Pabloite revisionism and its variants, such as Morenoism was precisely to derail the working class’s struggle for political independence. These revisionist tendencies represented an attempt to liquidate Trotskyism into the nationalist perspectives of Stalinism, while promoting bourgeois nationalism and petty-bourgeois guerrillaism as substitutes for the conscious and independent mobilization of the working class in the struggle for socialism.

As Trotsky wrote in 1937: “The modern history of bourgeois society is filled with all sorts of Popular Fronts, i.e. the most diverse political combinations for the deception of the toilers.” This tradition was tragically continued throughout the course of the 20th century.

In Latin America, it led to the US-backed 1973 coup in Chile, which was prepared by the betrayals of the Unidad Popular government joined by the Stalinists and backed by the Pabloites. In 1976, an equally brutal military regime took power in Argentina facilitated by the subordination of workers to Peronism promoted by Nahuel Moreno.

The 21st century “Pink Tide” was the most recent and decrepit manifestation of the promotion of bourgeois nationalism and “popular frontism” by the pseudo-left enemies of the working class.

The violent eruption of US imperialism is not a symptom of its strength, but of its historical demise. While the preservation of global capitalism doesn’t allow for a peaceful reconfiguration of the international order, the conditions for overthrowing the imperialist system as a whole are objectively posed.

The working class is being called upon the historical arena to resolve the crisis of humanity and to establish an international socialist society that corresponds to the objective character of globalized economy and the potential of technology.

The historic task confronting workers and youth in Venezuela and throughout Latin America is the construction of revolutionary parties based on the strategic lessons of these experiences. This means building sections of the International Committee of the Fourth International, grounded in the intransigent defense of the political independence of the working class, the theory of permanent revolution, and the program of international socialist revolution.

11. Peru protest joins drivers, university students and relatives of state repression victims

The “March of Sacrifice” was organized by the relatives of those murdered in 2023, when newly installed President Dina Boluarte gave shoot-to-kill orders to suppress nationwide protests. 

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According to government figures, there were more than 56 murders of drivers and fare collectors in 2025; the unions put the figure at 180. The union leaders, drawn largely from small transport company operators, have collaborated with police in quelling previous protests. Their demands center on strengthening the repressive apparatus with more militarized policing and more prisons.

Clashes broke out when the police banned the march from advancing along Abancay Avenue. This time the police backed down and the march continued along that avenue until it reached Congress.

In three of the last four presidential changes, the police opened fire with intent to kill. The latest killing was of youth protester and rapper Eduardo Ruiz Sanz (aka Trvko) at the hands of an undercover police officer during a demonstration on October 15, 2025. That day Gen-Z took to the streets to protest the rise of José Jerí to the presidency.

Jerí was a corrupt congressman and has taken all his tricks with him to the Government Palace. Every day the newspapers publish more filth associated with Jerí. He staged a clandestine meeting with two Chinese businessmen in a Chinese restaurant, where the president tried to conceal his presence by wearing a hood. The meetings were not on his official schedule. The scandal is known as “Chifagate.” In Peru, Chinese restaurants are known as chifas. More information has been coming out that Jerí awarded plum government jobs to young women after they made late night visits to his residence. 

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Jerí is Peru’s eighth president in less than a decade, with four of his predecessors currently in jail.

Clara, who was among the people waiting for the marchers to reach Plaza San Martín, told the World Socialist Web Site: “I have come to the march to accompany the comrades who have been demanding justice for more than three years. [Former president] Dina Boluarte is a psychopath. She attacked more than 80 Peruvians among those killed, wounded and disappeared. Many [of those who took part in the protests from January to March 2023] are in prison without lawyers to defend them.”

“Jerí is just another servant of the dictatorship. It is more of the same. They simply got rid of Boluarte because her government could not go on any longer.” 

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There is a growing radicalization of workers and youth in Peru amid the abject subordination of the unions and so-called “left” to the bourgeois state. The burning necessity is that of a new revolutionary leadership in the working class dedicated to uniting its struggles with those of workers throughout the Americas and around the world. This means building a Peruvian section of the International Committee of the Fourth International.

12. A toddler’s near death at Dilley exposes the reality of US immigration detention

The case of an 18-month-old girl identified as Amalia exemplifies the true character of the US immigration detention system. Her near-fatal illness and the subsequent lawsuit filed by her parents expose a system in which children are treated as criminals, disease is allowed to spread unchecked, and even the most basic obligations of care are abandoned. What happened to Amalia was not an accident or an unforeseeable medical emergency. It was the predictable outcome of confining families in squalid, carceral conditions where human life is treated as disposable.

Yesterday, Reuters reported that the parents of Amalia, who have been detained at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas since December 11, 2025, filed a federal lawsuit last Friday against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and federal officials under the Department of Homeland Security responsible for her detention and medical care.

While in custody, Amalia became critically ill and went into life-threatening respiratory failure. On January 18, she was rushed to Methodist Children’s Hospital in San Antonio, where she was admitted to the intensive care unit and remained hospitalized for 10 days.

According to her parents, Amalia developed a high fever in early January that would not subside. She began vomiting and experiencing severe diarrhea, leaving her dangerously dehydrated and struggling to breathe. Despite repeated pleas by her parents for medical attention, detention staff reportedly turned them away, instructing them only to administer basic fever medication.

By mid-January, Amalia’s condition had deteriorated rapidly. She became lethargic and listless as her respiratory failure worsened. On January 18, her blood oxygen saturation levels plunged into the 50s—critically low levels that, without immediate medical intervention, would have resulted in her death within a short time. She was transported to the hospital with her mother, where she was finally given supplemental oxygen and nebulized breathing treatments, hydrated with intravenous fluids, and placed under intensive care. Throughout her hospitalization, ICE officers maintained constant supervision over both mother and child.

During her medical evaluation, Amalia was diagnosed with COVID-19, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), viral bronchitis, and pneumonia. She required nutritional supplements after losing approximately 10 percent of her body weight. For a child of her age, the combination of multiple viral respiratory infections with pneumonia represents a severe illness with a prolonged and fragile recovery. Such conditions require close medical follow-up and uninterrupted access to prescribed medications and equipment, including breathing treatments to reduce airway inflammation and prevent relapse. Children recovering from this level of illness remain at high risk of rapid deterioration if care is interrupted. According to reports, Amalia’s mother remained at her daughter’s bedside throughout the hospitalization, fearing she would not survive.

Despite this, upon Amalia’s discharge on January 28, the family was informed they would be returned to the Dilley detention center. Once back in custody, Amalia’s prescribed nebulizer, medications, and nutritional drinks were confiscated by detention staff. Her parents were forced to wait with her each day in long outdoor lines outside the facility’s medical unit—known as the “pill line”—during a period of frigid winter weather that had swept across the region. On each occasion, Amalia was given a nutritional supplement but denied access to the breathing medications ordered by her physicians. 

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A recent STAT News report on the measles outbreak at Dilley by infectious disease physician Dr. Krutika Kuppalli explained that people held in immigration detention centers face a heightened risk of contracting vaccine-preventable diseases. Due to poor baseline health, malnutrition, and chronic stress, they are also more likely to suffer severe complications once infected.

These dangers are well documented. A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in October 2025 found that between 2019 and 2023, ICE facilities reported 2,035 influenza cases, 252 mumps cases and 486 hepatitis A cases across just 20 detention centers.

Another investigation by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, examining the period from January 1, 2017, through March 22, 2020, identified 1,280 influenza cases, 1,052 chickenpox cases and 301 mumps cases, including dozens of documented outbreaks. Dr. Nathan Lo, the study’s lead author, observed: “These numbers are pretty shocking, and very concerning. They suggest this vulnerable population is being placed at very high risk for these infections while being detained. Crowding people together and giving them poor access to health care or vaccines makes these detention centers ripe for facilitating infectious outbreaks.” 

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Amalia was released only because her case briefly broke through the legal system. That outcome should not be mistaken for justice. Courts intervene late and selectively, after serious harm has already occurred, and only for those who are able to secure lawyers and public attention. Countless others remain imprisoned under the same conditions, with no recourse at all.

What happened at Dilley cannot be solved through lawsuits or administrative fixes. These detention centers are not malfunctioning; they are working as designed. They exist to criminalize immigrants, to confine families in degrading conditions, and to treat human suffering as acceptable collateral damage.

Defending immigrant children and families therefore cannot be separated from the broader struggle of the working class. The same political system that cages migrants, dismantles public health protections, and allows preventable disease to spread is one that exploits workers everywhere. The answer is not appeals to the courts, but collective political action. A revolutionary, internationalist perspective is required, one that defends the rights of all people, regardless of nationality or legal status, and unites workers across borders in opposition to a system that profits from repression, disease, and inequality.

13. Minnesota police riot against protesters outside Whipple Federal building

On February 7, a combined force of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office and Minnesota State Patrol troopers carried out mass arrests of protesters outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building. The building serves as the nerve center for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operations that have terrorized immigrants and protesters in Minneapolis and throughout Minnesota.  

The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) dispatched snowplows to block entry points to the Whipple building. Ranks of helmeted, baton-wielding state troopers and sheriff’s deputies moved in on protesters who have held daily vigils to oppose ICE operations. Using a bullhorn, a Hennepin County sheriff announced, “Due to the unlawful conduct and threat to public safety, I hereby declare this to be an unlawful assembly.”

Police forces advanced shouting, “Move back! Move back!” Protesters responded that the real criminals were the ICE agents inside the Whipple building, and that it was ICE that was “violating a federal judge’s orders” and “violating our Fourth Amendment rights.” State troopers and deputies then charged, wrestling protesters to the ground and hauling them away.

One witness wrote on social media:

“Hennepin County sheriffs declared an unlawful assembly at the Whipple Building, despite protesters staying behind the fences, out of the road, and well off federal property. They backed protesters into the South Fort Snelling parking lot and then began arrests, kneeling on people and even shooting out a car window with rubber rounds. HCSO may not literally be ICE, but they are bosom buddies and should be treated with equal levels of disdain.”

Local media reported that 54 people were arrested on Saturday. The Minnesota State Patrol confirmed that 25 of those detained by state troopers were arrested for allegedly failing to disperse.

Prior to police declaring an unlawful assembly, fascist Jake Lang menaced the hundreds peacefully protesting from the back of a rented U-Haul truck. Video of the incident shows Lang in the back of the truck with a speakerphone. The fascist proclaimed “Jesus is king” in between slurs against Somali people and praise for the immigration police. Joining Lang in the back of the truck was a man with a paintball gun and another man with large wooden cross.

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These events underscore the real meaning of the January 26 phone call between Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and President Trump concerning Homeland Security’s violent “Operation Metro Surge.” 

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The use of state troopers and the mobilization of MnDOT to kettle protesters at the Whipple Federal Building has stripped away the mask from Walz’s posturing against Trump. Both the Minnesota State Patrol and MnDOT operate under Walz’s authority. Responsibility for this police operation cannot be shifted away from the governor or the Democratic Party.  

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Phrases such as “general strike,” along with the accurate characterization of Trump’s actions as “fascist” and aimed at establishing a “dictatorship,” are increasingly entering the vocabulary of broad layers of workers.

Protests continue across Minnesota. Thousands of people are volunteering as constitutional observers, documenting ICE and CBP violence, escorting schoolchildren, and supplying immigrant families with food and protection as federal agents seek to hunt them down.

At the same time, the national media is carrying out its own drawdown of coverage. Reporting on events in Minnesota is being quietly dropped. The goal, shared with the Democratic Party and the trade union bureaucracy, is to bring the protests to an end and wear down the movement. Walz’s policy of deploying police against demonstrators while urging residents to place their faith in the courts and the November elections is aimed at demobilizing the growing opposition to fascism and dictatorship.

14. New Zealand government defends social inequality on Waitangi Day

Waitangi Day on February 6, New Zealand’s national day, commemorates the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 by representatives of the British Empire and several Māori tribal leaders.

The document facilitated British colonization and the entrenchment of capitalist property relations. It falsely promised that Māori rights to land and resources would be protected, in exchange for the indigenous people accepting a colonial government. The treaty served to buy time for the British to amass sufficient military forces to conquer Māori land in a series of brutal wars, which killed thousands of people.

Speaking at the Waitangi Treaty Grounds each year, political leaders invariably gloss over these facts. Instead, they present a nationalist mythology, according to which the treaty was a national founding document that paved the way for democracy and an end to racism and discrimination.

In a speech on February 5, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon claimed that in contrast with the rest of the world, “where difference so often leads to violence and fracture, New Zealanders have decades of experience working through our differences with words, ideas and debate… and I think we have the treaty to thank for that.”

While decrying violence, however, Luxon hailed “the sacrifice of Māori in service of the Crown” during the First and Second World Wars. He repeated the phrase of Āpirana Ngata—a Māori politician who played a major role in the recruitment of young Māori for both wars—that fighting was “the price of citizenship.”

The National Party-led government, with Labour’s support, intends to vastly expand the size of the military, as it integrates the country into US-led plans for war against China. Thousands of young people will be expected to again sacrifice their lives as New Zealand imperialism joins in the violent redivision of the world. 

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The day before Luxon’s speech, Statistics NZ reported that unemployment reached 5.4 percent in the December quarter, the highest rate in 10 years. A total of 165,000 people are officially unemployed, 43,000 more than in December 2023.

Annual wage growth is just 2 percent, well below the inflation rate of 3.1 percent, meaning most workers, employed or not, are getting poorer.

The vast majority of Māori, who make up about 15 percent of the population, are among the most exploited workers: Māori unemployment is 11.2 percent, more than twice the national rate, while for Pacific Islanders it is 12.3 percent.

Māori and Pacific Islanders face worse health outcomes, lower life expectancy and higher levels of child poverty. Luxon trumpeted improved literacy scores for Māori school students, claiming that thousands more were “getting the start in life to create the future they dream of and ultimately deserve.” He did not mention that about 1 in 4.5 Māori children and 1 in 3.5 Pacific children are in “material hardship,” according to figures from 2023.

Both groups are also more likely to be homeless. According to the 2023 Census, 3.94 percent of Māori and 6.6 percent of Pacific peoples are “severely housing deprived,” i.e. homeless or in unsafe, overcrowded or makeshift accommodation, compared with 2.3 percent of the overall population.

In a pitch to the tribal elite, Luxon said he was “deeply, deeply committed” to ongoing Treaty of Waitangi settlements. These are multi-million dollar payouts given to tribes, ostensibly as reparations for land confiscation and other crimes of British imperialism.

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While Luxon used his Waitangi speech to denounce socialism and equality, Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour, from the far-right ACT Party, provocatively stated that poor and homeless people are actually well-off.

He told a media conference that thanks to British colonisation enabled by the treaty, New Zealand became “one of the most successful societies that has ever existed.” Channelling the contemptuous comments of Marie Antoinette, Seymour declared: “Even the poorest people in New Zealand today are living like kings and queens compared with most places and most times in history.”

15. On NATO’s eastern flank: German government seeks to transform regional airport into military fortress

In two world wars, the German bourgeoisie expanded brutally to the East, leaving behind scorched earth and committing the most monstrous crimes. Today, the German imperialists are openly linking back to this tradition: driving forward the transformation of Germany into Europe’s leading military power to expand their military and political weight, especially in Northern and Eastern Europe.

To this end, the Bundeswehr (Armed Forces) wants to transform the civilian Rostock-Laage airport, located about 30 kilometers from the center of the East German port city of Rostock and directly bordering the military “Laage Air Base,” into a military fortress.

Officially, since mid-December, the Bundeswehr has been examining the takeover of the airport area, which has operated under civilian control since the 1990s. This is necessary due to the “changed security situation,” which necessitates a “significant growth of the armed forces,” including “infrastructural needs,” a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Defense stated in mid-January 2026. Numerous properties nationwide are also being examined.

Laage Air Base is one of the four central Eurofighter locations in Germany, with approximately 920 military personnel and 35 Eurofighter combat jets, forming the backbone of the German combat aircraft fleet, with a total arsenal of some 138 Eurofighters.

With its geographical location on Germany’s northern coast, only around 700 kilometers as the crow flies from Kaliningrad, it is at the same time one of the most geo-strategically favorable German air bases for rapid access to the Baltic. Under good conditions, and at combat speed (approx. 1,900 km/h), a Eurofighter could reach the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad (formerly Königsberg) in about 20 minutes. 

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In June 2025, broadcaster NDR reported that the Bundeswehr had earmarked investments amounting to around €1 billion [!] in the coming 10 to 15 years for the further expansion of the location.

The planned investments are intended to “modernize” the runway, energy supply, ammunition depots, squadron and command posts as well as protective structures (against shelling and fire) for the Eurofighter fleet and ammunition such as guided missiles. In truth, the military striking power and protective capability against counter-attack are being increased considerably.

The conversion and expansion plans for Laage Air Base are not an isolated case. They fit into the Bundeswehr’s operational capability and digital networking “Target Image,” in which the future Rostock-Laage air base, together with the maritime tactical NATO headquarters “CTF Baltic” in Rostock, is to play a central role in a digital and fully networked “air defense infrastructure” on NATO’s eastern flank.

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With “Operation Plan Germany” (OPLAN DEU), the Merz government is ensuring that all civilian capacities and infrastructure are subordinated to the needs of the military. Responsibilities for a military emergency were already settled in Berlin at the end of last month—with the explicit goal of making Germany a host nation and logistical hub for allied troops. The integration of airports, railways, municipal utilities, hospitals and rescue forces into such scenarios means the de facto militarization of entire branches of civil administration and supply.

For some time now, the Luftwaffe has been practicing landing its Eurofighters at civilian airports, which “in an emergency” would become transshipment points for troops, materiel and fuel—and thus a regular target for the opposing side. 

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The conversion of the Rostock-Laage air base into a pure NATO base with increased security status—like the CTF Baltic—is equally threatening and de facto illegal.

With the stationing not only of German but also of NATO pilots—as well as their training and deployment—Berlin would again break the Two Plus Four Treaty, with which the reintroduction of capitalism on the territory of the former East Germany was sealed. It stipulates that no foreign armed forces and nuclear weapons or their carriers may be stationed in or transferred to East Germany. Russia already reacted to the inauguration of the CTF Baltic in 2024 by summoning the German ambassador Alexander Graf Lambsdorff and threatening a “corresponding response from the Russian side.”

That Berlin is systematically undermining the foundation of the Two Plus Four Treaty shows the ruthlessness of the German and European ruling class, and once again reveals their goal of provoking a war with the nuclear power Russia, and accepting the annihilation of all life in Europe. 

16. United States: They represented Marathon, not us”: Refinery workers denounce USW sellout in national pattern deal

Refinery workers across the United States are speaking out to the World Socialist Web Site against the tentative national pattern agreement announced by the United Steelworkers (USW) covering 30,000 oil refinery workers.

The tentative agreement provides wage increases totaling approximately 15 percent over four years, along with a one-time $2,500 signing bonus. At the same time it leaves intact forced overtime regimes, limited sick leave and longstanding staffing and safety issues. The USW bureaucracy has moved quickly to present the deal as the best that can be achieved, while signaling that individual locals—most notably at BP Whiting in Indiana—may be left to fight alone if they reject it.

To defeat this sellout, refinery workers need to take the struggle into their own hands by forming rank-and-file committees at every refinery and petrochemical plant. These committees should be elected by workers on the shop floor, not appointed by the union, and used to communicate across refineries, share information the USW is withholding and coordinate a common response to the tentative agreement.

In particular, refinery workers should mobilize to prevent the USW from isolating a strike at BP Whiting, where workers have authorized a strike and management is demanding even deeper concessions.

One Whiting worker told the WSWS, “We’re getting 15 percent over 4 years and a middle finger, and maybe just the middle finger at BP Whiting. How does this make sense?

“And to top it all off, I’m sure if we, at the BP Whiting Refinery, go out on strike, we’ll be on our own. The USW’s stance should be every refinery signs or we go out … plain and simple.”

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At Chevron’s Richmond, California refinery, a worker pointed to the contrast between workers’ sacrifices and what the company and union are offering in return. “A fire took place here early last year February of 2025,” he said. “Operators and fire fighters working along side each other kept this event from going catastrophic.

“Meanwhile we have forced overtime hours of 12- to 13-hour shifts, 6 to 14 days straight, with 1 or 2 days off in between for over an entire year. We work to keep this company going and forced overtime and yet sick time stays the same, and vacation hours stay the same, and we get a slap in the face with wages. The $2,500 signing bonus is a joke too.”

Workers in Northern California emphasized the crushing impact of cost-of-living increases and the erosion of time off.

“A slap in the face. We deserve better. We sacrifice our lives, our time, and our health, for these companies. We work long hours, away from family. We miss birthdays, anniversaries, holidays. We have to be forced to work because we don’t have enough time to be able to take days off liberally. We risk a write-up for a day off because we only get a total of eight sick days for the year.” 

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Another Northern California worker underscored regional disparities ignored by the national agreement: “Living in California, the cost of living is so much higher than the Midwest and the gulf states. We’ve been behind the inflation curve for years and this settlement keeps us behind the curve.”

17. Landslides kill 227 at Democratic Republic of Congo coltan mines at the centre of Washington’s struggle to control vital mineral resources

At least 227 Congolese workers were killed last week when landslides collapsed several coltan mines in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Heavy rains triggered cave‑ins at the artisanal Rubaya site in North Kivu province.

This follows a similar collapse last June, when at least 12 miners died at another artisanal coltan site near Rubaya. Global Witness has documented at least four deadly landslides in the area over the last 18 months.

The Rubaya mines are in territory seized in 2024 by the M23 rebels, a Rwanda‑and Uganda‑backed militia. They produce around 15 percent of the world’s coltan. Coltan is processed into tantalum, a heat‑resistant metal essential for capacitors used in mobile phones, computers, advanced medical equipment, aerospace components and gas turbines. Global demand for rechargeable batteries is expected to triple between 2024 and 2030, driven by electric vehicles and grid‑scale energy storage.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame claims his intervention in the DRC is aimed at protecting Congolese Tutsis from the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), formed from remnants of the forces responsible for the 1994 genocide. This is a thinly veiled justification for a land grab in one of the most resource‑rich regions of the country, where Rwandan‑backed forces now dominate and displace local authorities.

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Artisanal mining—sites without recognised corporate operators—employs hundreds of thousands across eastern Congo. These workers produce a significant share of the region’s mineral output under the most hazardous conditions for minimal pay. They typically work with basic hand tools, digging deep, unstable tunnels without proper structural reinforcement. Underground water can rapidly flood shafts or slowly erode their integrity. Most sites lack pumps, drainage systems, personal protective equipment, ventilation, early‑warning systems or emergency plans.

M23’s control of the region includes a 15 percent tax on coltan production and strict control over access to mining sites. This creates a regulatory vacuum in which safety is non-existent. Pay is tied to output, pushing miners to work faster and take greater risks. The extraction process also releases toxic chemicals, harming wildlife, polluting waterways, contaminating crops and damaging workers’ health.

The conditions highlight the extreme dangers faced by artisanal miners amid the rapacious exploitation of conflict‑zone resources. While industrial mines typically record fewer than one fatality per million hours worked, artisanal operations suffer casualty rates 30–40 times higher, according to UN Environment Programme research. 

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Desperate conditions force families to send children as young as 10 into mining‑related work, especially sorting and processing.

While miners earn a pittance—capturing just 1–3 percent of the final value of the minerals they extract—the rest of the supply chain reaps enormous profits. 

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The supply chain for coltan and other strategic minerals is long, opaque and deliberately fragmented. Each layer adds distance between the ultimate beneficiaries—giant tech corporations such as Apple, Tesla, Samsung, Intel, Nokia, Motorola, Google, Microsoft, Dell, Sony and BMW—and the armed violence that secures their raw materials.

Minerals first pass through a network of intermediaries: local pit bosses, traders, armed groups operating roadblocks, and regional smugglers. These actors collectively capture 5–10 percent of the final value before the minerals reach Rwandan exporters. From there, they are shipped to capital‑intensive refineries in China and Malaysia. With only a handful of companies globally capable of processing tantalum, these refiners set prices and capture 20–40 percent of the final value — giving Beijing a chokehold over global supply.

The processed minerals are then sold to specialised manufacturers that produce capacitors and other electronic components under long‑term contracts with major tech firms. These manufacturers capture 15–25 percent of the value. The tech giants—which largely design and market the final products rather than manufacture them—take the lion’s share: 40–60 percent of total value. To cite but one example, a smartphone retailing for $800 contains only a few dollars’ worth of tantalum. Apple alone reported $112 billion in net profits last year. 

Numerous reports by UN agencies, the US government, the European Union and NGOs have exposed the dependence of these multinationals on conflict minerals. In December 2024, the DRC filed an unprecedented case against Apple, accusing its subsidiaries in Belgium and France of using conflict minerals and fueling violence.

Robert Amsterdam, the lawyer representing the Congolese government, stated that Western governments and corporations bear ultimate responsibility: “The tech industry has funded Rwanda’s war crimes.” Apple denied the allegations, claiming it instructs suppliers not to source minerals from the DRC or Rwanda. 

*****

In January last year, during a lightning offensive, heavily armed militias—backed by the DRC’s eastern neighbours, nominally fighting to overthrow President Félix Tshisekedi and defend the Congolese Tutsi minority—seized more mineral‑rich territory. This advance marked the collapse of previous peace negotiations and triggered the most serious political crisis in decades. M23 and allied forces now control North and South Kivu, bordering Rwanda and Burundi, and much of Ituri, with its lucrative gold mines, bordering Uganda. 

The conflict, reignited when M23 resurfaced in 2021, has displaced millions, killed tens of thousands, and severely strained relations between the DRC, Rwanda and Burundi. UN investigators have documented widespread atrocities—executions, sexual violence and other abuses—committed by militias on all sides.

After three decades of war, the DRC faces one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. More than 6.9 million people are internally displaced, including over 5 million in North Kivu, South Kivu and Ituri. Nearly one million Congolese refugees and asylum‑seekers are scattered across Africa. The DRC also hosts more than 517,000 refugees fleeing violence in neighboring states, most living outside formal camps.

Despite its immense natural wealth, the DRC suffers some of the world’s highest levels of poverty and vulnerability. Epidemics of cholera, measles and Mpox pose constant threats. Climate‑related disasters—floods, landslides and extreme weather—repeatedly devastate communities, especially in the east.

Food insecurity has reached catastrophic levels. Around 15 million people are projected to need assistance in 2026—down from 25 million in 2025, but only due to changes in methodology, not improvements on the ground. The worst‑affected areas remain the war‑torn eastern provinces.

M23 and roughly 10,000 Rwandan troops control the fraudulent extraction, trade and smuggling of minerals from Rubaya, generating an estimated $800,000 per month to finance the insurgency. UN experts report that more than 120 tonnes of coltan are transported monthly from the DRC into Rwanda, where it is laundered and exported as Rwandan product to China, Europe and the United States.

*****

The vast reserves of cobalt, coltan, cassiterite (tin ore), gold and wolframite in the eastern DRC have placed the region at the center of the escalating US‑China struggle for strategic minerals and influence in Africa. Washington has grown increasingly alarmed at China’s dominant economic position on the continent: Beijing is now Africa’s largest investor, trader and infrastructure financier, and a central partner of the minerals‑rich DRC. 

The Trump administration’s new US National Security Strategy, published last November, openly asserts its predatory aims: “The purpose of foreign policy is the protection of core national interests; that is the sole focus of this strategy,” ensuring that the US remains “the world’s strongest, richest, most powerful, and most successful country for decades to come.”

Its section on Africa—just three paragraphs—could have been lifted from the Berlin Conference of 1884–85 that formalised the Scramble for Africa. Gone are the familiar platitudes about “development assistance,” “aid” and “capacity building.” In their place is a blunt shift toward trade, investment and resource extraction.

Washington will now seek “partnerships with capable, reliable states committed to opening their markets to US goods and services.” The strategy identifies immediate opportunities for US investment in Africa’s energy sector and critical minerals. It explicitly links US‑backed nuclear energy, LPG and LNG technologies to securing access to these minerals and outcompeting rivals.

In practice, this means deploying America’s vast economic and financial power to exploit weak African states that hold more than 30 percent of the world’s critical minerals, while AFRICOM—the US military command for Africa—focuses on securing access and protecting mineral routes. 

*****

To this end, the Trump administration has intervened directly in the war in eastern DRC under the banner of “restoring peace.” Washington brought the Rwandan and Congolese governments together to initial an accord in June, explicitly tied to securing cobalt supplies for US corporations. A 24‑page agreement—the Washington Accords for Peace and Prosperity—was signed at a presidential summit in December, witnessed by the leaders of Angola, Kenya and Burundi. Parallel talks between Kinshasa and M23, mediated by Qatar, produced a framework deal in November. 

More significant than the nominal “peace agreement” were two accompanying economic and strategic deals. The first is the Regional Economic Integration Framework (REIF), a bilateral framework between the DRC and Rwanda. The second is the US–DRC Strategic Partnership Agreement, granting US corporations priority access to the DRC’s critical minerals and constraining China—which currently controls around 80 percent of the country’s cobalt production—from expanding further. In return, Washington promises investment in rare minerals, electricity, infrastructure and cooperation against arms and mineral traffickers.

Trump hailed the package as a “great miracle” that “paves the way for mineral investment via the Lobito Corridor.” This refers to the $10 billion pledged to revitalize the 2,000‑km Lobito Corridor, enabling minerals to be transported to the Angolan port of Lobito for export to the US and Europe. Backed by the EU and the US, the corridor is designed to counter China’s dominance in the sector.

Under the Strategic Partnership Agreement, Kinshasa will be required to use the Lobito Corridor for exporting “qualifying projects,” even when alternative routes—such as the Tazara railway linking Zambia and Tanzania, soon to be refurbished by China—may be cheaper or more efficient. This binds the DRC firmly into Washington’s geostrategic orbit in exchange for political and diplomatic (but not military) support against its eastern neighbors.

It is a replica of Trump’s transactional approach to “peace‑making” seen in Gaza: the DRC is to become a mining zone for the benefit of US imperialism and its corporations.

Despite the fanfare, Congolese President Félix Tshisekedi and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame refused to shake hands, and fighting has continued. M23 and Rwandan forces have seized more territory, displacing another 100,000 people. 

*****

On Wednesday, Washington hosted the first Critical Minerals Ministerial, attended by representatives from more than 50 countries, including President Tshisekedi and ministers from Angola, Guinea, Kenya, Morocco, Sierra Leone and Zambia. South Africa—which holds globally significant reserves of platinum, manganese, chrome and vanadium and has deepened ties with China—was pointedly excluded. 

US Vice President JD Vance proposed creating a US‑led FORGE alliance, a trading bloc designed to counter China’s dominance in critical mineral supply chains and coordinate pricing floors to attract private investment into mining and processing. “We want members to form a trading bloc among allies and partners,” he said, one that guarantees American access to industrial inputs while expanding production across the bloc.

This follows the launch of Project Vault, a $12 billion fund to acquire equity stakes in mining and processing companies and build production facilities in the US. Trump declared the initiative essential to ensuring that “American businesses and workers are never harmed by any shortage.”

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

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.