Apr 11, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. “Progressive” Democrats seek collaboration with fascist critics of Iran war

On X/Twitter Tuesday night, Democratic California Representative Ro Khanna posted a statement thanking far-right politicians and political commentators after Trump announced a two-week ceasefire in the war against Iran.

In a 45-second video, Khanna noted that Congress had done nothing to prevent Trump from waging an illegal war against Iran. After stating that he was “relieved” Trump had accepted the “ceasefire,” Khanna said, “Let’s be clear, this did not happen because of Congress, which barely made a whimper.”

Khanna did not mention that Congress’s silence was bipartisan. That is because many Democrats support the illegal war against Iran, just as many supported the genocide in Gaza. Hakeem Jeffries, the top Democrat in the House, deliberately delayed a war powers resolution Khanna filed jointly with Republican representative Thomas Massie last month.

Khanna claimed the “ceasefire” happened “because of the force of the American people, not just progressives and liberals, but conservatives like Tucker Carlson, Marjorie Taylor Greene and even Ann Coulter spoke out against the horror of threatening genocide against another people.”

That some of Trump’s biggest backers, including Carlson and Coulter, who still publicly support him, and Greene, a supporter of Trump’s January 6 coup and his 2024 presidential campaign, voiced opposition to the illegal war against Iran is not a sign they have become anti-war.

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Many on the far-right seek to channel popular opposition to the Iran war along antisemitic lines, claiming that the Trump administration has been hoodwinked into fighting “Israel’s war” by Netanyahu and the “Jewish lobby.” They argue that if Jewish influence were excised from Congress and the military, a genuinely American foreign policy would emerge.

While American and Israeli interests are closely linked, and the Zionist state plays a deeply reactionary role in the Middle East and beyond, it is false to claim that Israel dominates in the formulation of American imperialist foreign policy, including the war against Iran. Such claims amount to an alibi for US imperialism, which has been oppressing Iran for more than a century.

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The phony opposition of Carlson, Greene and Coulter to Trump’s threats to destroy Iran is aimed at corralling the mass opposition in the United States to the war back into capitalist politics and the Republican Party.

That Khanna promotes these figures’ opposition as genuine exposes his “progressive” pretenses and defines him as an enemy of the working class.

Khanna’s statement included overtures to the fascist right with a call for a “broad populist social movement.” He said:

This tells me one thing. The only thing that will save this country, the only thing that will save our democracy, is a broad, populist social movement, anti-Epstein class, anti-war and pro-working class.

Khanna’s appeal for unity with the far right is aimed at blocking an independent socialist movement in the working class against both capitalist parties. What he is proposing has a definite historical and political character. It is a form of what has long been known as a “red-brown” alignment: a convergence in which forces speaking in the name of the “left” seek common cause with the nationalist right and even openly fascistic elements.

Such alliances do not express the interests of the working class. They arise from the politics of privileged middle-class layers, sections of the labor bureaucracy and other petty-bourgeois forces whose essential aim is the preservation of their own social position amid deepening crisis. Terrified by the growth of mass opposition to capitalism from below, they look for ways to channel popular anger into forms compatible with bourgeois rule, even if that means adapting to the language and personnel of extreme reaction.

The classic and most disastrous example was provided in Germany during the final crisis of the Weimar Republic. Following the Stalinist line, the Communist Party of Germany rejected Trotsky’s call for a united front of the workers’ parties against Hitler and instead treated the Social Democratic Party (SPD) as the main enemy. This policy led not only to the division and paralysis of the working class, but at key moments to direct political convergence with the Nazis against the SPD, most notoriously in the 1931 Prussian referendum. After Hitler’s victory, Stalinism swung to the opposite extreme, promoting the anti-fascist “Popular Front,” which subordinated workers to alliances with liberal democratic sections of the bourgeoisie.

Leon Trotsky opposed this as another mechanism for disarming the proletariat. In France and Spain, the Popular Front subordinated revolutionary struggles to capitalist governments in the name of defending democracy, strangling the independent movement of workers and opening the way for fascist reaction.

The essential lesson is that the working class cannot fight fascism, war or dictatorship through alliances either with the far right or with liberal sections of the bourgeoisie. Every form of class collaboration serves, in the end, to weaken the workers and strengthen the class enemy. 

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Under conditions in which, less than two weeks ago, some 8 million people marched in opposition to the immigration Gestapo, Trump’s budding dictatorship and the illegal war against Iran, the “progressive” Democrats are doing everything they can to keep this movement trapped within the Democratic Party and subordinated to capitalist politics, rather than developing into a revolutionary class struggle. This includes making alliances with fascists who played an instrumental role in Trump’s political ascension. 

2. Fuel shock sends inflation soaring while the oligarchy grows richer

While gasoline prices have been higher in absolute terms before, they have never risen this quickly over the course of a single month. In California, where workers already face some of the highest fuel costs in the country, the statewide American Automobile Association (AAA) average stood at $5.92 a gallon on April 10, with county averages reaching nearly $6.91. Across the United States, the sharp rise in fuel prices is falling directly on the backs of the working class.

This burden is especially severe because driving is not optional for millions of workers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that 26.6 percent of civilian workers are in jobs that require driving. This includes delivery drivers, truckers, ride-share and app-based workers, home healthcare workers, contractors, electricians, plumbers and countless others whose jobs depend on access to a vehicle. These workers are being forced to absorb soaring operating costs without any corresponding increase in wages.

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Despite the “ceasefire” announced earlier this week, the energy shock triggered by the war in Iran and the closing of the Strait of Hormuz has not abated. The continuing disruption of fuel supplies is already provoking social unrest internationally. As The Guardian reported Friday, protests over fuel prices and shortages have spread from Ireland to Norway, with truck drivers, farmers and logistics workers entering into open conflict with governments imposing emergency measures. 

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While millions of workers struggle to survive on poverty wages, the financial oligarchy has never had it better. A March analysis of the boom in billionaire wealth by the New York Times found that the richest Americans saw their net worth soar by 120 percent from 2017 to 2025, under the first Trump and the Biden administrations. This growth in wealth far outstripped the 45 percent increase recorded over the previous comparable period. As a result, the number of billionaires in the United States jumped by 50 percent, to more than 900 by some estimates.

This immense transfer of wealth to the top is rooted above all in the rise of the stock market and the concentration of financial ownership. Federal Reserve distributional data show that the top 1 percent held about 50.2 percent of all corporate equities and mutual fund shares in the third quarter of 2025. Put differently, a tiny layer of the population controls roughly half of one of the main sources of wealth accumulation in the United States.

The enrichment of the oligarchy is not separate from the impoverishment of the working class, but its other side. Corporations and financiers used the pandemic to drive up prices and keep them elevated long after supply bottlenecks eased as workers were forced to return to disease-ridden job sites. Now, under conditions of an illegal imperialist war, the same class is profiting again while workers are made to pay more for gasoline, food, rent and every other necessity.

Inflation is not an accidental malfunction of the economy, but a social expression of capitalist class rule. Monopoly power, war, speculation and the dictatorship of profit over production ensure that every crisis is paid for by the working class. The fight against inflation is therefore inseparable from the fight against the capitalist system itself.

3. Trump says the US is “loading up the ships” with weapons during ceasefire talks

On Friday, during a phone interview with the New York Post, President Trump said US warships were being reloaded with weapons to be used against Iran in anticipation of a failure of the ceasefire talks taking place in Pakistan.

When asked if he thought the negotiations would be successful, he said, “We’re going to find out in about 24 hours. We’re going to know soon.” Trump’s remarks are an unmistakable indication that the two-week pause in the US air assault on Iran he announced on Tuesday has resolved nothing and is being used to prepare the next stage of the war.

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There are major conflicts within the US ruling establishment over whether the talks will produce any results because of Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon. Iranian officials have warned that time is running out, while US officials are trying to preserve the ceasefire before it expires on April 22. 

However, based on Trump’s comments to the New York Post, it is likely the Israeli attacks on Lebanon are being used to deliberately sabotage talks that function as a cover for preparations to restart the war on a far higher level.

The truce discussions are taking place in Islamabad, with Pakistan mediating and a large US delegation involved, including Vice President JD Vance, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Marco Rubio and Adm. Brad Cooper, alongside officials from the National Security Council, State Department and Pentagon.

On the Iranian side, reports say the delegation arrived in Islamabad and is headed by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and other senior officials also included. Reuters described the meeting as “make-or-break,” and other reports say the two sides remain far apart on core issues.

The official line is that the talks are meant to translate the ceasefire into a longer standing arrangement, but there is no agreement over whether Lebanon is covered. Pakistan and Iran have said that the ceasefire framework includes Lebanon, while the White House and Israel have denied it. 

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who previously said there is “no cease-fire in Lebanon,” agreed on Thursday to start direct negotiations with Lebanon after Trump urged restraint by Israel, and the European imperialist leaders warned that the attacks on Lebanon threatened to collapse the ceasefire with Iran.

Recent reporting says that more than 1.2 million people have been displaced since the beginning of the conflict, with the UN citing evacuation orders covering 14 percent of the country. On Wednesday, Israeli strikes killed at least 303 people and injured more than 1,000, the deadliest day so far in the war that began on March 2.

The scale of destruction is also being measured in infrastructure collapse. Reports cite strikes on roads, bridges, hospitals and commercial districts, with aid delivery badly disrupted and parts of the south rendered non-functional. Like the Gaza genocide, this is not a limited border operation; It is a systematic campaign to make areas of Lebanon uninhabitable.

The correspondence of interests between Washington and Tel Aviv were expressed when Trump said on Wednesday that he had spoken with Netanyahu and that Israel would “tone it down” in Lebanon. Knowing full well the Iranian position on the Lebanon, Trump added, “I just think we need to be a bit more low-key,” and claimed Netanyahu would “ease up” and be “totally fine” on the Lebanon issue.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu’s latest statements make clear that Israel’s objective is not a pause but a political-military restructuring of Lebanon. He has said the talks with Lebanon will focus on “disarming Hezbollah” and establishing “peaceful relations” on Israeli terms, while also insisting that Israel will keep striking until its security conditions are met.

These remarks should be understood alongside the fact that the bombing of Lebanon continues. Israel is using negotiations as a cover to press its military campaign, not as a genuine path to de-escalation. Israeli strikes continued Thursday killing dozens more, with between 17 and 24 killed in specific strikes by Israel.

This is in fact the same modus operandi of the Trump administration itself. The “talks” in Islamabad are but a respite as the White House considers its next move to militarily impose the requirements of US imperialism onto the Iranian people.

The World Socialist Web Site has consistently maintained that this war is part of the imperialist effort by Washington to subordinate the region to American interests. The US is pursuing “the obliteration of Iran as a state and a campaign of terror against the population,” and that the assault on Iran is tied to control over energy resources and preparation for wider a conflict, including against China and Russia.

As an anonymous senior defense official told Politico in March, “Iran is not the end. It’s the first test of a broader geopolitical reorientation. We’re rebuilding the capacity to project power simultaneously in multiple theaters—Eurasia, the Pacific, and the Middle East.”

This analysis identifies the present war as a warning of what is coming next. The aim of US imperialism is the domination of Iran as a major opening act in a broader global escalation. The Middle East war is the sharpest expression of the world crisis of capitalism.

4. USPS moves to suspend pension payments amid deepening financial crisis

The United States Postal Service (USPS) has suspended payments to its employees’ pension program, amid a mounting liquidity crisis. 

Postmaster General David Steiner told the House Oversight Committee in March: “At our current rate we will be out of cash in less than 12 months,” Steiner warned. “So in about a year from now the Postal Service will be unable to deliver the mail if we continue the status quo.”

In response, USPS leadership has initiated an emergency cash conservation plan. Beginning April 10, the agency will temporarily suspend its biweekly employer contributions to the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS), which covers approximately 99 percent of career postal workers.

These payments, typically about $200 million every two weeks, amount to roughly $400 million per month. By halting them, USPS expects to free up approximately $2.5 billion through the end of the fiscal year, providing a temporary buffer to sustain operations.

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What is being presented by officials as a sudden fiscal emergency is, in reality, the culmination of decades of policy decisions that have systematically weakened the public postal system. In 1971, following a massive national wildcat strike against the Nixon administration, the post office was demoted from a cabinet-level department of the federal government to a self-funding independent agency, USPS. 

This has been used to justify repeated rounds of cuts, including the most recent “Delivering for America” restructuring program. This aims to adopt an Amazon-style logistics model prioritized for package delivery while expanding a 'non-career' workforce characterized by low pay and precarious job security. 

The program has been a disaster for workers. New and renovated facilities, designed to exploit workers to the limit, are unsafe and have led to a series of workplace fatalities. This includes the deaths of Nick Acker in Michigan and Russell Scruggs in Georgia last November. The USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee responded to their deaths by launching an independent investigation into workplace conditions at the post office.

At the heart of the funding crisis is a fundamental shift in USPS’s revenue model. The agency is legally required to provide universal service to 168 million addresses, six days a week, regardless of profitability. Yet its most core revenue stream, First-Class Mail, has declined dramatically.

Since 2007, First-Class Mail volume has fallen by more than 50 percent, driven by the rapid digitization of communication. This collapse has not been offset by growth in package delivery, which, while expanding, operates on thinner margins and faces intense competition from private carriers.

The financial consequences are that USPS reported a $9 billion net loss for fiscal year 2025, continuing a pattern of persistent deficits that management now cites to justify sweeping operational and workforce changes.

To address the impending cash exhaustion, projected for as early as February 2027, the USPS management is considering other schemes, such as a 4-cent increase for First-Class Mail Forever stamps to 82 cents. It is also courting large corporations for delivery contracts, undermining the agency’s universal service mandate. 

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While paying lip service to the threat of privatization, the APWU apparatus promotes the very fiscal framework used to justify the assault on the workforce. Even as it  claims to urge workers to 'get ready for the fight to come,' the union bureaucracy offers no concrete strategy to oppose mass layoffs, the suppression of wages, or the relentless expansion of a precarious, 'non-career' workforce.

For rank-and-file workers, “getting ready for the fight to come” means organizing independently of the union bureaucracy through a network of rank-and-file committees to prepare action from below. Such committees will provide the framework to unite postal workers across facilities, job classifications and appeal to workers across the country for support. 

A key objective must also be to link up with postal workers worldwide, where similar cuts are taking place. Workers at Canada Post are preparing to vote on sellout contracts that would pave the way for thousands of job cuts.

The USPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee, in line with postal committees in other countries in the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, has been founded to advocate and encourage this strategy among postal workers.

5. Teamsters and UPS reach settlement over driver buyouts, while company continues plans to slash 30,000 more jobs

By claiming a victory over the buyouts, the Teamsters apparatus is signaling to UPS that, as long as the bureaucracy is included, the destruction of UPS workers' livelihoods can proceed.

6. Artemis II mission concludes after astronauts travel to the Moon and safely return to Earth

By the parameters set for it, the mission has been a success. Initial medical reports indicate the astronauts are healthy and will soon be back on land. The various scientific experiments conducted, largely focused on the impacts of radiation on humans beyond low Earth orbit, were completed and will be more carefully studied in the coming months to inform future missions. An international team of thousands of engineers, scientists and other workers across NASA and its contractors, from designing, building and testing the spacecraft to operating it and communicating with it during the past 10 days all contributed to this massive effort.

Yet the Artemis II mission has been conducted largely in the background of US capitalism in terminal crisis. The Trump administration's war against Iran, now in its fifth week, has killed thousands, destroyed historical sites, driven up fuel and commodity prices, and brought the world to the edge of a broader conflict. On April 8, with Orion on its return trajectory, Vice President JD Vance threatened that the US possessed tools in its “tool kit” it had “so far” not chosen to use, strongly implying the possible use of nuclear weapons. The following day, Trump issued the genocidal threat that “a whole civilization will die tonight.” The current two-week “ceasefire” was almost immediately broken by Israel, which launched a murderous bombardment on Lebanon that has so far cost 303 lives.

Even the bourgeois press has been forced to note this context. Philip Kennicott, writing in the Washington Post during the mission, observed that Artemis II was proceeding “without any of that larger framing, or soaring rhetoric” that characterized the Apollo era, as the world watched the US president use “the language of genocide and apocalypse to threaten a country that posed no imminent danger to the United States.” He concluded that Artemis II felt like “an echo of a world that has passed” as Trump promises “to return an entire people to the Stone Age.”

From the outset, the mission has been framed in terms of geopolitical competition, above all with China. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, the billionaire entrepreneur appointed by Trump, was present in person at the naval retrieval of the astronauts. He said afterwards that the US is “back in the business of sending astronauts to the Moon.” And despite the explicit exclusion of China and Russia in future US missions, Isaacman cynically claimed the mission was designed to send “ambassadors from humanity to the stars.”

As for Trump himself, he claimed in an earlier conversation with the astronauts that, in part because of Artemis II, “America is the hottest country in the world right now.” He continued that, “America will be second to none in space.”

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The logic of the modern space race makes clear that the fight for a progressive expansion by humanity into space is bound up with the fight against war and against capitalism as a whole. There can be no genuine scientific exploration of the Moon and beyond while space travel is subordinated to corporate profiteering and military conflicts. Such efforts will only flourish when the international working class has swept away the current outmoded social order and established society on socialist foundations.

6. Australia: UWU boss posturing as “rank-and-file” candidate in union election

The phony “rank-and-file” Members First campaign points to mounting discontent among United Workers Union members over previous sellouts and growing opposition to the Labor Party, of which the UWU is an integral part.

7. Oppose the draft! Build a working class movement against imperialist war!

The Socialist Equality Party and the International Youth and Students for Social Equality warn workers and young people throughout the United States: the American ruling class is laying the foundations for the reimposition of the draft. The oligarchy wants cannon fodder for its illegal and expanding wars of aggression.

8. Indiana University postdoctoral fellow Youhuang Xiang sentenced to time served and ordered deported

After over four months of detention, Xiang was coerced into pleading guilty to trumped-up federal charges of smuggling innocuous E. coli plasmid DNA into the United States. 

9. Gore Verbinski’s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die–The solution to the world’s problems? Infect everyone with anti-technology allergy

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die is useful in that it brings together a number of the reactionary responses to the development of technologies such as AI.

Dark, grim, gloomy, foreboding, static, the film speaks to the thoughts and feelings of sections of the American petty bourgeoisie, overwhelmed by present-day developments, informed intellectually by a healthy leftover dose of “New Left”-—whether the filmmakers are aware of it or not. The problem is squarely the rotten, materialistic, lazy population: “It’s all your fault … everyone from your time. You’re all equally complicit.”

There’s not a hint here that the problem isn’t technology in the abstract, but the current economic organization of society. There’s not a hint here that AI and other extraordinary developments could improve life if not under the control of profit-driven conglomerates. 

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Yes, of course, it’s a comedy, and Verbinski-Robinson are pulling our collective leg. Up to a point. However, the portrayal of a population benumbed by their phones, “lost forever in a world of entertainment and distraction,” isn’t simply an exaggeration, a heightened version of what actually exists, a pointed if painful warning. It misrepresents reality in a malicious fashion—in fact, it turns things largely upside down. Far from being unthinking robots, thousands of high school students have walked out against ICE, in the face of concerted repression. Tens of millions in the US and worldwide have shown their outrage over genocide, war and dictatorship. Much of this, incidentally, has been organized through social media.

There’s not a hint in Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die of dialectics either or any kind of nuanced thinking, for that matter.

What’s missing: technology is a conquest of humanity. Although it serves as an instrument of oppression, it is the basic requirement for the liberation of humanity.

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die is a rather stupid and backward film, all in all.

10. The International Bolshevik Tendency: Pseudo-left apologists for the union bureaucracy and Stalinism

New Zealand’s trade unions have refused to call a single strike or industrial action against the genocide in Gaza, the attack on Venezuela and the expanding war against Iran. These are pro-war organizations. The country’s largest union openly supports increased military spending to “build a modern, combat-ready defense force,” preparing NZ to join a US-led war against China.

The IBT is well aware of these facts but keeps quiet about them. Its most recent statement on the Gaza genocide—published on October 17, 2025—called for “coordinated joint action within the trade unions and across Mediterranean ports” to stop weapons getting to Israel. It failed to mention that union leaders internationally have been the central force blocking precisely such actions.

This cover-up stems from the IBT’s class orientation. Far from being Marxist or socialist, it is one of several pseudo-left formations that reflect the interests of definite layers of the middle class, including the union bureaucracy, whose aim is not to overthrow capitalism, but to secure a more comfortable position for themselves within the capitalist system.

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The middle class nationalist politics of the IBT are deeply rooted in its history. The organization originated in a series of splits in the early 1980s from the Spartacist League, itself founded in the 1960s in opposition to the ICFI. The current IBT leaders in New Zealand, Bill Logan and Adaire Hannah, previously held leading positions in the Spartacist League in both Australia and Britain until the late 1970s.

The IBT defends the positions advanced by the Spartacists in the 1960s and 1970s, claiming that they “upheld the banner of revolutionary Trotskyism.” Nothing could be further from the truth.

The Spartacist tendency was an adaptation to Pabloism, a revisionist current that emerged in the Fourth International following World War II, led by Michel Pablo and Ernest Mandel. Pablo repudiated Trotsky’s conclusion that the Stalinist bureaucracy had become a counter-revolutionary force in the Soviet Union and internationally, which had to be overthrown by the working class in a political revolution in order to preserve and extend the gains of the Russian Revolution. Trotsky had founded the Fourth International in 1938 as the world party of socialist revolution, to lead the working class in an uncompromising struggle against Stalinism, social democracy and bourgeois nationalism.

Drawing deeply pessimistic conclusions from the temporary stabilisation of capitalism after World War II, Pablo claimed it was not possible to build independent Trotskyist parties and that Stalinist regimes, under mass pressure, could carry out revolutionary tasks. He instructed Trotskyists to enter “the mass movement as it exists,” including Stalinist, social democratic and bourgeois nationalist organizations.

In 1953, the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) was founded to defend orthodox Trotskyism against Pabloism’s liquidationist program, which directed national sections to dissolve into Stalinist, reformist and bourgeois nationalist movements on the false premise that such forces could be pushed leftward.

The American Socialist Workers Party (SWP) initially led the international struggle against Pabloism. A decade later, however, the ICFI waged an intense battle against the SWP’s opportunist decision to reunite with the Pabloites in the United Secretariat.

Two oppositional groupings arose within the SWP: the American Committee for the Fourth International (ACFI), aligned with the ICFI in defense of orthodox Trotskyism, and the Spartacist League, led by James Robertson, which concentrated on US tactical questions rather than the international struggle against revisionism. 

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The International Bolshevik Tendency originated in the “External Tendency,” formed in 1982 by members in the US, Canada and Germany who had been expelled or who split from the Spartacists during a series of factional crises in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The US-based External Tendency, which had renamed itself the Bolshevik Tendency, fused with the New Zealand Permanent Revolution Group—led by former Spartacists Logan and Hannah—to form the IBT in 1991.

The IBT still glorifies the Spartacist League of the 1960s and 1970s but claims that during the 1980s it degenerated in a “Stalinophilic direction” and Robertson’s leadership took on “hyper-centralist, paranoid and personalist characteristics.”

The IBT’s differences with the SL, however, were limited and tactical, rather than principled. It retained the same pro-Stalinist orientation. The IBT distanced itself from some of the Spartacists’ crudest apologetics, such as the slogan “Hail Red Army!” which glorified the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan at the end of 1979. While saying that the slogan was too uncritical of the Soviet bureaucracy, the IBT still called for “military support to the Stalinists,” backing the invasion—which was a reactionary response to the US funding of the mujahadeen rebels against the Moscow-aligned regime.

The IBT portrayed the invasion as progressive, based on the Pabloite and Spartacist argument that the Red Army was defending “socialized property forms” and opposing imperialism. In fact, the war—paid for by the Soviet working class through brutal attacks on living conditions and thousands of deaths—accelerated the economic crisis that culminated in the bureaucracy’s decision to dissolve the Soviet Union.

Similarly, the IBT gave its “unconditional military support” to the Stalinists to crush the mass strike movement of Polish workers in 1981, which it smeared as “counter-revolutionary.” It merely criticized the Spartacists’ pledge to “take responsibility in advance for whatever idiocies and atrocities” the Soviet troops committed.

As the Soviet bureaucracy under Mikhail Gorbachev was preparing the imminent dissolution of the USSR and restoration of capitalism, the IBT insisted that it was the “duty” of socialists to back rival Stalinist factions who attempted a military coup in August 1991. The coup plotters agreed that capitalism should be restored, but feared that the rapidity of the transformation would spark an uncontrollable movement in the working class.

In the case of China, the IBT continues to deny the obvious fact that capitalism has been restored. It refers to China as a “deformed workers state” and on this basis defends its repression of workers and portrays its military as a progressive force. 

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The claim that workers in Cuba, or any oppressed country, can defend themselves by siding with China in a military confrontation with US imperialism is both dangerous and delusional. Insofar as this perspective is taken seriously, it can only undermine the essential task of unifying the international working class—including workers in the United States and China—in a socialist, anti‑war movement.

In reality, Beijing is responding to Washington’s far-advanced war preparations against China by desperately seeking an accommodation with the imperialist powers. At the same time, in response to provocations by the US and its allies in Taiwan and the South China Sea, China is staging its own military exercises, playing into the hands of the US and heightening the danger of a catastrophic nuclear war.

The overriding fear of the Chinese ruling elite is that the worsening global economic crisis and approaching war could trigger a movement in the working class against its capitalist police-state regime. The IBT has indicated where it will align in such a confrontation: when millions of people protested in Hong Kong in 2019 to demand democratic rights and an end to police brutality, the IBT smeared the demonstrations as “pro-imperialist” and called for “the suppression of the leadership of the movement and its most intransigent adherents.” 

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The restoration of capitalism by the Stalinist regimes was only the most dramatic response to the unprecedented globalization of production during the 1980s, which fatally undermined the basis for all national-reformist political programs. It was part of a global rightward shift by all the parties—whether Stalinist or social democratic—that workers had previously looked to to defend their interests. 

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The IBT continues to heavily promote racial and gender identity politics, which serves both to divide workers and to subordinate them to sections of the upper middle class and the capitalist political establishment. In New Zealand, the IBT supports “the movement for Māori autonomy” based on the Treaty of Waitangi, a colonial document which has been used by successive governments as a mechanism to hand out multi-million dollar settlements to the Māori bourgeoisie.

It also uses the issue of transgender rights in order to boost the unions, the Green Party and other middle class groups, based on the claim that elements of “the ‘progressive’ bourgeoisie or reformist workers’ parties can at times be convinced” to support access to healthcare for transgender people and anti-discrimination measures, even if “these reforms are reversible under capitalism.” 

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The IBT’s promotion of Stalinism and “left” capitalist parties, and its defense of the union bureaucracy, are two sides of the same nationalist perspective, rooted in the rejection of the fight to mobilize the international working class under the leadership of the Trotskyist movement.

In a March 2025 article, the IBT was forced to admit that “the unions have failed to fight, even in limited ways, when workers needed it,” but attributed this to mistaken policies that can be corrected through pressure. It called on “communists” to “struggle for a militant pole, for open discussion of strategic differences, and to challenge the leadership.”

A February 28 article calling for workers to strike against the US-Israeli war on Iran similarly stated: “The current leadership of the organized labor movement is too beholden to their respective ruling classes to launch such actions, but there is hope that the rank-and-file may push for sanity.”

This position—that the union leadership can be “pushed” to fight—echoes that of the Spartacist League, which attributed the wave of working class defeats in the 1980s to the union leaders’ failure to “play hardball to win.”

As the ICFI noted, this explained nothing. The corrupt and reactionary character of the union leaders could only be understood as “the subjective expression of more fundamental objective processes.” Globalization had “undermined the viability of trade unions as nationally-based defensive organizations of the working class. This process is expressed in the decay of these organizations and their transformation into appendages of the employers and the state.”

As organizations which “arose historically on the soil of the national economy and the growing power of the national state,” the unions had no progressive response to globalization. For more than 40 years their role has been to sabotage strikes, enforce mass redundancies and assist in lowering workers’ living standards to defend the “international competitiveness” of the national bourgeoisie. 

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Today, subordinating workers to the unions means aiding these organizations in the defense of the bourgeois state and imperialism—most starkly exposed in the unions’ refusal to call strikes against the Gaza genocide and the war against Iran.

The explosive struggles in the US in January 2026 also demonstrate that any serious mass movement against fascism must develop in opposition to the union apparatus. The demand for a general strike to stop the reign of terror by ICE and Donald Trump’s drive to dictatorship gained popularity in the working class independently of the unions, which are deeply hostile to such a strike.

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Sharp political lessons must be drawn from the record of the IBT and the Spartacists. All the theories they advanced about the “progressive” role of Stalinism, and the possibilities of “transforming” the unions and “broad left” capitalist parties into “revolutionary” organizations, have been shattered by events.

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The urgent task facing socialist-minded workers and young people is to build the revolutionary leadership required for the coming mass struggles of the working class. This in turn requires a political fight to differentiate Trotskyism—the program of world socialist revolution—from every variety of pseudo-left politics, which seeks to corral workers and young people behind illusions in bourgeois parties and regimes and the unions. As the crisis of the capitalist system continues to deepen, the pseudo-lefts will be brought forward as the last line of defense for bourgeois rule.

The ICFI alone provides the necessary strategic perspective for this fight, due to its principled struggle to defend the Trotskyist program against Stalinism, Pabloite liquidationism, and all forms of nationalist politics.

11. IYSSE (Sri Lanka) meeting discusses socialist strategy to stop the war against Iran

On April 7, the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) and the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) held the second in a series of anti-war public meetings titled “Stop the US-Israel illegal war against Iran” at the Orient Education Institute in Hindagala, near the University of Peradeniya. Students, workers, university academics and party supporters attended the meeting. The SEP also livestreamed the event on its Facebook page, where, at the time of writing, viewers had shared it more than 325 times and watched it over 4,800 times. 

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Most participants in these discussions expressed anger and opposition to the war and sought clarity on how it could be stopped. This demonstrated a strong interest in understanding the root causes of the imperialist war drive and its implications in the context of the deepening global crisis of the capitalist system. More than one hundred copies of the booklet Stop the Criminal US-Israeli War on Iran, containing Sinhala and Tamil translations, were sold during the campaign.

The SEP and IYSSE also held a lunchtime picket prior to the meeting, calling for an end to the war against Iran through the building of a conscious and active international anti-war movement of the working class. The protest was witnessed by thousands of commuters using public transport, and several news websites reported on it favorably.

Sakuntha Hirimutugoda, a leading member of the IYSSE in Sri Lanka, chaired the meeting, while SEP General Secretary Deepal Jayasekera delivered the main report. In his introductory remarks, Hirimutugoda said that the period following the first US-Israeli attack on Iran had demonstrated the homicidal, brutal and violent character of the war. Every other imperialist power, he noted, was backing the onslaught.

Hirimutugoda referred to the threats by Donald Trump to send Iran “back to the Stone Age,” declaring that “the whole of Iran will be destroyed overnight,” and targeting Tehran’s energy system. He warned:

If he attacks the energy system, there will be dangerous consequences. Immense destruction has already been caused. Already, 2,000 people in Iran have died. Trump is threatening to destroy a country with a population of 90 million. Such threats can be equated with the actions of the Nazi regime in Germany in the 1930s. However, when they spoke of the Holocaust, it was done secretly, behind the backs of the people. Trump is making such threats in broad daylight, on social media and in press conferences. This exposes the total bankruptcy and advanced stage of collapse of the capitalist system.

12. Australia: Key issues buried at Brisbane rally against arrest of anti-genocide protester

There was no mention of Labor’s own “hate crime” laws and wave of arrests at a protest over the prosecution of a Palestine solidarity activist for using the prohibited anti-genocide slogan “from the river to the sea.”

13. Protests and strikes erupt in Brazil in turbulent run-up to presidential election

Since the beginning of this year, a series of protests and strikes have erupted in Brazil against the privatization and austerity policies of the Workers Party (PT) administration of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

14. Pseudo-leftist union leadership undermines Argentine tire plant occupation with appeals to nationalism

The SUTNA union, led by the Partido Obrero, is chaining the Fate tire workers’ plant occupation to nationalist appeals to Peronist factions and other bourgeois politicians.

15. Turkish independent union leader Başaran Aksu arrested

Başaran Aksu, Organizing Coordinator of the independent rank-and-file union Umut-Sen (Hope Union), was arrested Thursday by a court because of a public statement he had made. Aksu, who also serves as an organizing specialist for Bağımsız Maden İş (Independent Mine Workers’ Union) and is based in Soma, had his family home in Hopa, Artvin raided by police on Monday.

He has played a leading role in workers’ struggles and wildcat strikes emerging in opposition to the union bureaucracy in Türkiye, most recently being detained during the Polyak miners’ strike in İzmir. He has long been in the crosshairs of the corporations and the state.

Ulaş Sevinç, chairman of the Sosyalist Eşitlik Partisi – Dördüncü Enternasyonal (Socialist Equality Party – Fourth International), condemned this political arrest in a statement on X, calling on workers to defend Aksu:

Başaran Aksu, like BİRTEK-SEN Chairman Mehmet Türkmen, was arrested in line with the ruling class’s conscious offensive against the working class.

These workers’ leaders, unlike the dominant union bureaucracy, do not act as an extension of the state and corporations. They are seen as a major threat precisely because they have been at the forefront of the initial steps of a re-emerging labor movement—because they have given expression to the revolutionary potential of the working class.

The working class must recognize that Başaran Aksu, Mehmet Türkmen and Esra Işık are class war prisoners, defend them, and mobilize for their immediate release.

Aksu had publicly protested on social media against the arrest of Esra Işık. Işık, a leader of the villagers’ resistance against the “emergency expropriation” decree issued for Akbelen Forest in Milas, Muğla—a case still before the courts—and against the Limak Holding of Nihat Özdemir, was arrested on Tuesday, March 31, after protesting an inspection team.

The prosecution questioned Aksu over a statement, in which he said, “Having Esra Işık arrested on Nihat Özdemir’s orders represents the highest level our independent judiciary can reach. Arrest all the Akbelen villagers, you shameless people! May those who show even the slightest sign of submission to you be disgraced.”

In his defense, Aksu stood by this statement, saying: “I believe Nihat Özdemir is an influential figure in the Muğla region and that he played a role in what happened in Akbelen. The detention of Esra Işık, the daughter of the Akbelen village headwoman, without any evidence, is the most concrete proof of this.” Özdemir, the head of Limak—one of Turkey’s largest holding companies—is one of the country’s wealthiest businessmen.

Aksu was arrested on charges of “spreading misleading information” and “inciting the public to hatred and enmity.” The political character and arbitrariness of the arrest is underscored by the claim that Aksu’s union activities, which meant he was not permanently residing at his registered address, gave rise to his “escape risk.”

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As Aksu was being taken into custody pending the remand hearing, he declared: “In Türkiye today, it is impossible to state the truth without committing the crime of ‘spreading misleading information,’ and impossible to expose the bloody exploitation regime in Türkiye without committing the crime of ‘inciting hatred and enmity.’ This regime rests on holding companies and yellow unions. The judiciary and the police are part of this process. They are very powerful; they are running a vast operation of robbery, plunder and extortion.”

As he was being taken to prison, Aksu defiantly challenged this unlawful ruling, stating: “This is the state of the judiciary in Türkiye—they do whatever the holding companies tell them to. We will continue to make life difficult for the holding companies.”

While Aksu’s arrest was widely protested, the trade union confederations—including the ostensibly oppositional DİSK (Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions)—completely ignored the arrest, doing nothing to mobilize workers in his defense.

The Istanbul Bar Association issued a statement stressing that the arrest order was in violation of the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights. The bar noted that arresting someone solely on the basis of critical public statements “without concrete and sufficient evidence” amounted to “courts becoming instruments for the suppression of trade union organizing activities,” adding that “this situation produces a chilling effect on the legitimate actors in the struggle for trade union rights.” 

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The real reason behind the arrests of Aksu, Türkmen and Işık is that they have exposed the savage exploitation of the working class and natural resources, the obscene wealth extracted through that exploitation and the structure of class rule designed to protect and perpetuate these capitalist relations of exploitation—and the role they have played in the growing independent workers’ movement rising against this order.

It is no accident that the Erdoğan government’s offensive has intensified in recent months. During this period, the United States, Türkiye’s NATO ally, together with Israel, launched its imperialist war of aggression against Iran. At the same time, there has been a significant upsurge in class struggles, including wildcat strikes amid a mounting inflation and economic hardship. While the overwhelming majority of the population—over 90 percent according to polls—opposed this unjust war against Iran, the Erdoğan government adopted a stance completely contrary to the will of the people and even condemned Iran’s right to defend itself against the aggression.

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Will Lehman, a Mack Trucks worker who ran for the presidency of the United Auto Workers (UAW) under the slogan “transfer of power to the rank-and-file” and a leading member of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC), pointed out in his solidarity statement with Türkmen to the connection between escalating authoritarianism, imperialist war and the growing workers’ movement. He explained:

Türkmen’s arrest is part of a broader offensive against a growing movement of workers in Turkey...

The response of the Erdoğan government, as with Trump in the US, is repression. As Turkey is increasingly drawn into the expanding war in the Middle East, the government is determined to give no quarter to any form of social or political opposition—above all from the working class. A government preparing for war cannot tolerate workers who organize independently, strike for their wages, and refuse to be silenced. The assault on democratic rights and the assault on workers’ living standards are two sides of the same process, and both are intensified by the drive toward militarism and war.

The World Socialist Web Site calls on its readers to defend the class war prisoners in Türkiye—Başaran Aksu, Mehmet Türkmen and the other detainees—and to demand their immediate release.

16. Starmer visits Gulf states amid fracturing “special relationship” with US

The US/Israeli war on Iran has provoked an escalating crisis for all the European powers, none more so than the Starmer government in Britain.

Foreign policy precepts that have determined the actions of UK governments for decades are being torn apart—centered on the worsening breakdown of the “special relationship” with the United States.

Starmer in opposition promised a “reset” with the major European powers, after Britain’s fractious and economically catastrophic exit from the European Union—as demanded not just by dominant sections of British capital but also by the Biden administration, which wanted a restoration of the UK’s role as a reliable voice for Washington within the bloc.

But by the time Labour came to office, Donald Trump occupied the White House, forcing Starmer to try to agree a vital pro-Brexit trade deal with a US government that was openly hostile to the EU.

A trade deal was eventually reached, but entirely on Trump’s terms—with Britain hit a little less hard by tariffs than other European powers.

The second major bone of contention was military spending, with Starmer posturing, ever more unsuccessfully, as the European power most receptive to Trump’s demands for 5 percent of GDP spending by NATO powers.

The Iran war has brought US-UK and US-European tensions to fever pitch, with Trump repeatedly berating Starmer and other European leaders for placing face-saving restrictions on US flights and for not sending ships to the Strait of Hormuz. Starmer was “no Winston Churchill”, Trump declared, and the Royal Navy’s warships were “toys”, fronted by “two old broken-down aircraft carriers”.

Within hours of Trump announcing a ceasefire in the US war against Iran, Starmer announced a visit to the Middle East “to meet leaders of countries who have been in the front line and will set out his full support for the newly agreed ceasefire”. Talks would center “on ensuring the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz remains permanent, with the United Kingdom continuing to lead international efforts.”

Once again, however, Starmer’s diplomatic visit unravelled spectacularly. 

*****

When asked about Trump’s threat to pull the US out of NATO, Starmer made an appeal for a continued alliance: “It is in America’s interests. It’s in European interests” that “the single most effective military alliance the world has ever known” is preserved, he said, adding that he had been making the case for Europeans to do more, as Trump has demanded, “for the best part of two years”.

The Starmer government’s dilemma is that of British imperialism as a whole: whether to continue efforts to restore the relations with US imperialism on which it has relied for decades, placating Trump to keep NATO alive, or whether to shift more decisively towards the creation of an at least semi-independent economic and military block with Germany, France and others to counter the “America First” anti-European agenda now dominating Washington.

Both demand a massive escalation in military spending, austerity cuts of unprecedented savagery, and an ever-deeper turn to authoritarian rule. Amid the continued drive by all the imperialist powers to redivide the world between them, both routes lead to bloody wars internationally and class war at home.

17.  Workers Struggles: Asia, Australia and the Pacific

Australia:

Tasmania: Grange Resources mine workers strike for improved pay offer
 
Workers from eight Melbourne metropolitan councils begin joint industrial action
 
Workers at Brownes Foods in Western Australia strike
 
MSS security guards at Casey Hospital in Victoria campaign for wage rise
 
Ambulance Tasmania paramedics and communications workers strike
 
Royal Hobart Hospital operating theater workers strike for improved conditions
 
Vinidex factory workers in Victoria hold second strike for pay increase

Bangladesh:

Sugar mill workers demand permanent jobs

India:  

National Thermal Power Corporation workers at Korba, Chhattisgarh protest
 
Tamil Nadu police intimidate protesting SS Hyderabadi Restaurant workers in Chennai
 
Karnataka State Road Transport workers protest outstanding wages
 
Rajasthan: Jaipur Municipal Corporation sanitation workers protest outstanding wages

Philippines:

Newtech Pulp mill workers in Northern Mindanao on strike

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

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

Apr 10, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Jacobin and the DSA sow complacency to demobilize opposition to war against Iran

The two days since Trump proclaimed a “ceasefire” have been characterized by continued violence in the Middle East, above all, through Israel’s massive bombardment of Lebanon, and a deepening political crisis in the United States. Trump has paired his ceasefire announcement with open threats of renewed war against Iran, declaring Wednesday night that the US military is “Loading Up and Resting” for its “next Conquest.”

Under these conditions, the publication Jacobin, semi-official house organ of the Democratic Socialists of America and the Democratic Party, has responded with a series of articles whose central theme is: There is nothing to worry about, and nothing needs to be done. 

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Bound up with the Democratic Party politics that determine Jacobin’s policies, its central purpose is to demobilize opposition to war: Trump has suffered a “debacle,” therefore the danger has supposedly receded. It is certainly the case that American imperialism has suffered a major setback and catastrophically misjudged the resistance of the Iranian people. But the Trump administration’s response will not be retreat but escalation—greater violence abroad and a deepening conspiracy for dictatorship at home. 

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As the World Socialist Web Site stated, Trump’s threat is a historical watershed. His declaration that the United States is prepared to annihilate an entire civilization of more than 90 million people exposed the war’s genocidal logic and laid bare the criminal character of the American state and its leaders. It shatters what remained of the myth that US imperialism acts in defense of “democracy” or “human rights.” 

Such considerations are entirely foreign to the politics of Jacobin and the DSA, which are oriented entirely to the electoral fortunes of the Democratic Party and the prospects for political advancement (and personal enrichment) this affords.

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The central aim of the Democratic Party and the DSA is to prevent the emergence of a movement from below, which would not stop with opposition to Trump. The Democrats fear any genuine popular mobilization because it would immediately raise broader questions: the grotesque concentration of wealth, the dictatorship of the financial oligarchy, and the entire social order that both capitalist parties exist to defend. 

This is why, during the “No Kings” protests against Trump held on March 28, they and their political affiliates deliberately downplayed the war against Iran. Those like Sanders who did raise the question of the war offered no way forward for the struggle except appeals to Congress and even to Trump himself.

What is entirely absent from the Jacobin articles is any reference to the historical roots and fundamental driving forces of the war against Iran. There is not a word about the strategic interests of American imperialism, the long history of US intervention in Iran under both Democrats and Republicans, or the connection between the assault on Iran and the expanding conflict with Russia and China. Neither article mentions “oil,” “imperialism,” “capitalism,” the ruling class or the social forces represented by Trump. 

This omission expresses a definite class standpoint. Jacobin, speaking for the Democratic Party and the upper-middle class milieu represented by the DSA, seeks above all to block the emergence of an independent movement of the working class against war and the capitalist interests from which it arises. Such a movement, Jacobin has stated elsewhere, constitutes “sectarianism.” 

The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party fight for the building of a mass anti-war movement based on the independent political mobilization of the working class against the capitalist system, which is the root cause of war. Only the international working class has the social power to halt the imperialist war machine and prevent the present crisis—or the next one—from developing into a world war that would threaten civilization not only in Iran but everywhere.

2. Detroit autoworkers denounce US-Israeli war on Iran: “This is for Big Oil”

Reporters from the World Socialist Web Site spoke to workers as they passed through the factory gates, shortly after reports emerged that the US government is moving toward automatic registration for a potential military draft. 

3. Trump’s selective service filing prepares for activation of US military draft

When President Trump signed the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) into law last December—with critical votes supplied by the Democratic Party—one provision was largely concealed from the American public. The creation of an automatic selective service registration system for all men aged 18 to 26, tied directly to state and federal databases, was barely discussed.

Now, under conditions of the widening US-Israeli war in the Middle East—and future wars being prepared by US imperialism—the 2026 NDAA has a ready-made mechanism for conscription that can be activated by a directive from the fascist in the White House.

A filing by the Trump administration to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on March 30 has confirmed both the operational readiness of the system and the administration’s long-term strategy to prepare for a generation of imperial wars fought by working class soldiers.

Under the NDAA provision, the Selective Service System (SSS) will automatically register all males between 18 and 26 using existing data streams from state motor vehicle departments, educational institutions and federal tax and immigration agencies beginning in December 2026. The measure replaces the voluntary mail-in or online registration system previously implemented by the Selective Service Act going back to 1980 and the administration of Jimmy Carter.

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Notifications and classification statuses would be delivered electronically through federal and state portals, while appeals or deferment requests may be filed online through a centralized system. Framed by the Trump administration as a “modernization” of the draft infrastructure, officials claim the process will “reduce administrative burden” and “increase equity in compliance.” However, the main goal is to eliminate non-registration, centralize control and ensure readiness for immediate mobilization once a national emergency requires the draft. 

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The scale of US casualties in the initial months of the war against Iran has already sparked renewed discussion in Washington about manpower shortages and the exhaustion of volunteer enlistments. Recruitment has plummeted for the third straight year, forcing the administration to expand eligibility criteria and reopen previously closed avenues of enlistment.

The lies provided by the US government justifying the wars launched over the past three decades—from the false claims about “yellow cake uranium” prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 to the obviously made-up claim by Trump that Iran was “weeks away” from having a nuclear weapon—have no doubt played a role in the decreasing numbers of enlistments to the all-volunteer US army. 

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Strategists within the National Security Council have spoken bluntly about the draft plan. “Iran is not the end,” one senior defense official told Politico in March. “It’s the first test of a broader geopolitical reorientation. We’re rebuilding the capacity to project power simultaneously in multiple theaters—Eurasia, the Pacific, and the Middle East.” Behind this language is the unmistakable logic of international imperialist war for markets and resources.

The NDAA provision also mandates that automatic registration will apply to lawful permanent residents, asylum seekers, Deferred Action (DACA) recipients and undocumented immigrants identified through state or federal data.

While Trump and his fascist and xenophobic supporters have vilified undocumented immigrants as a national threat and unleashed violence, detention and death upon them, the new SSS system shows that those same “illegal” immigrants will be compelled to serve and die alongside American youth in US wars of conquest.

By linking data from the Department of Homeland Security, ICE and state records, the administration ensures that all young men residing within US borders—regardless of their immigration status—will be entered into the federal registry. Now, the immigrant workers will not only face deportation and being hauled off to concentration camps in El Salvador or elsewhere. They will also be forced onto the battle fields to die for the interests of the American financial oligarchy. 

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The system’s reliance on state-level data also contradicts local laws. Several states, including California and New York, maintain strict privacy laws governing the use and transmission of resident data to federal agencies. By demanding direct data pipelines to the Selective Service System, the Trump administration’s new plan seeks to override these restrictions. 

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Alongside the selective service overhaul, Trump’s Pentagon also quietly raised the maximum enlistment age from 35 to 42, a change that was made public only in an internal directive earlier this year. Defense officials have said the adjustment is about “greater longevity and fitness levels,” but the underlying motivation is obvious. The wars the US is now fighting require many more soldiers.

The volunteer army has long faced a crisis of recruitment amid stagnant pay, poor conditions and widespread public distrust of government motives. The enlistment age increase widens the conscription base to include millions of older working-class men—those who are struggling with income instability, medical and college loan debt, or unstable employment—and for whom military service may be seen as the only path out of a crisis.

The reactivation of the draft shows that the global strategic aims of the Trump administration require the mobilization of the youth to fight and die in its wars of aggression and conquest. This is a central component of the drive by US imperialism to turn the clock back and abolish the gains by the working class in the 20th century. 

4.  New York City Mayor Mamdani reneges on promise of free bus service

April 10 marks the first 100 days in office of New York City’s Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) mayor, Zohran Mamdani. They have been characterized by a betrayal of the aspirations of the million New Yorkers who voted for him and the tens of millions across the US who supported him. He has retreated from implementing his major campaign promises, given the New York Police Department (NYPD) license to spy on and repress antiwar and anti-ICE protesters, is preparing massive cuts to social services and education and has made a political alliance with the fascist in the White House, Donald Trump.

In his latest retreat from the minor but popular reforms he proposed during his election campaign, Mamdani has all but admitted that his promise of free bus service is dead. In an interview with Politico on Wednesday, after the interviewer noted that no proposal had been made to include funding for the program in the state budget, from which mass transit for the city is funded, Mamdani could only respond lamely: “It continues to be part of budget negotiations,” and “We’re encouraged by the conversations we’re having with the governor.”

This is the same governor, right-wing Democrat Kathy Hochul, who fled an appearance at an auto exhibition in Manhattan later that day after being besieged by protesters. One demonstrator shouted at her, accurately, “You’re a millionaire protecting billionaires.” On Thursday, Hochul canceled an appearance in Queens, no doubt out of concern that she might be run out of the borough as well.

Hochul, whom Mamdani endorsed in February for governor in her reelection bid and whom he refuses to confront on any issue, has been adamant that she will oppose his proposed 1 percent tax increase on incomes over $1 million and 3 percent tax increase on corporations.

Two of the three major promises Mamdani made during his election campaign, free bus service and universal pre-K, simply cannot be fully funded on any long-term basis without these taxes, which were never in the offing. Even so, Mamdani and the DSA continue to promote the illusion that Hochul is willing or able to persuade the billionaires to give up even a tiny fraction of their wealth. 

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Mamdani has said little in recent weeks about his third major election proposal: freezing rents on the 1 million rent-regulated apartments in the city. While he appointed six of the nine members of the Rent Guidelines Board (RGB), which has the power to set rent increases, in February, there is no guarantee they will vote for a 0 percent increase, although most observers think this is likely. On Thursday, however, the RGB itself reported that the annual Price Index of Operating Costs, which landlords pay for building upkeep, had risen 5.3 percent. 

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The fate of these three programs, central to Mamdani’s supposed effort to make New York City “affordable” for most of the population through minor reforms, must be seen in the context of much broader cuts to social programs and education that are almost certainly coming as Mamdani tries to close the city’s $5.4 billion budget gap, as he is legally required to do by July.

While he has floated an either-or scenario of, on the one hand, pressuring Hochul and the state legislature to pass the millionaires’ tax or, on the other, increasing the city’s property tax by 9.5 percent—a move that would devastate millions of working class and middle class homeowners and tenants, as well as small businesses—it has been clear from the outset that this was a nonstarter and that the only real option before Mamdani is to cut vital social programs. 

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The DSA has now been in power in America’s largest city for 100 days. Not only has its mayor shown his willingness to meet with the city’s leading billionaires and seek to balance the city budget without touching their wealth; no DSA leader, least of all Mamdani himself, seriously entertains the prospect of significantly increasing taxes on them. Instead, the DSA is preparing to impose the full burden of the fiscal crisis on the working class.

To do so, the repressive apparatus of the capitalist state must function without restraint. The immense economic pressure bearing down on the working class in New York, nationally and internationally has combined with widespread dissent, first in opposition to genocide and now in opposition to war and dictatorship. Mamdani’s willingness to assure the ruling elite that he could govern the financial nerve center of world capitalism was signaled not only by his meetings with the city’s billionaires after receiving the Democratic Party nomination in June, but above all by his two cordial meetings with Donald Trump and his pointed refusal to criticize Trump by name—even as Trump threatened to destroy Iranian civilization. 

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He has allowed NYPD officers to arrest striking nurses—after working behind the scenes to shut down the nurses’ strike at four major hospitals in February—and has continually backed away from his promises to disband the Strategic Response Group (SRG), the NYPD’s anti-terrorism unit, which beat and arrested George Floyd protesters in 2020 and pro-Palestinian demonstrators and others beginning in 2023.

While Mamdani has repeatedly said that the SRG would be disbanded, SRG officers arrested protesters on Monday at “Passover Seder in the Street,” a Jewish-sponsored event, after demonstrators sought to block the doors of Palantir’s Manhattan headquarters. Palantir is a tech company that provides data aggregation and relationship-mapping software to ICE. Significantly, Mamdani had attended the protest earlier while it was rallying in Union Square in Lower Manhattan.

The week before, at a press conference at 1 Police Plaza in Manhattan alongside Jessica Tisch, Mamdani stepped back from his campaign pledge to disband the Criminal Group Database, better known as the Gang Database, which contains thousands of names, including minors, of people the NYPD merely suspects of gang affiliation. Mamdani cited the record low murder and shooting statistics from the first quarter of 2026 as proof that the NYPD’s current policing strategies, including reliance on the database, were working.

His collaboration with the NYPD has become so blatant that the New York Times published an interview with him on Thursday largely to allow him to make excuses for not disbanding the SRG, for keeping the Gang Database, and to show that he was in command, allowing him to declare: “I hold the final decision.”

The fact that a so-called “socialist” mayor feels compelled to say this about the largest police force in the country only demonstrates that, after 100 days, his administration has only one response to the relentless pressure and power of the capitalist state—whether in the form of Trump, the NYPD or their Wall Street masters. The DSA in power in New York City is a regime of surrender to these forces.

5. Idaho constructs remote-controlled firing squad chamber: A method of state killing with a merciless history

The continued practice of state-sanctioned murder in the United States remains a brutal reality of American capitalism. Even in this gruesome landscape, however, the construction of a remote-controlled firing squad chamber in Idaho stands out for its calculated, technological savagery. As the ruling establishment struggles to maintain its “assembly line of death,” five states—Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah—have turned to the firing squad in a desperate effort to keep the state killing machine moving. 

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In Idaho, this retrogression has met with significant opposition. Protesters, including local faith leaders and anti-death penalty advocates, have gathered in Boise to deliver petitions to the private corporations complicit in designing this facility, among them the engineering firm Cator Ruma and Associates, whose employees have been drawn into the machinery of state murder through routine contracting work.

The chamber itself, a “retrofit” of the F Block execution unit at the Idaho State Maximum Security Institution, stands as a testament to the cold, bureaucratic character of state killing. Internal emails between contractors reveal a chilling “business as usual” tone, with technicians discussing floor drains to “mop/squeegee liquids” and soundproofing measures to ensure other incarcerated people do not hear the shots. The project will utilize a remote-operated firing mechanism specifically designed to “minimize correctional staff involvement”—allowing the state to kill a human being with the push of a button. 

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The drive toward this mechanical slaughter was accelerated by the state’s own previous incompetence in killing a condemned prisoner. In 2024, Idaho attempted to execute Thomas Creech by lethal injection. In a torturous procedure, the execution team failed eight times to establish an IV line, probing Creech’s hands, feet and legs for nearly an hour before abandoning the attempt. The grotesque spectacle did not prompt a reconsideration of the death penalty itself. Instead, the legislature responded by passing House Bill 37, clearing the path for the chamber now under construction. 

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Idaho’s embrace of the rifle follows the trail blazed by South Carolina, which carried out three firing squad executions in 2025—the first such executions anywhere in the United States since Utah put Ronnie Lee Gardner to death in 2010. 

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The grim record of what the firing squad does to a human body was established in vivid detail when Utah executed Ronnie Lee Gardner just after midnight on June 18, 2010, at a prison in Draper. Gardner, 49, was seated in a straight-backed metal chair raised on a platform, his hooded head secured by a strap across his forehead, harness-like straps constraining his chest, his handcuffed arms hanging at his sides. A small white cloth square bearing a black target was affixed over his heart. 

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Defenders of the firing squad promote it as a reliable and even humane alternative to the botched chemistry of lethal injection. The historical record of this method offers a definitive judgment on that claim: the firing squad has historically been used most widely in war: as punishment for desertion and mutiny, in mass killings of civilians and as retribution for political opponents of repressive and colonial regimes. 

Irish socialist James Connolly, along with 14 other leaders of the Easter Rising of 1916 against British colonialism, were shot by firing squad. The rebellion began on April 24, 1916, and was suppressed within a week, with the leaders surrendering on April 29-30. Their trials, along with those of dozens of others, were conducted under the Defense of the Realm Act and British military law. They were swift, secret and afforded the accused no meaningful opportunity to defend themselves.

The 15 men were shot by firing squad between May 3 and 12, 1916, at Kilmainham Gaol. Connolly, military commander of the Rising, had been so badly injured during the fighting in Dublin that he could not walk or stand unsupported, and had to be tied to a chair to be shot.

Some of the most harrowing examples of civilian death by firing squad were carried out by the Nazis. The following are only three examples of such atrocities:

On December 18, 1939, following the Nazi invasion of Poland, 56 Polish citizens were massacred in Bochnia, near Kraków, in one of the first mass reprisal executions of the occupation. The victims had committed no crime against the German military. They were murdered as a demonstration of power and terror, a message to the occupied population that resistance or even the suspicion of resistance would be met with collective death. 

On June 2, 1941, German paratroopers prepared to execute Greek civilians in the village of Kondomari, on the island of Crete, following the Battle of Crete. The villagers were rounded up in retaliation for armed resistance. Photographs survive of the men of Kondomari being led out of the village, assembled in a field and shot. 

In September 1941, on the Eastern Front, German soldiers raised their rifles against Soviet civilians accused of being partisans. A line of men were shot down, falling into a pit already dug. 

These examples define the social and political meaning of this method of killing. It is a demonstration of the state’s monopoly on violence, an assertion of absolute power over the lives of those it has judged expendable—whether a condemned prisoner in a South Carolina execution chamber or a Polish farmer in a town square in December 1939.

The revival and acceleration of the firing squad in the United States cannot be separated from the broader political context in which it is occurring. On Inauguration Day, January 20, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order titled “Restoring the Death Penalty and Protecting Public Safety,” which rescinded the moratorium on federal executions, directed the attorney general to pursue capital punishment in all applicable federal cases, specifically mandated the death penalty for murders of law enforcement officers and for capital crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, and called for efforts to overturn Supreme Court precedents that limit state and federal authority to impose execution.

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Lethal injection was introduced in the 1970s precisely because the ruling establishment needed a method of killing that appeared less violent to observers. But the record of lethal injection has been one of continuous failure and horror: inmates who have groaned and writhed on the gurney, lungs filled with frothy, bloody liquid as they experienced the agonizing sensation of drowning; prisoners removed from the execution chamber alive, only to face another date with the executioner; states unable to obtain the necessary drugs because European pharmaceutical companies have refused to sell them for use in capital punishment.

The return to the firing squad is another iteration of this search—the state’s perpetual attempt to find a method of killing that looks clean and defensible, however savage the reality....

***** 

Meanwhile, states like Alabama have simultaneously moved to adopt nitrogen asphyxiation in the gas chamber, pursuing every available avenue to keep the machinery of death operational. The diversity of methods is not evidence of a search for humanity but of a system determined to keep killing, by whatever means remain available.

There is a direct line between this domestic violence and the violence the US state inflicts around the world. President Trump’s recent threats to destroy Iran’s entire civilization are the fascistic and desperate statements of an oligarchy in extreme crisis. The imperialist brutality expressed in the Pentagon’s military operations is reflected in the treatment of the working class at home. From murders carried out by ICE agents in immigrant communities to the execution of death row inmates whose crimes stem from lives of poverty and abuse, capital punishment is an expression of a system that holds human life in total contempt—whether that life ends in a jail in Dublin in 1916, a Greek field in 1941, or a retrofitted execution chamber in southern Idaho in 2026.

6. Immigrant senior stripped of Medicare under Trump bill exposes bipartisan assault on social programs

The case of Rosa María Carranza, a 67-year-old immigrant from El Salvador, lays bare the devastating human consequences of the assault on social rights unfolding in the United States. Her experience is a concentrated expression of a broader policy targeting hundreds of thousands of immigrants, including those who have lived and worked in the country for decades, paid taxes and complied with every legal requirement imposed upon them.

Carranza has spent more than 30 years in the United States. She built her life through socially essential labor, working as a caregiver and educator before co-founding a Spanish-immersion outdoor preschool in Oakland. Like millions of workers, she paid into Social Security and Medicare throughout her working life. Over 24 years, she contributed tens of thousands of dollars into these programs with the expectation that she would receive benefits in retirement.

That expectation has now been shattered.

Under the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act engineered by Trump and supported by the Democrats, Carranza and an estimated 100,000 other lawfully present immigrants will be stripped of access to Medicare, even if they have contributed to the system for decades. The law excludes broad categories of immigrants, including Temporary Protected Status holders, refugees, asylum seekers and certain visa holders. Those already enrolled face disenrollment, with coverage set to terminate in early 2026. 

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Medical professionals have repeatedly warned that forced exclusion from health coverage leads to predictable outcomes. When seniors delay treatment, minor conditions escalate into serious illnesses and reliance on emergency services increases. The policy does not even eliminate costs. It redistributes them in a more destructive and socially detrimental form: war and repression.

The psychological toll is equally devastating. Carranza has described her situation as “a complete nightmare.” The loss of health coverage intersects with broader insecurities surrounding immigration status, housing and retirement. A prior bureaucratic error that temporarily cut off her Social Security benefits left her unable to pay rent, forcing her to work in exchange for housing. What was once a temporary disruption now threatens to become a permanent condition.

Her experience exposes a fundamental contradiction. Workers are compelled to contribute to social programs throughout their lives, yet access to those programs is not guaranteed. For immigrants, decades of labor and tax contributions provide no protection against sudden exclusion. In fact, this is a form of mass expropriation, the seizure of funds paid by workers for their own future survival. 

*****

Immigrants, including undocumented workers, contribute billions annually to the very programs from which they are excluded. In 2022 alone, undocumented immigrants paid $6.4 billion into Medicare and $25.7 billion into Social Security. Yet they have historically been ineligible for these benefits. The new measures extend this framework to growing sections of legally present immigrants, deepening what amounts to legalized theft.

This exposes the fraudulent claim that immigrants are a burden on public resources. They are a net source of funding. The real aim is the redistribution of resources upward, away from the working class. The stripping of benefits already paid for is not a cost-saving measure but a transfer of wealth. 

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Immigrants, including undocumented workers, contribute billions annually to the very programs from which they are excluded. In 2022 alone, undocumented immigrants paid $6.4 billion into Medicare and $25.7 billion into Social Security. Yet they have historically been ineligible for these benefits. The new measures extend this framework to growing sections of legally present immigrants, deepening what amounts to legalized theft.

This exposes the fraudulent claim that immigrants are a burden on public resources. They are a net source of funding. The real aim is the redistribution of resources upward, away from the working class. The stripping of benefits already paid for is not a cost-saving measure but a transfer of wealth.

*****

At the state level, conditions offer no relief. In California, the Democratic Party-dominated government has frozen enrollment in certain health programs for immigrants, citing budget constraints. The state estimates that replacing lost federal coverage would cost approximately $1.1 billion annually, a sum it refuses to allocate.

Governor Gavin Newsom’s 2025–26 budget includes roughly $5 billion in cuts to vital social programs, including Medi-Cal. These cuts disproportionately affect undocumented adults, seniors, people with disabilities and youth in foster care. Federal and state policies reinforce one another, leaving vulnerable populations without alternatives while normalizing the rollback of social rights.

The claim that such measures are unavoidable collapses under scrutiny. The same legislation that strips healthcare from immigrant seniors allocates massive resources to the military and domestic repression. The “One Big Beautiful Bill” is a multitrillion-dollar package that ensures continued funding for the Pentagon and immigration enforcement agencies.

The role of the Democratic Party is decisive. Far from opposing these measures, key Democratic leaders negotiated and supported the bill, ensuring its passage. Their actions reflect the interests of a ruling class determined to preserve its global dominance and suppress social opposition at home.

Carranza’s case illustrates the human cost. After decades of socially necessary labor, she now faces old age without access to basic healthcare. More broadly, the legislation signals a shift toward dismantling the social safety net. It undermines the principle that labor entitles workers to social rights. Instead, access to essential services is increasingly conditioned on political calculations that favor the wealthy.

7. Socialist Equality Party (UK) announces public meeting series on 1926 general strike 

There are few more bitterly contested and less clearly understood historical experiences than the general strike of 1926, despite it being a decisive moment in the history of the British and international working class.

Begun on May 3 and officially lasting nine days, it was the first and remains the only general strike ever to have taken place in the UK.

The action was launched in response to a massive attack on the wages of Britain’s 1.2 million coal miners, amid a period of widespread labour unrest. Overseeing the strike, the Trades Union Congress (TUC) was terrified by its revolutionary potential and worked to bring it to an end, succeeding on May 12 and enforcing a crushing defeat.

The Socialist Equality Party is holding a series of meetings around the country (Sheffield, Inverness, Manchester, London and Glasgow) aimed at arming workers with the lessons of this experience for the political battles they face today: against a right-wing Labour government of austerity and war, and trade union bureaucracies suppressing a struggle against it.

*****

Make plans today to attend a meeting near you. Prepare for the discussion by reading the new pamphlet by Mehring Books (UK), “Trotsky, Stalin and the 1926 British General Strike: Lessons For Today”.

Sheffield
Tuesday, May 12, 7pm
Showroom Cinema
Paternoster Row
Sheffield, S1 2BX
Get tickets here

Manchester
Monday, May 18, 7pm
Friends' Meeting House (behind Manchester Central Library)
6 Mount Street
Manchester, M2 5NS
Get tickets here

Inverness
Sunday, May 24, 2pm
Royal Highland Hotel (Magnus Hall)
Station Square
Academy Street
Inverness, IVI ILG
Get tickets here

London
Saturday, May 30, 2pm
Elizabeth House
2 Hurlock Street
London, N5 1ED
Get tickets here

Glasgow
Sunday, May 31, 2pm
Premier Inn Glasgow City Centre
187 George Street
Glasgow, G1 1YU
Get tickets here

8. German reactions to the “ceasefire” in the Iran war: Berlin sticks to its war aims

The German government and ruling class have officially welcomed the “ceasefire” in the Iran war. But behind the diplomatic phrases lies no departure from previous war policies.—on the contrary, their continuation by other means.

9. United States:  Medical neglect and preventable deaths spread across ICE detention centers

From North Lake in Michigan to Camp East Montana in Texas, repeated deaths, ignored grievances and documented abuses expose medical neglect as an institutionalized feature of ICE detention.

10. Canada:  Far-right Alberta premier announces anti-immigrant referendum

Evoking the fascist anti-immigrant demagogy of the Trump administration, far-right Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has called a provincial referendum for next fall with the aim of whipping up animosity to immigrants and providing “popular” sanction for stripping them of rights.

11. BNP government in Bangladesh imposes economic impact of Iran war on working people

Amid sky-rocketing energy prices, the recently elected right-wing Bangladesh Nationalist Party has rapidly jettisoned its election promises to improve living standards and ensure basic democratic rights. 

12. UAW issues statement of phony support for Mexican tire workers shot on picket line

The UAW’s “support” for Mexican tire workers promotes appeals to Trump’s Labor Department and the Mexican government and ruling class while pitting US autoworkers against their Mexican class brothers.

13. Firefighters hold more strikes across New Zealand

While the government insists that 2,000 Fire and Emergency NZ workers must take a pay cut, the opposition Labour Party, with the support of the union leaders, is seeking to divert workers’ anger behind its election campaign. 

14. Australian university chiefs back Labor’s corporate agenda while pleading for funding relief

Universities Australia (UA), the peak body representing the country’s university managements, has reiterated its commitment to delivering the Albanese government’s big business and pro-military agenda, while partially documenting Labor’s funding cuts, which are driving restructuring and the destruction of thousands of jobs. 

15. Turkish municipal workers support Will Lehman’s UAW presidential campaign

Socialist, autoworker Will Lehman discusses his prior campaign in 2022 to become the United Auto Workers (UAW) Union president in a Turkish broadcast 

Will Lehman, a rank-and-file worker at the Mack Trucks plant in Pennsylvania, US, announced his candidacy for president of the United Auto Workers (UAW) elections earlier this year. His campaign is based on the abolishing of union bureaucracy and the transfer of power to the rank and file, grounded in an international socialist program. As a leading member of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC), Lehman’s campaign addresses not only American auto workers but workers globally, advancing an international strategy.

Lehman, who closely follows class struggles in Türkiye, issued a statement protesting the arrest last month of Mehmet Türkmen, chairman of the independent rank-and-file textile union BİRTEK-SEN. He also declared his support for the wildcat strike by Polyak coal miners in Izmir.

During his first UAW presidential campaign in 2022, Lehman gave an interview to Mukavemet TV, a YouTube channel broadcasting from Türkiye.

The World Socialist Web Site has received messages of support for Lehman’s campaign from workers at the Kadıköy, Maltepe, and Şişli municipalities in Istanbul, a city of 16 million.

16. Israel continues to bomb Lebanon, as US media demands renewed onslaught against Iran

Israeli airstrikes killed at least seven people in the town of al-Abbassieh in southern Lebanon on Thursday, as the bombardment of the country entered its second day since the proclamation of a US-Iran ceasefire.

Thursday’s strikes followed Wednesday’s onslaught—the deadliest single day in Lebanon since the full-scale war began on March 2. The Israeli military deployed 50 fighter jets that dropped 160 munitions across more than 100 sites in 10 minutes, destroying residential buildings, shops and offices from central Beirut to the southern suburbs. At least 303 people were killed and more than 1,150 wounded, including children. Several strikes hit busy neighborhoods during rush hour without prior warning. Lebanon declared a national day of mourning. At a mosque in the capital, funeral prayers were held while tented settlements for the internally displaced stood across the street.

The massacre came less than 24 hours after US President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran. The deal was brokered by Pakistan. When Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif made the announcement Tuesday evening, he said the ceasefire covered “everywhere, including Lebanon.” Hours later, Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that Lebanon was not covered by the deal. Trump dismissed the war in Lebanon as “a separate skirmish.”

*****

The Strait of Hormuz remained effectively shut on Thursday. The New York Times reported that only a handful of vessels had crossed since the truce began, with shipowners, insurers and others wary of safe passage.

In Washington, the ceasefire produced sharp divisions. Significant sections of the US political establishment argued that the United States had agreed to pause military operations before achieving any of its stated strategic objectives. Iran had not dismantled its nuclear program. The Strait of Hormuz remained under Iranian control. Hezbollah had not been disarmed. 

*****

On Wednesday, Trump met with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the White House. Politico reported that Trump berated Rutte over NATO’s refusal to provide airspace and military bases for the US war on Iran. Trump called the alliance “very disappointing” and demanded that NATO allies send warships to reopen the Strait of Hormuz within days.

17. Trades Union Congress offers Iran war partnership with Starmer government

Just as they did during the pandemic, the Britain's trade union apparatus is preparing to suppress strikes, enforce wage restraint and collaborate in austerity under the guise of “protecting the economy”. 

18. Workers Struggles: Africa & Europe

Africa

Kenya:

Nurses in Kilifi County walk out on indefinite strike over pay and working conditions

Guinea-Bissau:

Public transport workers strike over rising fuel costs

Nigeria:

Resident doctors begin indefinite strike over pay arrears and broken promises
 
 Union calls off oil workers’ stoppage within 24 hours

South Africa:

National Union of Mineworkers ends pay strike at Afrimat’s cement plant

Zimbabwe:

Nurses launch strike action at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals

Europe

Cyprus:

General strike against welfare cuts continues in Northern Cyprus with riot police again deployed against protestors

Spain:

Early years teachers in Madrid strike for professional recognition and improved working conditions

Airport workers strike indefinitely in protest over pay shortfall

United Kingdom:

Seafarers employed by the Royal Fleet Auxiliary walk out over pay
Walkout by Encirc glass container manufacturer workers in Cheshire over redundancies

Health staff at hospital trust in Greater Manchester, England hold 24-hour walkout over use of agency staff for overtime

Support staff at three Scottish universities set to walk out over pay

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

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

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