Feb 5, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Trump prepares to rig—or cancel—the 2026 elections

President Donald Trump’s declaration Monday on a right-wing podcast that the Republican Party should “nationalize” elections and “take over the voting” in Democratic-controlled cities and states is the signal for an intensified effort to rig the 2026 elections or cancel them outright. 

Trump repeated his demands in remarks to the press on Tuesday in the Oval Office and then at greater length in an interview with Tom Llamas of NBC News, with excerpts broadcast by the network on Wednesday night. In unmistakably racist terms, Trump singled out Detroit, Philadelphia and Atlanta, all majority-minority cities with African American mayors, for vilification as “corrupt.”

Significantly, Llamas expressed no disagreement with Trump’s nonstop lies about the 2020 election, nor did he point out that Trump’s effort to seize control of the electoral process in selected states and cities is a blatant violation of the Constitution. As billionaires tighten their grip on the corporate media—the purges at CBS and the Washington Post are current examples—the multi-millionaire “journalists” are accommodating themselves to the new order. 

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Most recently, FBI agents raided the election office in Fulton County, Georgia (Atlanta), an action supervised on the spot by FBI Deputy Director Tom Bailey and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Trump himself spoke directly to the FBI agents through a connection established by Gabbard, who has been suggesting that China interfered in the 2020 vote.

All of these actions have been in support of Trump’s false claims that he lost the 2020 election because of the votes of “illegal immigrants” brought into the country by Democratic administrations, although non-citizens cannot vote, and very few attempt to do so. This is invariably linked to some form of the fascist “Great Replacement Theory,” which claims that immigrants from Africa, Asia and Latin America are being brought into the United States by the millions in a deliberate effort to “replace” the white population.

In the openly neo-Nazi version, the perpetrators of this supposed campaign are Jewish billionaires. In Trump’s slightly sanitized version, it is the Democratic Party. “So they’ve sent all of their people, millions and millions of people,” he said Monday, referring to immigrants. “We have to get them out. And by the way, if Republicans don’t get them out, you will never win another election as a Republican.” 

Trump’s campaign against the 2026 elections thus combines his “stolen election” lies from 2020, which were the basis for the attempted coup of January 6, 2021, and the ongoing campaign of state terror against immigrants, being waged by masked, heavily armed agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

The end result would be an election rigged by the use of police terror to intimidate anti-Trump and particularly minority voters. Fascist former aide Steve Bannon hailed Trump’s comments, calling for ICE agents to “surround” polling places in November. 

Alternatively, should such methods prove unworkable, Trump might simply declare that the vote results in certain areas of the country should be disregarded. Or, as he told an interviewer last month, the elections should be cancelled altogether due to the supposed “great success” of his administration.

The United States has held elections every two years for Congress and every four years for president without interruption since the adoption of the Constitution in 1789. The Great Depression, foreign wars and even the Civil War did not prevent voting from taking place. If Trump now openly muses about putting an end to elections—in the year which marks the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence—it is because American capitalism faces a crisis of even greater dimensions.

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No doubt Trump fears that a heavy defeat of the Republicans in the 2026 elections would weaken his administration. But he is not principally concerned about the Democratic Party gaining seats in the House and Senate. He has long since taken the measure of the Democrats. It was Barack Obama who first welcomed him to the White House after his victory in 2016, declaring that after the “intramural scrimmage,” the Democrats and Republicans were “on the same team.” It was Biden who declared, after Trump’s failed coup of January 6, that he wanted a “strong Republican Party.” And the Democratic response to the violence of ICE and CBP has been to file lawsuits and wring their hands.

The New York Times demonstrated the prostration of the Democrats before Trump with an editorial raising his threat to the 2026 election, but beginning with a rebuke of Democrats who criticized voter ID requirements as an effort to suppress minority turnout. The editorial noted that Trump himself told the Times that he “regretted not sending the National Guard to seize voting machines after the 2020 presidential election.” Yet in response to this implied threat of military force, the Times could only appeal for more people to serve as poll workers and watchers. 

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Trump does not command a mass fascist movement. He seeks to carry out what the coup failed to accomplish five years ago by using the armed forces of the executive branch to establish a presidential dictatorship. The obstacle to this is not the Democratic Party but the working class, the vast majority of the American population.

The would-be dictator fears the mass movement that erupted in Minneapolis against the murderous invasion by ICE and CBP agents, and the intensification of the class struggle shown in the coast-to-coast wave of nurses’ strikes and the impact of mass layoffs and falling living standards on working class consciousness. 

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The growing strikes, mass protests and calls for a general strike point the way forward. Preparations must be consciously made to unite workers across industries, regions and national lines in a general strike aimed at defeating Trump’s drive to dictatorship. The working class must build an independent political movement whose goal is to break the power of the financial oligarchy and overturn the capitalist system that is driving society toward dictatorship and war. 

2. Trump welcomes Colombian President Petro at the White House after military threats

Colombian President Gustavo Petro met with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday in a closed-door session lasting over two hours. The meeting came just days after Trump brazenly threatened Petro with military action akin to last month’s US invasion of Venezuela and abduction of President Nicolás Maduro.

The encounter, hailed by Trump as a “complete success,” was yet another capitulation by a figurehead of Latin America’s bankrupt “Pink Tide.”

Like New York pseudo-socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani, who recently visited the White House to kiss Trump’s ring and pledge partnership, Petro arrived hat in hand, pledging collaboration.

On the eve of the meeting with Petro, Trump told reporters in his usual thuggish style: “He was certainly critical before that but, somehow after the Venezuelan raid, he became very nice.” Post-meeting, Trump gushed that Petro was “terrific.”

Petro now apes Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum’s playbook: stifling public criticisms of US policy, sweet-talking the would-be fascist emperor, and offering full-fledged collaboration plus additional tributes. Most recently, Sheinbaum has stopped oil shipments to Cuba, leaving the country with just days worth of fuel after Trump threatened to impose sanctions on Mexico.

The shift is significant. Petro once denounced NATO powers’ direct role in the Gaza genocide, the execution of 126 fishermen, including Colombians, with US missile strikes on their boats since last September, and the Pentagon’s kidnapping of Maduro.

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As Petro hobnobbed with Trump, Slate published the harrowing account of a Colombian mother whose family fled death threats in Colombia in 2022, only to endure the “Liam Ramos nightmare” at the Dilley, Texas migrant concentration camp before deportation. Her daughter suffered vision and hearing damage plus a bacterial infection after two months in hellish conditions. “My daughter is only 6 years old. She should not know chains or handcuffs or the terror of her family being torn apart,” she wrote from Colombia. “ICE treated us like animals. Officers intimidated, restrained and deported us without regard for our humanity. … My daughter is traumatized and cries every day.”

Meanwhile, in Washington, Petro continued his rhapsodic description of the White House: “Different ways of thinking, different regimes, different powers can come together. There’s no need to fight. ... ‘I like you,’ he told me.” 

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Petro’s trajectory embodies the political pedigree and degeneration of the so-called “Pink Tide,” a series of left nationalist governments that used proceeds from high commodity prices to implement limited social reforms.

In 1977, at age 17, he began university studies and joined the M-19 guerrilla group until its 1991 transformation into a “respectable” bourgeois party. The fighting included efforts to reclaim land from US-backed fascist paramilitaries. In October 1985, Colombian Army forces—founded, financed, and trained by Washington—captured and tortured him for days. He was not freed until February 1987.

In 1991, he entered Congress as part of the ex-guerrilla bloc, and as early as 1994, he met Venezuelan Lt. Col. Hugo Chávez, who launched “Bolivarianism” and the Pink Tide after his 1998 election as president.

Declassified documents reveal US training, funding, and intelligence enabled the massacre of over 6,000 demobilized guerrilla members in Colombia during this period, with Petro himself under constant threat.

Notwithstanding this bloody history, under Petro, Colombia remains a NATO global partner and Washington’s closest military ally in Latin America, hosting US troops and bases.

Petro’s pilgrimage underscores the terminal crisis of “left” nationalism across Latin America. Self-styled progressives like Petro, Lula, Sheinbaum and the Venezuelan Bolivarian remnants, preserve capitalist exploitation while capitulating to US imperialism’s demands.

Trump’s threats can only succeed insofar as these regimes serve to suppress any independent revolutionary movement of the working class. The national bourgeoisies they represent manage capital within the imperialist-controlled nation-state system, offering repression, cheap labor and resources at home and collaboration abroad.

Colombia’s NATO status, joint anti-drug operations, and bases make it Washington’s unsinkable aircraft carrier for subjugating the hemisphere. Petro’s “frank gringos” line whitewashes this as “liberty,” while migrants rot in US camps. The “Pink Tide” now openly services Trump’s neocolonial blitzkrieg across the region.

An explosive series of mass protests and general strikes in Colombia against austerity, inequality and repression were channeled by the pseudo-left and the trade union bureaucracy behind the election of Petro in 2022. The political disaster this has wrought is plain to see and now it is high time to draw fundamental political lessons from the experience of the “Pink Tide.”

The Latin American working class cannot fight extreme inequality and defend its democratic rights—above all against imperialist oppression—through politicians like Petro or any other capitalist party. Only the independent mobilization of the working class for power can achieve this as part of the world socialist revolution.

3. Kaiser Permanente pays $556 million for medicare fraud while claiming there is no money for striking workers

The ongoing strike by 31,000 nurses, technicians, and other healthcare workers at Kaiser Permanente in California and Hawaii has entered its second week, amidst an eruption of strikes and protests across the country. For three weeks, 15,000 nurses in New York City have been on strike; thousands of Kaiser pharmacists and technicians are set to join the pickets on the west coast in the coming days.

Kaiser Permanente pleads poverty when it comes to vital issues such as safe staffing ratios and pay increases to ensure staff retention. But it has quietly agreed to pay $556 million to settle allegations of Medicare fraud with the state of California, underscoring that “non-profit” healthcare operates no differently from any other corporation.

The settlement stems from Kaiser’s systematic exploitation of the Medicare Advantage (MA) risk-adjustment system, a federally mandated program designed to compensate insurers for patients with more complex health needs. Under MA, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) pays private insurers a fixed monthly amount per enrollee, adjusted upward for documented illnesses. Such a system creates a strong financial incentive to maximize coding of diagnoses, turning patient records into revenue-generating instruments.

Federal prosecutors allege that between 2009 and 2018, Kaiser carried out a multi-state scheme to inflate risk scores through automated and coercive practices. The primary tool was the retroactive use of medical record “addenda.” Typically intended to correct minor errors shortly after a visit, addenda were instead repurposed as a revenue tool. 

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Physicians and facilities were assigned risk-adjustment targets and tracked on internal dashboards, with financial incentives or penalties tied to coding output. Court filings estimate that roughly 500,000 unsupported diagnoses were added, generating approximately $1 billion in improper Medicare payments.

The $556 million settlement, while large by most measures, represents only a fraction of the alleged overbilling and a minor cost for an institution with billions in reserves.

The practices exposed at Kaiser are widespread throughout the healthcare industry. UnitedHealth Group (UHG) has faced multiple similar allegations, using its vertically integrated structure and vast data systems to identify diagnoses that increase Medicare payments. Meanwhile they are accused of ignoring evidence that existing diagnoses were unsupported or incorrect and therefore required repayment of previously overbilled funds. In both cases, corporate control over clinical data was used to maximize revenue. 

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Kaiser’s “non-profit” status is a sham. In 2024, it reported $115.8 billion in operating revenue, $12.9 billion in “net income,” and nearly $67.4 billion in financial reserves, while executive compensation approached $93 million. Against this backdrop, a $556 million settlement amounts to a routine operating expense.

Beyond financial misconduct, the most damaging consequence of risk-adjustment fraud is the corruption of patient medical records. Inaccurate coding creates permanent records of fictitious or exaggerated illnesses, distorting care and exposing patients to unnecessary treatment or stigma. Investigations show millions of Medicare Advantage enrollees carry serious diagnoses without follow-up care, underscoring how illness has been transformed into a revenue stream.

UNAC/UHCP, the union covering striking workers, has issued statements portraying Kaiser’s actions as a moral lapse or a failure of management ethics. Its January 2026 report named “Profit Over Patients” frames the issue as “mission drift,” rather than the predictable outcome of subordinating healthcare to market imperatives. 

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Privatization of Medicare has been a bipartisan project carried out over decades. The Reagan administration introduced prospective payment systems that encouraged competition and for-profit hospital operations. Under Clinton, Medicare+Choice (later Medicare Advantage) allowed private insurers to profit directly from public funds. Bush expanded the program further, diverting billions from public resources into private hands.

Subsequent administrations, from Obama’s Affordable Care Act to the Trump-era Direct Contracting and Primary Care First models, deepened the focus on cost control and profit, often at the expense of patient needs. Value-based payment models reward savings over care, incentivizing providers to see more patients in less time, restrict treatments, and shift care to cheaper alternatives. 

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The ongoing strike by 31,000 by nurses, laboratory technicians, and other staff is against understaffing, burnout and unsafe conditions driven by relentless cost cutting. That this takes place even as management extracts revenue through inflated risk scores and financial maneuvers shows this struggle is inseparable from a broader question of whose social interests dominate healthcare, whether medicine is organized to meet human needs or to generate profit.

4. Washington Post slashes one-third of its newsroom, as 2026 jobs bloodbath continues

The Washington Post announced Tuesday that it is eliminating more than 300 journalists—roughly one-third of its 800-person newsroom. The paper is shuttering its entire sports section, closing its books desk, suspending its flagship “Post Reports” podcast and gutting its foreign and metro coverage. The entire Middle East team was laid off, including the Cairo bureau chief. The Asia editor position was eliminated, along with the New Delhi and Sydney bureau chiefs. Correspondents covering China, Iran and Turkey were cut.

The layoffs at the Post are part of a wave of mass job cuts in 2026 that is on pace to eclipse 2025—itself one of the worst years of layoffs in recent history. In January alone, Amazon announced 16,000 corporate job cuts targeting core product and engineering roles, with over 2,000 in the Seattle area. UPS eliminated 30,000 positions on top of 48,000 cut in 2025, bringing cumulative layoffs to 78,000. The company is closing or reducing operations at 28 facilities. Pinterest cut 15 percent of its workforce. Meta laid off more than 1,000 workers in its Reality Labs division as it pivots from the metaverse to AI.

According to the Challenger, Gray & Christmas outplacement firm, US employers announced 1,206,374 job cuts in 2025—a 58 percent increase over the previous year and the highest level since the 2020 pandemic. This was the seventh-highest annual total since tracking began in 1989. 

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The Post is owned by Jeff Bezos, who purchased it in 2013 for $250 million, promising that his business interests would not affect the paper’s coverage. His net worth has soared from approximately $110 billion in 2022 to over $250 billion today. His wealth increase of $140 billion over four years could cover the Post’s reported $100 million annual losses for 1,400 years. Instead, Bezos is gutting the newsroom while using his fortune to curry favor with Trump. 

In October 2024, Bezos ordered the Post not to endorse a presidential candidate for the first time in 36 years—even though the editorial board had already drafted an endorsement of Kamala Harris and had written that Trump was unfit for office. More than 250,000 readers canceled their subscriptions in response.

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Artificial intelligence is increasingly cited as justification for mass layoffs. According to Challenger, AI was responsible for 54,836 announced job cuts in 2025. Since 2023, when this category was first tracked, AI has been cited in 71,825 layoff announcements. Amazon, Microsoft, Workday, Salesforce, HP and Chegg have all pointed to AI investments as rationale for workforce reductions.

The impact of AI on the news industry has been substantial. According to industry analyses, Google’s AI Overviews have reduced click-through rates to news sites by 30 to 55 percent. AI chatbots provide virtually no referral traffic to publishers—their click-through rates are 96 percent lower than traditional search. A SearchEngineWorld study found that referral traffic from Google has dropped by up to 64 percent for some publishers. News organizations expect search traffic to fall 43 percent by 2029.

The layoffs of 2025 and 2026 have corresponded to a massive increase in the wealth of the financial oligarchy of which Bezos is a part. In the first year of Trump’s second term, the combined wealth of American billionaires grew by $1.5 trillion—a 22 percent increase—to $8.2 trillion. Elon Musk alone gained $305 billion, becoming the first person to surpass $700 billion in net worth.

The 15 richest Americans saw their wealth surge by 33 percent—more than double the rate of the stock market—gaining $800 billion collectively. The top 1 percent of US households now own 31.7 percent of all wealth, the highest share since the Federal Reserve began tracking in 1989.

The ruling class is committed to using artificial intelligence and automation—despite the fundamentally progressive character of this technology—as a battering ram against the working class. AI, which could reduce the burden of labor and expand access to information, is instead being deployed to eliminate jobs, suppress wages and concentrate wealth in ever fewer hands. The same billionaires who are laying off hundreds of thousands of workers are using their fortunes to purchase political influence and shape government policy in their interests.

Both the Democratic and Republican parties represent this financial oligarchy. The working class cannot defend its interests through either capitalist party but must build an independent socialist movement to expropriate the wealth of the billionaires and place the resources of society under democratic control.

5. Greek Coast Guard rams refugee boat, killing and injuring dozens

Early Wednesday morning, another incident became known in a long series of deadly confrontations between migrants and the border forces of Mediterranean states.

A boat carrying an estimated 35 people, traveling from the Turkish coast to the nearby island of Chios, was rammed by the Greek Coast Guard. At least 15 people were killed. Twenty-six injured individuals were taken to hospitals, including 12 children. Two surviving women lost their unborn children. As of Wednesday, the search for additional missing persons had not yet been completed.

The exact circumstances of the collision remain unclear. According to the Coast Guard, a patrol discovered the migrant boat and ordered it to turn back. Dangerous maneuvers by the speedboat allegedly followed, and during the ensuing pursuit the vessels collided. This version of events has not yet been independently verified. Serious doubts are warranted, as border guards have repeatedly drawn attention through brutal, unlawful and inhumane actions that have led to the deaths of refugees.

In the past year alone, there were several cases in which refugee boats capsized while being pursued by the Coast Guard. In October 2025, a man and a boy died off the island of Rhodes under such circumstances. Human rights and maritime rescue organizations regularly accuse Greek authorities of pushing migrants back into international waters or shortly after they reach Greek waters, without examining their right to asylum, thereby placing them in life-threatening distress at sea. 

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European states are responsible for these deadly migration routes and the associated human suffering. Their migration policy is designed to recruit skilled workers trained around the world, while sealing off Europe to people without immediate “economic value.”

Those affected by the most recent disaster off Chios are predominantly people from Afghanistan, a country devastated by years of war in which the European powers were also involved. Today, the Islamist Taliban rule there with brutal arbitrariness. Welthungerhilfe (WWF, World Without Hunger) describes the situation as “catastrophic.” According to the UN, 97 percent of Afghanistan’s population lives in poverty, and more than 1 million children under the age of five are severely malnourished. The education system has collapsed, and roughly two-thirds of the population is illiterate. Who could be more in need of protection than the people from Afghanistan? 

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Just last week, the European Commission announced a further tightening of its migration and asylum policy. The responsible EU Commissioner, Magnus Brunner, stated: “We must use all the means at our disposal if we want to decide who is allowed to enter the European Union and who must leave it again.” This should be understood as a clear warning. Among the planned measures is the establishment of deportation centers outside EU territory in order to deliberately undermine asylum rights and deter migrants.

This so-called “deterrence” also includes state-organized terror against boat refugees in the Mediterranean. Violence and injustice against those seeking protection are to be institutionally entrenched in the planned “return hubs” outside Europe.

The constant escalation of measures against refugees is also part of the construction of a European police state. The accompanying legal and moral boundary shifts do not affect migrants alone. The repressive apparatus can quickly be deployed against the entire working class as soon as resistance to social cuts and war policies grows, as current developments in the United States clearly demonstrate.

Defending the fundamental and human rights of refugees and migrants is not only an act of necessary solidarity. It lies in the direct interests of the European and international working class and is a central component of the struggle against fascism, militarism and war. 

6. Australia: National Cabinet agrees on plan to drive tens of thousands of children off NDIS disability support

At a closed-door “National Cabinet” meeting on Friday, Australia’s Labor government, headed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, reached an agreement with the states and territories to impose sweeping austerity cuts to disability support. The deal will drive annual growth in spending on the $52 billion National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) down to 5–6 percent, from about 9.5 percent last year, amounting to cuts of tens of billions of dollars over the coming decade.

Central to the agreement is Labor’s “Thriving Kids” program, advanced as the first stage of a new “foundational supports” regime; cut-price programs, outside the NDIS, based on already overstretched state-level health, education and community services. Thriving Kids targets children aged eight and under with developmental delay and/or autism assessed as having “low” to “moderate” support needs. 

Its purpose is to shunt tens of thousands of children off the NDIS by blocking access and funneling both existing and future participants into cheaper, state-run programs, dumping the burden of care onto families and chronically underfunded pre-schools, schools and hospitals. 

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Under Thriving Kids, children assessed as having “low needs” will have no access to funded therapeutic disability support, forcing families, who are able, to pay for private services. Parents will be directed to token parenting programs, peer groups, supported play activities and phone advice lines. Allied-health professionals, where involved at all, appear only in advisory or group roles, not as providers of treatment. 

Children classified as having “moderate” needs will receive only marginally more: limited, time-restricted access to allied-health services delivered through hubs or education settings and tightly controlled by referral pathways. There is no guarantee of continuity or duration. Once these short interventions end, families are pushed back onto overburdened “universal” services.

The comments of Health Minister Mark Butler confirm that Thriving Kids has nothing to do with helping children with disabilities “thrive,” but is aimed at slashing funding. He explained that at present, 120,444 children receive “low or moderate” supports through the NDIS, costing the federal government $1.8 billion annually. National Cabinet has pledged $4 billion over five years, which includes all the costs of roll-out, to replace this funding, with only half coming from the federal government. In other words, federal funding for these children over five years will drop from $9 billion to just $2 billion. 

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Thriving Kids advisory group chair Professor Frank Oberklaid made clear that very limited assistance will be available under the program, declaring that “many, many children just need a bit of support over six or 12 months in order to thrive.” The “many, many children” that he is talking about are those whose parents had to jump through a maze of regulatory hoops to prove that their children require ongoing assistance.

The original design of the NDIS was as a cost saving scheme to limit disability support to the very needy and to open up a new arena for profit to private providers. The market-based program allocated individualised budgets to families and carers who could then shop around for services. The fact that the scheme was expanded beyond the original forecasts only exposed the fact that a vast unmet need existed before its introduction.

Thriving Kids' impact on families will be severe. When it was first announced in August last year, Adelaide mother Lisa Goodwin, whose twins are autistic, described it as “a betrayal of our children,” insisting that “autism is a lifelong diagnosis.” She explained that she had to apply three times before her children were accepted onto the NDIS and then spent years fighting funding cuts through appeals. 

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A tragic episode last week in Western Australia has brought the enormous pressures facing parents looking after autistic children into sharp focus. In Perth, 16-year-old Leon Clune and 14-year-old Otis Clune were found dead alongside their parents in their Mosman Park home, in what police have described as an apparent murder-suicide. 

Both boys had severe autism, with Otis non-verbal. Friends, teachers and support workers described the family as exhausted and isolated, caring full-time for children with complex needs amid chronic sleep deprivation. They had reportedly had their NDIS supports cut. 

Thriving Kids is only one element of Labor’s broader assault on disability support and functions as a test case for deeper and wider cuts. By targeting children with so-called “low or moderate” needs, the government is establishing the principle that entire layers of disabled people can have their supports reduced, capped or withdrawn in the name of “sustainability.”  

7.  Build rank-and-file committees at Australian universities to fight job destruction and pro-war restructuring

Already, over the past year, the managements at Australia’s 39 public universities have eliminated almost 4,000 jobs nationally. This is the sharp edge of a pro-corporate and pro-military restructuring. It has been aided and abetted by both the campus trade union apparatuses—the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) and the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU)—which have opposed any unified action by staff and students across the country.

Definite conclusions must be drawn from these bitter experiences under the Labor government. 

Despite outrage and opposition by staff and students, displayed in repeated protests, this offensive has been allowed to proceed, enabled by union deals featuring “voluntary redundancies” and sham “consultation” processes in union-management enterprise agreements.

The onslaught on jobs, accompanied by course closures, especially in humanities, and soaring workloads, can only be understood and fought by placing it squarely within a world wracked by the US-led imperialist military aggression and threats, staggering inequality, the rise of authoritarian rule and a global offensive against democratic rights to suppress rising working-class opposition.

The naked “America first” drive by the oligarchic Trump administration to restore US dominance after years of economic decline, above all against China but also at the expense of one-time US allies such as Canada and the European imperialist powers, threatens a catastrophic plunge into another world war. 

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In Australia too, education funding is being weaponized to enforce political conformity and suppress critical thought and dissent.

Following the December 14 terrorist Bondi Beach massacre, the Albanese government established a witch-hunting “antisemitism education taskforce,” chaired by businessman David Gonski and Jillian Segal—the Labor government’s Zionist “antisemitism envoy.”

This body poses a serious threat to democratic rights and academic freedom by equating political opposition, particularly to Israel’s genocide in Gaza, with antisemitism, providing a framework for censorship, curriculum changes, victimizations and repression in schools and universities. Under the guise of combating hatred, the Labor government also has introduced laws allowing for the banning of political groups by ministerial decree.

While allocating vast sums for AUKUS submarines and other weaponry directed against China, Labor is continuing to starve the universities of adequate funding, along with schools, hospitals, the NDIS and other social programs.

This is intensifying the deterioration of conditions in the universities over the past four decades—producing huge class sizes, the casualization of the workforce and the ever-greater reliance on corporate funding and student fees, both domestic and international.

According to official statistics, federal funding for higher education has been declining since the 1970s, under Labor and Liberal-National governments alike. Funding per student has been slashed from around $32,000 in 1974 to some $12,000—a cut of about two-thirds.

Labor’s continued financial squeeze, reinforced by reactionary nationalist cuts to international student enrollments, is aimed at compelling the universities to integrate themselves more fully with the demands of big business and the military, as set out in the government’s Universities Accord.

The Accord insists that universities must transform both their teaching and research in partnership with employers, and in line with the building of a war economy, including through the AUKUS pact, which is a preparation for a US-led war against China.

The Accord blueprint ties funding to universities signing “mission-based compacts” with Labor’s new Australian Tertiary Education Commission, above all to serve “national priorities” such as defense and critical minerals. 

The Accord report specified “micro-credential” courses to meet the requirements of employers, along with “work integrated learning” and “degree apprenticeships,” including AUKUS apprenticeships. Hundreds of such courses are being rolled out, including at the newly merged Adelaide University, where integration into the AUKUS military buildup is well underway.

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Opposition exists throughout the universities to the job destruction, course closures, pro-corporate restructuring and suppression of dissent. But the NTEU and CPSU leaders have for years blocked any unified fight by staff and students.

Instead, the union apparatuses have pressured educators into applying for “voluntary” redundancies, like the deal pushed through at Western Sydney University (WSU) last August, which displaced hundreds of staff members, particularly professional staff, forcing many to fight each other for new jobs or to leave.

The NTEU and CPSU have already this year struck another such deal at WSU, this time for a near four-year enterprise agreement that provides further real pay cuts—3.2 percent annually, compared to the resurgence of official inflation to 3.8 percent—and traps staff in the same kind of enterprise agreements that facilitated last year’s job carnage.

This is a warning that the unions will seek to impose similar sellouts everywhere in 2026. 

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Just quitting the unions in disgust, as many workers have done, is not an answer. Instead, staff and students must actively take matters into their own hands. For that, new democratic forms of organization—independent rank-and-file committees (RFCs)—must be built and the existing ones at WSU and Macquarie University must be developed.

RFCs need to be formed everywhere to link up with workers in Australia and worldwide through the International Workers’ Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees. Our struggle on campus must be connected to working‑class resistance internationally.

8. Germany: IG Metall boss calls for protectionism and trade war

At the union’s annual press conference on January 26 and in further statements IG Metall chair Christiane Benner has called for protectionism and trade war as integral elements of the union’s so-called “Initiative for Jobs and Economic Recovery: Future Instead of Relocation.” Benner warned, “The situation in Germany is extremely serious; we need new strategies.”

Amid the most severe attacks on workers since World War II, Benner and IG Metall stand squarely with big business and the federal government. IG Metall’s new strategy amounts to “Germany above all others,” a program steeped in German economic nationalism. We are currently seeing where this leads in the US. As the representative of the US economic and financial oligarchy, US President Donald Trump is attempting to rescue American capitalism through war against the working class at home and military operations against his rivals abroad.

There, too, the Trump administration can be sure of the support of the union apparatus. The sister union of the IGM in the US, the United Auto Workers (UAW), immediately after Trump’s second takeover, openly declared through its president Shawn Fain that the union was prepared to cooperate with his administration—especially on issues of economic nationalism and tariffs.

Currently, the UAW is doing everything it can to sabotage a general strike in Minneapolis and nationwide against Trump’s ICE murderers and his dictatorial aspirations.

This is insane: on both sides of the Atlantic, the union apparatuses are standing firmly behind their respective governments and corporations, advocating trade war and ultimately world war. 

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[IG Metall] repeatedly assures employers and the government it will continue to suppress resistance in the workplace: “As IG Metall, we take responsibility in companies and society,” it says in its initiative. “We contribute to stabilization with our collective bargaining policy, our company alliances, and our political commitment.”

Benner emphasized this last Monday: “IG Metall, its works councils, and the employees have delivered. The employees in our sectors are foregoing billions. Without us, the situation in German industry would already be bleak,” she claimed.

This is an obvious distortion of the facts. The employees are not voluntarily “foregoing” these billions; they are being forced to do so by their own union. The truth is that IG Metall and its works councils have handed the corporations and companies jobs and wages on a silver platter. Each of the many job massacres in 2025 bears the signature of the works councils and union officials. This is what saves the corporations billions. 

At VW, they have pushed through salary cuts of up to 20 percent and the elimination of 35,000 jobs—more than one in four; at Thyssenkrupp Stahl, they have pushed through the elimination of 11,000 jobs—out of a total of less than 27,000. The same applies to Porsche, Mercedes, ZF, Bosch, and many companies in the metal and electrical industry. Last year, an estimated 60,000 jobs were lost nationwide, particularly in the Ruhr region (mainly in the steel and metal industry) and in Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria (mainly in the auto industry). Since the downsizing plans drawn up by the IGM last year will allow corporations to cut thousands more jobs in the coming years, there is no end in sight.

To end this downward spiral, the workforce needs its own new strategy. This must follow three basic principles:

  • The struggle must be waged independently of IG Metall and all other union apparatuses, which work closely with the state, the government, and corporations and act as company police toward the workers.
  • The struggle must be waged internationally, overcoming the divisions created by IG Metall, the UAW, and others. The VW corporation alone has nearly 700,000 employees worldwide, including nearly 300,000 in Germany. Including suppliers and service providers, millions are linked in a single process. Only by fighting together and refusing to be played off against each other can the attacks be repelled and conditions for all workers improved. Such a struggle must be the starting point for a broad offensive by the working class against the war drive and the attacks on workers.
  • The struggle must not be guided by the profit logic of corporations and the interests of individual nation states, as the unions propagate. The needs of workers must be at the center. Enormous technological developments, above all artificial intelligence, make it possible to improve the lives of everyone to an unprecedented level. But under capitalist conditions, the same technology leads to mass layoffs, war, and destruction. This cannot be accepted.

In order to organize the struggle on the basis of these principles, action committees independent of the union bureaucrats must be established in every factory and every department, which must network internationally and organize a counterweight to the government and management.

9. United Kingdom: Epstein scandal engulfs Labour’s Peter Mandelson and former Prince Andrew, threatening Starmer

Fresh revelations tying Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal network to senior figures of Britain’s ruling elite—former Labour Party minister/key adviser Lord Peter Mandelson and the former Prince Andrew—have embroiled Keir Starmer’s Labour government.

Epstein, who died in suspicious circumstances in a prison cell in 2019, operated for decades as a highly connected middleman for the rich and powerful. He trafficked underage girls to a clientele of billionaires, politicians, diplomats and intelligence operatives.

The latest tranche of files released by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) had Mandelson named in almost 6,000 of them. He was forced to resign from the ruling Labour Party on Sunday and stepped down Tuesday from the House of Lords.

Mandelson walked when it was revealed that he had passed confidential UK government information to Epstein. Downing Street has been forced to pass information to the Metropolitan Police to investigate. On Tuesday evening a Met commander, Ella Marriott, stated that the force had received “a number” of complaints, including from the government, of “alleged misconduct in public office”.

A previous batch of released documents forced the prime minister to sack Mandelson last September, less than a year after appointing him US ambassador in December 2024. In those, Mandelson urged Epstein to “fight for early release” shortly before he was sentenced to 18 months in prison for soliciting prostitution from a minor.

The day before Epstein began his June 2008 sentence, Mandelson wrote, “I think the world of you and I feel hopeless and furious about what has happened.” He urged Epstein to be “incredibly resilient,” adding, “Your friends stay with you and love you.”

Despite being warned by the intelligence services of Epstein’s extensive connections to Mandelson, Starmer still went ahead and appointed this venal right-winger—associated more than anyone else with Tony Blair’s New Labour project and its political crimes. He notoriously said that Blair’s government was “intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich.”

Among the latest revelations are that Mandelson gave Epstein advance notice of an imminent €500 billion European Union (EU) bailout of the Eurozone in 2010.

*****

One of the documents uncovered by the Financial Times reveals that Mandelson told Epstein in a December 2009 exchange how he could assist in watering down a tax on bank bonuses announced by Brown’s Chancellor Alistair Darling.

Under the measures, bonuses over £25,000 in the finance industry were to be liable for extra 50 percent tax rate. Epstein asked, “[A]ny real chance of making the tax only on the cash portion of the bankers bonus?” Mandelson responded, “Treasury digging in but I am on [the] case.”

In another email Epstein asked Mandelson whether he should ask JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to phone Darling over the issue. Mandelson replied, “Yes and mildly threaten.” 

*****

Mandelson received $75,000 from Epstein in 2003 and 2004. While claiming he has no recollection of receiving the money, Mandelson has admitted Epstein made smaller payments to his husband.

In the latest trove of documents, another photo was published of Mandelson, this time in Epstein’s luxury Paris apartment where Mandelson is pictured in his underpants with an unknown woman. Images of Epstein and Mandelson go back as far as 2002–2003. Previous exposures uncovered a “birthday book” compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell (Epstein’s long-time associate and partner in crime) for his 50th birthday in 2003, where Mandelson described Epstein as his “best pal”.

Far from Mandelson’s claims now that he regrets ever spending time with Epstein, he continued to consort and encourage the convicted criminal after he served 13 months of the 18 month prison sentence. One email shows Mandelson asking Epstein (on the day he was released from prison), “how is freedom feeling”, to which Epstein replied: “She feels fresh, firm and creamy.”

Mandelson responded: “Naughty boy.” He asked, “How shall we celebrate?” to which Epstein responded, “With grace and modesty (those are the names of two strippers)”.

On Wednesday, Starmer’s crisis deepened when Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch invoked the parliamentary mechanism known as a “humble address.” She demanded the publication of all electronic communications between Mandelson and Starmer’s Chief of Staff, Morgan McSweeney, as well as between ministers and Mandelson, covering the six months prior to his appointment and the period “during his time as ambassador.”

Feeling too weakened—with his own and Labour’s poll numbers tanking—to allow the request to be put to a vote, Starmer put an amendment stating that the government would release as much as possible with regard for “national security or international relations”.

However, this compromise faced a rebellion by backbench Labour MPs, including an intervention from the floor by Starmer’s former deputy Angela Rayner, who last year was forced to step down in a tax sleaze scandal. The prime minister had to make further concessions, agreeing that any documents deemed a national security risk should be referred to the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) in Parliament—calculating that the body will agree to restrict the documents and allow Starmer to limp on in office.

Starmer is also contending with the horrific stench of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s sordid connections with Epstein; he has already lost his royal title due to the scandal and been forced by his brother, King Charles, to vacate his Royal Lodge mansion in the grounds of Windsor Castle. 

10. National Education Union ends Midlands, England teachers’ strike following agreement with Trust

Nine further days of strike action were due to begin on February 2. The NEU claimed the agreement as a “victory” and that “strikes work”. But the ATLP remains committed to balancing its deficits and the NEU is fully on board as partners.

The National Education Union (NEU) called off the strike of 800 teachers who work for the Arthur Terry Partnership Learning Trust (ATLP) across the Midlands last Thursday. The Trust, which runs 24 schools, is in a financial crisis was attempting to impose 100 redundancies.

Following eight days of solid strike action, supported by staff and parents throughout January, the NEU announced ending the strikes stating that following negotiations, the Trust has withdrawn the threats of redundancies and restructuring and the CEO of ATLP has been removed.

Nine further days of strike action were due to begin on February 2. The NEU claimed the agreement as a “victory” and that “strikes work”. However, while teachers, staff and parents will be relieved to hear that the threat redundancies have been lifted the ATLP remains committed to balancing its deficits and in this endeavour, the NEU is fully on board as partners.

The Trust issued a statement that it had agreed to pause all current restructuring and redundancy consultations and would “take every step possible so that any future compulsory redundancies are a last resort”.

*****

The NEU’s public outcry over the funding crisis, which the union says has left schools with £1 billion less in funding this year, belies its role as partners with private sector operators which run the Academies for profits. It is this corporate partnership that unions are embedded in that poses the greatest risk to education and one that teachers must confront to mount a successful counteroffensive. The NEU never addresses how it is that the government has Academized some 80 percent of secondary schools and 46 percent of primary schools. Funding and wages are at the same level as 2010 and this was on their watch. 

*****

According to ATLP’s latest accounts its deficit is around £10 million, which it is committed to legally resolve. Any claim that this will happen without impacting jobs, workload and quality of education is a fiction. The Trust released a “questions and answers” email to parents following the agreement with the NEU. There is no mistaking its intentions.

It states, “The trust will conduct a review of all non-staffing and central costs, with the aim of removing or reducing these and redirecting funding back to schools’ budgets. There will be ongoing regular meetings between the NEU and the new trust leadership looking at reducing the top-slice, and joint negotiating and consultation committees between union reps and management will be set up in every school to ensure union groups are part of decisions made.

“The Trust has needed to agree financial support from the Department for Education [DfE] in the form of repayable loans. This support has come with a number of conditions focused on the delivering a credible financial recovery strategy.” 

*****

There has been much criticism in the media over every child being issued with an iPad across the Trust. The accounts say there were some 11,281 children on the schools’ rolls, each issued with an Apple tablet. This is not uncommon and teaching and learning in today’s world necessitates the use of technology, which every child should have access to. The Trust has confirmed that to take this away would only scratch the surface of their debts. “Recent internal and external reviews, including those commissioned by the Department for Education, have identified overstaffing as the primary driver of the Trust’s current financial pressures”, it said.

While management at ATLP are awarding themselves obscene pay packets at the expense of children’s education, which the NEU have highlighted during the strike, these are not unusual across Academy Trusts. ATLP have defended these pay awards as “competitive”. The Trust’s accounts say key management staff received £1,841,000 in 24/25 up from £1,149,000 23/24 for eight management posts. This equates to £225,000 on average, almost 10 times the salary of a teacher entering the profession and over four times that of experienced teachers at the top end of the pay scale.

11. United Kingdom: University of Sheffield lock-out of staff adhering to action short of striking

Management at the University of Sheffield (UoS) implemented a lock-out on January 19, the first in the history of UK higher education (HE). Such measures have been threatened before by UK universities but had never previously been carried through.

UoS management is refusing to pay staff who fail to reschedule teaching missed during 16 days of strike action in November and December 2025. It is demanding that teaching lost due to industrial action be rescheduled without additional pay. Workers who had their wages deducted while on strike are now facing further pay losses for refusing to carry out unpaid work they were not compensated for in the first place.

Staff are therefore confronted with an effective “double deduction.” University and College Union (UCU) members already forfeited 16 days’ pay during the strike and are now expected to provide unpaid teaching. This threat is being enforced through the university’s refusal to pay any salary until workers accept the double deduction.

Management claims that, following the return to work in December, it is entitled to issue a “reasonable instruction” to reschedule missed teaching. UoS does not recognize this as additional work and cynically argues that lost learning must be replaced in order to meet its obligations to students.

While technically legal, this move is regarded as a highly controversial maneuver under UK employment law: the refusal to accept and pay for what management defines as “partial performance” by withholding all wages.

In November 2024, Vice-Chancellor Koen Lamberts announced a £50 million budget shortfall at UoS, which he intended to address through sweeping attacks on the workforce. He declared plans to cut £23 million by slashing staffing and costs over the following two years. The “New Schools” restructuring proposal reduces academic departments from 45 to 21, affecting nearly 800 staff. Between 300 and 600 workers are believed to have taken voluntary redundancy over the past 14 months. Management has refused to extend its no-compulsory-redundancy pledge beyond March 2025.

On November 28, 2025, striking UCU members received an intimidating email signed by Head of Human Resources Ian Wright, threatening a lock-out. The letter stated that all learning lost due to industrial action must be replaced and that failure to comply would constitute a breach of contract, warranting pay deductions of up to 100 percent. Strikers told the BBC that the letter amounted to a demand that they “work for free to undermine the strike.”

The UCU leadership described the threat as “brutal” and “intimidating,” arguing it was an attempt to force staff into unpaid labour and prevent the exercise of their legal right to strike. The UCU branch at University College London donated £5,000 in solidarity funds, warning that if Sheffield management succeeded in “breaking the resolve of union members, other employers are liable to follow suit.” However, the union bureaucracy organized nothing of substance in response.

In the new year, the university wrote to staff informing them that any academic who had not rescheduled lost teaching would have their entire pay docked for three weeks from January 19, on top of wages already lost during the strike. Workers who participated in the strike and refused to reschedule teaching therefore face losing a total of 31 days’ pay—around 8 percent of their annual salary.

Management carried out its threat on January 19. Staff who had not submitted “satisfactory plans” to reschedule missed classes are having their entire salary withheld until February 6, 2026, and potentially beyond. During this period, any work performed is classified as “voluntary.” 

*****

The union has had eight weeks since the initial threatening letter demanding that UCU members work for free, yet it has organized nothing. UCU General Secretary Jo Grady stated: “For management to now threaten staff with withholding pay, on top of the pay lost for lawful industrial action, is nothing short of scandalous… Sheffield management should get back round the table and work with us to save jobs.”

Appealing for management to return to negotiations while it ruthlessly presses home its advantage amounts to the UCU running up the white flag. The union’s sole aim is to suppress the key political issues and confine workers’ struggles within acceptable limits that threaten neither university management nor the Labour government.

*****

Management teams at universities across the country are closely watching developments. The struggle at UoS represents the thin end of the wedge, yet at every stage the union has sought conciliation. A fightback at Sheffield and nationally across [Higher Education] can succeed only if it is organized independently of the UCU bureaucracy. This requires the formation of rank-and-file committees uniting academic and non-academic workers with students to defend jobs and pay against the destructive marketization of higher education.

12. Communication Worker Union’s Martin Walsh opposes call for rank-and-file fightback at Royal Mail

The call by the Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee (PWRFC) to make 2026 the year of a fightback by Royal Mail workers has provoked an attempted push back by Communication Worker Union (CWU) postal deputy general secretary Martin Walsh on social media.

This took place on the Royal Mail Chat.co.uk forum after the statement “Make 2026 the start of a fightback at Royal Mail against CWU collusion with EP Group and Starmer government” had received several hundred views since being posted to the site on January 27. The response by Walsh on January 30 was a six-word throwaway line: “This has not lasted well at all!”

The PWRFC statement reported on a brutal Christmas period marked by the continuing breakdown of the mail service, as profitable parcel deliveries were prioritized through punishing workloads imposed on staff in understaffed delivery offices following thousands of job losses.

Walsh’s refusal to even address this reality typifies the unaccountability of the union bureaucracy. As the statement explained, the crisis pushing postal workers to breaking point is the direct result of last May’s £3.6 billion takeover of Royal Mail by billionaire Daniel Kretinsky’s EP Group, which became sole owner in order to gut the mail service and turn it into a low-wage parcel operation. 

*****

The World Socialist Web Site publishes a reply of a Postal Workers Rank-and-File Committee worker to Martin Walsh and requests that rank and file postal workers "extend this discussion not just on social media but within their workplaces away from management and their stooges in the CWU apparatus: in genuine and open forums where workers—union and non-union members—can draw up their red lines."

13. United Kingdom: Jury acquits Palestine Action’s Filton 6, dealing blow to Labour’s “terrorism” narrative

The Filton 6

Six young people imprisoned for 500 days without conviction by the British state for protesting at Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems near Bristol have been cleared of all charges.

Zoe Rogers, Charlotte Head, Leona Kamio, Fatima Rajwani, Jordan Devlin and Samuel Corner were acquitted by a jury on Wednesday, cleared of aggravated burglary for destroying military equipment at Elbit’s factory, including killer drones used to murder Palestinian civilians. The charge carried a potential life sentence.

All six were arrested in August 2024 and charged with criminal damage, aggravated burglary and violent disorder, while Corner was charged additionally with inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent for allegedly striking a police officer. All were held in pre-trial detention for 17-months--way beyond the legal limit of six months.

After deliberating for 36 hours and 34 minutes, the jury at London’s Woolwich Crown Court—attached to Belmarsh “supermax” Prison where Julian Assange was held for five years--announced their unanimous verdict of “not guilty” or “no verdict” on all counts. Five of the defendants were released from prison. Corner remains behind bars, pending a possible appeal by the state.

*****

As with previous acquittals of pro-Palestinian protesters, a jury has again delivered a verdict that reflects overwhelming public sentiment. Polling by YouGov in June 2025 found over half of Britons oppose Israel’s war on Gaza (55 percent), with 82 percent of these saying that Israel’s actions amount to genocide. This means 45 percent of UK adults regard Israel’s actions as genocidal. At the same time, nearly two thirds of the British public want the UK to enforce the International Criminal Court’s arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he visits the UK (65 percent). 

Labour’s backing of the genocide—including Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s vocal support for collective punishment of Palestinian civilians and his deputy, former foreign secretary and now secretary of state for justice David Lammy’s defense of missile strikes against Palestinian refugee tents as “not necessarily” a crime under international law—marks it a pariah government, fundamentally hostile to the democratic and social aspirations of the working class and oppressed masses worldwide.

The Filton 24 prosecutions have been central to the Starmer government’s re-casting of peaceful anti-genocide protests as “terrorism”. The Filton 6 were arrested on August 6, 2024, less than a month after the Labour government was sworn to office.

*****

Palestine Action was proscribed by the Labour government one year later, on July 5, making membership of the group an offense under the Terrorism Act punishable by up to 14 years’ imprisonment.

Civil liberties group CAGE responded to Wednesday’s verdict, stating: “The decision made by the jury critically undermines the rationale used to proscribe Palestine Action and underscores the urgent need for that ban to be lifted. This case was the most significant test of the government’s claim that acts of conscience against arms companies constitute a threat to public safety. 

*****

Lisa Minerva Luxx, a member of the Filton 24 Defence Committee, described the acquittal as a “significant victory” but warned, “There are still 18 more defendants imprisoned across the UK in connection with this case. They are being held under joint enterprise which means they each have the same three charges whether they are accused of being present at the action or not. Now that the first six have been liberated of the most serious charge, Aggravated Burglary, and none were convicted of a single offense, it follows that the rest must immediately have this charge dropped against them and be granted bail.” 

Luxx denounced Labour’s prejudicing of the hearing: “This was a trial by media. Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer took evidence in this case out of context and broadcast it on televisions and tabloids across the country in order to justify proscribing Palestine Action as a terrorist organization, despite forewarning that this will prejudice the trial.

*****

“Now that a court of law have vindicated the first six of the Filton 24 of the exaggerated charges against them [and found that the actions against Elbit Systems that night were reasonable], we should all expect Shabana Mahmood to do the reasonable thing herself and lift the ban on Palestine Action.”

The government has no intention of backing down. Little more than a week ago, London’s Metropolitan Police violently arrested 86 peaceful protestors outside Wormwood Scrubs prison where they had gathered in solidarity with Umer Khalid, a pro-Palestinian activist on a hunger and thirst strike who came close to death.

Even as rolling hunger strikes by prisoners threatened several young members of Palestine Action with death—including one who was reportedly “skeletal”-- Lammy refused to meet their lawyers or family members.

The Starmer government has brazenly defended its proscription of Palestine Action. During a judicial review late last year, government lawyers insisted the home secretary had “acted lawfully” in banning a non-violent civil disobedience group for the first time in modern British history. A decision by the High Court is pending.

Current Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood will respond to Wednesday’s resounding acquittal of the Filton 6 by stepping up Labour’s plans to abolish jury trials in England and Wales.

14. Workers Struggles: Africa & Europe

Africa

Kenya:

Five thousand workers from four sugar factories strike over unpaid wages

Nigeria:

Public sector strike in the Federal Capital Territory over pay and conditions which defied court order sabotaged by union bureaucracy

South Africa:
Municipal workers’ protest in Nelson Mandela Bay, Kariega highlights poverty

Europe

Belgium:

Thousands demonstrate in Brussels to defend free quality public education

Transport workers in Wallonia on indefinite strike against attacks on working conditions

Ireland:

ICT workers at local authorities strike for improved pay and conditions

Spain:

Workers fight back with strikes and protests against job losses

United Kingdom:

Strike by defense workers in Lancashire over pay

Staff at hospital in London walk out over terms and conditions

Further walkout by sports textile workers in Gloucestershire, England over pay

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

 

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

Feb 4, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Switzerland: Fire disaster in Crans-Montana claims 41st victim

There are actually clear rules regarding fire safety. One escape route is sufficient for up to 50 people; if there are more, at least a second escape route is required, and minimum widths are also mandatory. For 300 people or more, fire alarms, alarm systems and marked escape routes are also required. Virtually all of these requirements were disregarded.

It was not until a week after the fire disaster that the mayor, Nicolas Féraud, admitted that fire safety inspections had not been carried out in the bar for six years. They should actually be carried out and recorded annually.

*****

Switzerland is currently in the process of revising its cantonal fire safety legislation. A relaxation of the rules is planned by 2027, which will further reduce state control. Strictly in line with the motto “more market, less state,” certain owners will in future be able to replace official inspections with private expert reports.

The tourism industry in particular welcomed and promoted this relaxation. And in Valais, fire safety is the responsibility of the municipalities, whose council members are often themselves the operators of hotels, bars, mountain railways, ski lifts and shops.

*****

When the US company Vail Resort offered to practically buy up the municipality of Crans-Montana, taking over 85 percent of all public facilities, ski lifts and chairlifts, luxury hotels and shops, it was welcomed with open arms. Everything else was subordinated to the luxury tourism boom.

Politicians from all Swiss parties are currently talking big about “security” when it comes to armament, nationalism, the purchase of F-35 fighter jets and the militarization of society, but in reality they are sacrificing people’s protection and safety for profit. Crans-Montana is a telling example of this. The World Socialist Web Site wrote:

(The fire disaster).. is part of a chain of developments in which profit or power interests take precedence over human life—the coronavirus pandemic, the increase in fatal workplace accidents, the genocide in Gaza, the reintroduction of conscription in Germany—in which profit or power interests take precedence over human lives.

The protection and safety of the population will remain an empty phrase as long as the working class does not rise up to organize independently of all bourgeois parties and trade unions and establish democratic control over their working and living conditions.

2. United States: NYSNA seeks to undermine nurses strike as hospitals move to replace workers

On Monday, nurses marched to the office of Governor Kathy Hochul, a right-wing Democrat, to protest her efforts to break their strike. At the strike’s outset, Hochul declared a disaster emergency to allow nurses licensed in other states and in Canada to practice in New York.

Just hours after the protest concluded, Hochul extended the emergency declaration, demonstrating her contempt for the nurses and her alignment with the billionaire trustees who control the hospitals. In her statement extending the declaration, Hochul insulted nurses’ intelligence by claiming that the measure was “not intended to afford leverage to any party in collective bargaining.”

Earlier this week, negotiations resumed between the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) and the three healthcare systems that operate the four striking hospitals. Speaking with one voice, hospital management demanded that the union submit a “bare-bones” proposal.

NYSNA immediately complied, emphasizing its desire “to bring hospital executives back to the table” and “get nurses back to work.” It made no effort to fight back or mobilize its broader membership against the hospitals’ intimidation tactics.

In a statement Monday, NYSNA admitted it had “significantly revised and moderated our proposals.” These euphemisms amount to a declaration of surrender. Yet even this subservience failed to appease management. The hospitals’ latest proposals ignored safe staffing—the nurses’ central demand throughout the three-week strike—and failed to offer adequate protections against workplace violence, another key issue. 

*****

From the start, NYSNA has weakened and divided its members. It encouraged nurses to appeal to Democratic politicians like Hochul, who brought in strikebreakers, and Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who feigns support for the nurses while touting his “partnership” with the governor.  

*****

The striking nurses enjoy strong support from coworkers at other hospitals, fellow healthcare workers and the broader working class. The strike can be won if this support is actively mobilized and the strike is expanded to include all the hospitals where strike notices were withdrawn.

3. Protests erupt in Italy against ICE presence at Winter Olympics in Milan 

Last week’s announcement that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will operate on Italian soil during the Milan–Cortina Winter Olympics provoked an outpouring of opposition in Italy.

The ICE agency is infamous worldwide for its politically-driven executions of US citizens in Minneapolis. The announcement of its arrival in Milan follows the assault by ICE agents of two Italian journalists covering protests in Minneapolis last week. The video, viewed hundreds of thousands of times, provoked an outcry and demands that Italian authorities take a stand against the Trump administration.

ICE agents attempt to intimidate Italian journalists in Minneapolis 

*****

Workers took to social media to denounce the deployment of ICE in Italy, calling for protests and sit-ins over the weekend. They also launched a Change.org petition against ICE, which has already gathered 37,000 signatures. An outpouring of comments on X denounced ICE’s lawlessness against the American people, as well as warning that ICE could use the same murderous tactics during the Olympics.  

Several thousand people joined in protests on Saturday and Sunday against ICE on the Piazza XXV Aprile in Milan, blowing whistles and singing Bruce Springsteen songs, in solidarity with anti-ICE protests in the United States.

The square commemorates April 25, 1945, the first day of the general strike and armed insurrection of Milan workers called by the Committees of National Resistance of the Italian resistance against Nazi and Italian fascist authorities in the city. On April 28, resistance fighters captured and shot Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. The next day after that, Mussolini’s corpse was publicly exhibited on Milan’s Piazzale Loreto.

This eruption of outrage against ICE has provoked a crisis for Italy’s fascist prime minister, Georgia Meloni, who has cultivated ties with Trump and far-right megabillionaire Elon Musk. Her party, the Brothers of Italy, descends from the Italian Social Movement (MSI) formed in 1946 by former members of the Italian fascist regime against whom workers had risen up in Milan and across Northern Italy in 1945.

The Meloni government has tried to portray cooperation with Trump, the would-be Führer of America, as enhancing Italy’s prestige and capacity to host “orderly” games. Italian authorities initially denied reports that ICE would be present at the Games. They then tried to downplay ICE’s role, suggesting it would only assist with security for US athletes. 

*****

The ICE squads illegally occupying Minneapolis and other US cities operate without democratic constraints. Videos of the targeted execution on January 24 of Intensive Care Unit nurse Alex Pretti by immigration agents in Minneapolis, after the similar murder of mother Renée Nicole Good on January 7, have starkly shown this to hundreds of millions worldwide. By deploying ICE in Milan, Meloni is legitimizing murder and intimidation of migrants and protesters in Italy and across Europe. 

Meloni’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, snapped back at criticisms of ICE in Italy, saying that the ICE agents in Milan are “not going to be those who are on the street in Minneapolis.” He added, “it’s not like the SS are coming,” referring to the Nazi paramilitary organization that helped suppress the German labor movement, organized the Holocaust and led the war of annihilation against the Soviet Union and European resistance movements.

Tajani’s attempt to lull Italian workers to sleep is based on a political lie. In reality, with ICE, Trump is trying to build an organization as similar as it can to Nazi paramilitary groups. ICE is an organ of state terror overseeing mass repression, deportations, mass detention and extrajudicial murder on behalf of a ruling class that views the entire working population as disposable.

*****

Those who call to avoid creating an incident with ICE, issue appeals to Meloni or treat the ICE presence in Milan as a local security issue are seeking to disorient and demobilize this growing anger in the working class. Italy’s union bureaucracies have worked relentlessly to isolate strikes against Meloni, limit them to one-day actions and block the construction of a movement to bring down her government.

What is required is not more appeals to Meloni, but independent, organized working-class resistance by the rank-and-file, linked internationally to similar struggles that are emerging around the world, above all in the United States, against far-right dictatorship.

The Socialist Equality Parties in the United States and Europe and the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees are fighting to build such an independent movement. Workers and youth must oppose ICE’s arrival in Milan and the attempt to turn the Olympic games in the city into a laboratory of militarism and repression. Opposition to ICE, in Italy as in the United States, must be made the point of departure of a struggle of the working class to remove far-right governments from office and transfer power to the working people. 

4. Sri Lankan court hearing on violent 2023 assault on SEP members

Dehin Wasantha in bandages after being attacked for passing out leaflets 

[Dehin] Wasantha told the court that following the assault, he and [Lakshman] Fernando made their way to the Moratuwa Police Station to lodge a complaint. He stated that this occurred despite their injuries and the physical difficulty they experienced in reaching the station.

The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) has consistently explained in articles and statements that the attack was not an isolated street brawl, but a politically driven attempt to prevent it from organizing among university workers and students. It has situated the attack as part of a broader pattern in which trade union bureaucracies and pro-government unions act to defend capitalist austerity, protect ruling-class interests, and suppress rank-and-file, internationalist working-class politics.

Violence by union officials tied to the SLPP, the SEP argues, is an attempt to intimidate workers and block the growth of a socialist and anti-war movement that would challenge the capitalist order and International Monetary Fund austerity measures. 

*****

While the violent attack on the exercise of democratic rights drew international concern from defenders of civil liberties, the university administration has remained silent about the assault, despite a formal complaint by Wasantha in his capacity as an employee of the university. All the trade unions at the university, including those affiliated with the current Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna/National People’s Power government, have followed suit, exposing their anti-democratic character.

According to information cited by the SEP, the University of Moratuwa has not announced the outcome of any internal inquiry into the events of November 30, 2023. The absence of any publicly available findings raises serious questions about the responsibility of universities to ensure the safety and democratic rights of students and staff on and around campus.

The proceedings in the Moratuwa Magistrate Court continue to examine contested questions of fact, the actions of the accused, and the credibility of the various accounts presented. Further hearings are expected as the prosecution and defense continue to present evidence.

The SEP has stated that while it is pursuing the case through legal channels, it does not view this process in isolation. It emphasizes that the defense of democratic rights ultimately requires broader independent political mobilization by workers and students. At the same time, it has reiterated its demand that those responsible for the assault be held accountable through the judicial process.

5. Australian Labor government rolls out red carpet for Israeli president

Demonstrating its total support for the mass slaughter of the Palestinians, the federal Labor government is preparing to welcome Israeli President Isaac Herzog to the country for an official state visit. Herzog is due to arrive in Australia next Monday and remain for four days. 

The Laborites, at the federal level and in the states, have made clear that they will roll out the red carpet for one of the chief butchers of Gaza. The visit will include a massive security mobilization and an attempt to ban protests against the Israeli leader in Sydney, Australia’s most populous city.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese publicly invited Herzog to visit in the week following the December 14 attack at Sydney’s Bondi Beach. That antisemitic atrocity, targeting a Hanukkah celebration, was perpetrated by two Islamic State-inspired terrorists, one of whom had previously been on the radar of ASIO, the domestic intelligence agency.

The invitation to Herzog was presented as an opportunity for him to condole the Australian Jewish community and to himself mourn the lives lost. That can only be described as an obscenity.

It is based on the fraudulent conflation of the Israeli state, a fascistic outpost of imperialism in the Middle East, with the Jewish people internationally. Such an argument is itself antisemitic, identifying all Jews, many of whom are deeply opposed to Israel’s persecution of the Palestinians, with a criminal regime. 

Herzog has no business shedding crocodile tears over the deaths of innocent civilians, whatever their ethnicity or religion. His relationship to mass murder and terrorism is that of a perpetrator, not an opponent. 

*****

Of particular relevance to Herzog’s visit to Australia, ostensibly to express his horror over a terrorist attack, is his government’s own terrorist attack on Lebanon. In September 2024, the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad detonated explosives contained in tampered pagers across Lebanon. At least 42 people were killed, including children, and hundreds more were injured.

Herzog was not uninvolved. In the days after the attack, he fronted the Israeli response, angrily denouncing any suggestion that his regime was responsible. Those statements were later exposed as a fraud, including when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gratuitously gifted US President Donald Trump a golden pager in celebration of the attack. 

*****

The attempt to present Herzog’s visit as simply relating to the Bondi attack is a sham. In reality, the invitation was a signal of Labor’s full support for the Israeli regime, including its ongoing attempts to ethnically-cleanse Palestinians from Gaza and the renewed threats of the Trump administration to carry out war against Iran.

Throughout the Gaza genocide, the Labor government has supported Israel politically, diplomatically and materially, including through the continued export of advanced weapons components. But it has frequently sought to obfuscate that reality, through cynical references to the importance of civilian life. With the invitation to Herzog, the mask is off and Labor is openly identifying itself with the genocidal regime and its leadership. 

*****

The visit and the assault on popular opposition are no doubt shocking and angering masses of people. The critical question is to draw political lessons.

Throughout the genocide, the Greens and pseudo-left organizations such as Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance, have promoted the fraud that with sufficient pressure, Labor would end its support for the genocide.

They covered up the reality that Labor’s support for some of the worst war crimes since the Holocaust was not an aberration. It was an expression of Labor’s essence as a party of imperialist war and reaction, and was inseparably connected to its participation in an eruption of militarism globally, including in US-led preparations for war against China.

After more than two years of protests, Labor has not shifted to the left, it has shifted dramatically to the right.

That underscores the need, not for fawning appeals to the government, but for the most determined political struggle against it. Such a struggle must be based on the mobilization of the working class, industrially and politically and a socialist perspective, aimed at abolishing the root cause of war and reaction, the outmoded capitalist system itself. 

6. The US nurses’ strikes and the call for a general strike against Trump: How workers must prepare

Nurses are on the front lines of the ruling class’s war on society. They have borne the consequences of the government’s refusal to implement public health measures during the pandemic—decisions made to protect corporate profits. Now, the country is even less prepared than before. An estimated 260 million Americans were infected with COVID-19 last year. The US is also on the verge of losing its measles elimination status, with outbreaks emerging in ICE concentration camps.

Other sections of the working class are also pressing for a fight:

  • On Thursday, 40,000 graduate students across the 10-campus University of California system begin a strike authorization vote.

  • On Sunday, contracts expired for 30,000 oil refinery workers, responsible for two-thirds of US oil refining capacity.

  • Contracts have expired for most major California school districts, with strikes already authorized in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

  • A major contract covering 30,000 United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) at Stop & Shop is set to expire later this month.

  • Bargaining begins this month for the next contract for city postal carriers. On February 22, demonstrations are planned against the deadly cost-cutting that has already claimed the lives of postal workers.

  • Throughout the year, contracts will expire for hundreds of thousands of New York City public sector workers, including subway workers in May.

  • And on September 1, contracts for 25,000 steelworkers are set to expire.

A profound change is underway, one that is reaching ever deeper into the ranks of the working class. After more than four decades of suppressed struggles—following the betrayals and defeats imposed in the 1980s—the American working class is beginning to move once again.

*****

The movement against Trump and dictatorship must be anchored in the social power of the working class. The ongoing strikes must be supported, expanded and unified across industries. The protest movement must develop an explicitly class-conscious and anti-capitalist orientation, aimed at mobilizing the immense economic strength of the working class. It must assert itself as the leading force in the fight against dictatorship, drawing behind it students and broad layers of the middle class now entering into struggle.

This means combining the fight against dictatorship and war with the defense of the economic and social interests of the working class. Recognition of the organic connection between the Trump administration’s attack on democratic rights and the domination of society by a corporate-financial oligarchy must be made the basis of the political strategy of the working class.

*****

In Minneapolis, the unions have demanded that workers continue to honor “no-strike clauses” written into contracts over decades, even in the face of a fascist threat. In Chicago, the teachers union called for afterschool protests at local Target stores while actively deleting Facebook comments from members calling for strike action.

The prevailing attitude among the union bureaucracies is summed up by the infamous phrase adopted by a San Diego teachers union: “Obey now, grieve later.” In other words, submit now, fight never.

*****

The union apparatus is integrated with the corporate political establishment and supports the same nationalist “America First” agenda promoted by Trump and the Democrats alike. Breaking free from this stranglehold requires that workers reject this poison and unite with immigrant workers and workers all over the world against inequality, war and dictatorship. 

The strikes and protests now erupting across the country are animated not only by specific contract issues but by a deep and growing anger over intolerable levels of exploitation and inequality. A tiny financial oligarchy controls staggering wealth while working people are forced to choose between groceries and rent.

The IWA-RFC encourages the building of committees that can break the grip of the bureaucracies, transfer power to the rank and file and establish real democratic decision-making power.

Such a movement must confront not only the corporations but the political system that exists to defend their wealth and power. The working class cannot advance its interests within the framework of this corrupt system. It must build its own political leadership and fight to reorganize society based on equality and human need, not profit.

That means taking aim at the foundations of capitalist rule. The fight for workers’ power is inseparable from the fight to expropriate the billionaires and place the economy under the democratic control of the working class. The fortunes of figures like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos—pillars of the fascist right and profiteers of mass exploitation—must be seized and used to fund healthcare, education, housing and jobs.

7. House Democrats ensure passage of Trump’s global military rampage and domestic dictatorship

The passage of the spending bill in the House on Tuesday was a carefully calibrated maneuver between the Democratic and Republican leaderships. The bill passed the House by a narrow 217–214 margin. Twenty-one Republicans—primarily from the fascistic House Freedom Caucus—voted against the bill. The Democrats responded by supplying the exact number of votes needed to offset Republican defections.

These votes demonstrate that the Democratic Party functions not as an opposition but as an enabler of the Trump administration. Its priority is to ensure the uninterrupted funding of the US military while diverting popular opposition with calls for meaningless cosmetic changes to the administration’s efforts to establish a presidential dictatorship. 

*****

This is a continuation of the role the Democrats have played since January 6, 2021. After a fascist mob stormed the Capitol in an attempt to overturn the 2020 election, Democratic leaders rushed to rehabilitate the Republican Party. President Biden declared, “We need a Republican Party. We need an opposition that’s principled and strong.” After Trump won the 2024 election after large portions of the US financial oligarchy swung behind him, Biden shook his hand in the Oval Office and pledged the transition would be “as smooth as it can get.”

The Washington Post editorial board, speaking for a substantial section of the political establishment, published a column Monday titled “Better oversight will help ICE rebuild needed trust.” It declares: “Lawmakers of goodwill in both parties should understand that true accountability won’t impede ICE agents from going after threats to public safety.” By treating ICE’s rampage as a PR problem requiring “better oversight” rather than as a component of Trump’s drive toward dictatorial rule, the Post effectively endorses the crackdown itself.

The mass opposition to Trump—to the ICE killings, the military occupations, the threats of war against Iran and across Latin America—must not be diverted into the Democratic Party. The Democrats are not seeking to stop Trump. They are seeking to manage the political fallout from his fascist policies while ensuring that militarism and domestic repression continue without interruption.

Both parties represent the same financial oligarchy that has massively enriched itself under Trump. In the first year of his second term, the combined wealth of American billionaires grew by $1.5 trillion—a 22 percent increase—to $8.2 trillion. Elon Musk alone gained $305 billion. Both the Democratic and Republican parties serve this class, which demands the expansion of war, dictatorship and social inequality.

8. Trump calls for federal seizure of elections while directing FBI agents in Fulton County, Georgia

On Monday, President Donald Trump called on Republicans to “nationalize” elections and “take over the voting” in at least 15 states. Trump has repeatedly called for the federal seizure of elections in states he is projected to lose, while simultaneously directing federal law enforcement to seize voting infrastructure.

Trump’s actions over the past 48 hours are a continuation of the coup attempt that began on January 6, 2021, now being carried out through the powers of the federal government itself.

*****

On Monday, the same day Donald Trump first called on Republicans to back him in “taking over” elections, the New York Times confirmed that Trump has personally intervened in an active FBI investigation in Georgia. The paper reported that Trump spoke directly to frontline agents through Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard as voting equipment was seized in Fulton County.

The Times reported that Gabbard “appeared on site at the search” and “used her cellphone” to call Trump. The president then “addressed the agents on speakerphone, asking them questions as well as praising and thanking them for their work on the inquiry,” according to three people familiar with the call.

The paper further reported, citing a U.S. official, that Trump “personally ordered Ms. Gabbard to go to Atlanta for the search, and coordinated her actions with Andrew Bailey, one of two deputy FBI directors.”

The significance of Trump’s direct intervention cannot be overstated. By placing himself in direct contact with frontline FBI agents conducting an election-related investigation, Trump is reviving the same criminal logic he employed on January 2, 2021, when he personally pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” the votes needed to overturn Joe Biden’s victory. Then, as now, Trump was not seeking evidence of wrongdoing but demanding that state officials and law enforcement manufacture a result that would negate an election he had lost by more than 11,000 votes. The presence of the director of national intelligence at the scene and Trump’s direct communication with investigators demonstrate that this effort has now been escalated from political coercion to the active use of the federal security apparatus to override democratic outcomes. 

The events in Georgia follow similar coercive tactics in Minnesota where Attorney General Pam Bondi sent an extraordinary letter to Governor Tim Walz last month demanding that Minnesota turn over voter rolls and SNAP (food stamp) data to the federal government in exchange for a reduction in the number of immigration agents occupying the state. The demand exposed the fraudulent claim that the federal occupation, which has already resulted in the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, was aimed at targeting the “worst of the worst,” revealing instead that it was being used as leverage to coerce political compliance.

Trump has spent the first year of his second presidency federalizing National Guard elements and deploying them to major cities alongside his so-called “mass deportation operation,” in which thousands of masked federal agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have assaulted, murdered and kidnapped workers and residents with impunity. These and other federal police forces, can be positioned to intimidate voters, suppress turnout in targeted urban and working class areas, and seize ballots and voting rolls following an election.

Trump’s turn toward dictatorship is driven not only by his collapsing political support, but more fundamentally by the deepening crisis of the capitalist system itself. The United States is no longer the unchallenged global superpower it once was and now carries more than $40 trillion in debt, the product of decades of war, speculation, and financial parasitism. To impose austerity on the working class required to defend fictitious Wall Street valuations and sustain the wealth of a tiny financial oligarchy, the ruling class can no longer govern through democratic forms. The dismantling of elections, the expansion of the local and federal police forces and the military, and the concentration of power in the executive are not personal aberrations of Trump, but the means by which American capitalism is seeking to resolve its historic breakdown at the expense of the working class.

On the other end of the pole, millions of workers and students have taken to the streets across the country against the immigration Gestapo, police violence and state repression. Tens of thousands of healthcare workers in New York City and California are on strike, while thousands of oil workers and teachers are preparing to join them. Calls for a general strike to abolish the immigration police and drive Trump from the White House are growing, particularly in Minneapolis and other cities facing the brunt of the federal occupation.

The principal obstacle to a massive social explosion that would sweep Trump from power and reallocate billions towards healthcare, education and housing is not the strength of the administration, but the intervention of the Democratic Party and the trade union bureaucracy. Even as Trump accelerates his drive toward dictatorship, the Democrats are ensuring that his repressive apparatus remains fully funded and operational. 

*****

The crisis now confronting the United States cannot be resolved through elections that are being openly rigged, seized, or prepared under conditions of repression and martial law. Trump’s drive toward dictatorship is not an aberration but the product of a capitalist system in terminal breakdown, incapable of reconciling social inequality, imperialist war, and mass opposition through democratic forms.

9. Students, faculty protest against academic censorship at Texas A&M University (video included)

On January 29, students, faculty and alumni at Texas A&M University gathered at Academic Plaza to protest the censorship of more than 200 courses following the Board of Regents’ ban on classroom discussions of race and gender last fall. More than 300 people attended the rally, voicing opposition not only to the academic repression unfolding at Texas A&M and universities nationwide, but to the broader drive toward authoritarianism by the ruling class.

At the beginning of the spring semester, faculty revealed that over 200 courses had been flagged or canceled following amendments to A&M’s Civil Rights Protection and Compliance and Academic Freedom, Responsibility and Tenure policies that were approved by the university system board the previous semester. The anti-democratic measures, aimed at prohibiting the “advocation” of “race and gender ideology,” mandate per-semester reviews of syllabi for core courses and have reportedly relied on AI to flag material for noncompliance. This followed the firing of an instructor for discussing gender in the classroom and the forced resignation of university President Mark A. Welsh.

Many participants at the rally carried homemade signs drawing attention to the parallels between the ongoing assault on democratic rights and the policies of Nazi Germany in the 1930s. One sign read, “Goebbels would be proud of TAMU.” Others condemned the reign of terror carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Minneapolis and across the country, likening the agency to the Gestapo and calling for a general strike.

Among the speakers were Martin Peterson, a professor forced to remove a passage from Plato from his syllabus, and Dr. Leonard Bright, whose graduate-level Ethics course was canceled despite having fully documented that discussion of the banned topics was academically necessary. Their remarks exposed the far-reaching implications of the ban, which has affected not only the liberal arts but also curricula in public health and other scientific disciplines. Both denounced the intimidation and silencing of academics being carried out by university administrations. 

*****

The event was hosted by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), the Young Democratic Socialists of America (YDSA), MOVE Texas and other student organizations. The Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) also participated. While representatives of these Democratic Party-aligned groups at times alluded to the crisis of American democracy and the threat of fascism, they did not provide a political perspective capable of explaining the origins of the crisis or offering a way forward. 

The PSL endorsed the call for a general strike—a demand that emerged from workers and students in Minneapolis and is gaining broader support nationally—but failed to explain what a general strike is or how it can be built. Instead, it called for consumer boycotts, school walkouts and individual absenteeism to mark a national day of action on Friday, January 31.

10. Strikes and protests on the rise as Germany’s hospital sector faces growing crisis

While cuts in the healthcare system are driving more and more hospitals into insolvency, health workers are threatened with cuts in real wages and layoffs. The trade unions are isolating the struggles and preparing new sellouts. 

*****

It is not only healthcare workers in Germany who confront attacks on wages, working conditions and public healthcare provision in principle. The strike movement in the US makes clear that this is an international problem that can only be solved by an international movement.

In New York, around 15,000 nurses at several hospitals have been on strike since mid-January. They are demanding better staffing ratios, appropriate wages and social benefits. On the West Coast, more than 31,000 workers at Kaiser Permanente, a giant company in the healthcare sector, went on an indefinite walkout. Here too, employees are making similar demands on the company.

These struggles are directed equally against a healthcare system driven by profit at the expense of staff and patients. While hospital operators act against strikers using strikebreakers and legal manoeuvres, they rely above all on the unions, which try to isolate and weaken the struggles.

Workers everywhere in the world can only fight effectively for their demands if they form their own fighting organizations. For this, independent rank-and-file action committees must be built, which are directed against the pro-capitalist and nationalist policies of the trade unions and enable workers to develop resistance internationally and on the basis of a socialist perspective.

11. Australian interest rate hike hits working-class households

Yesterday’s decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) board to begin lifting interest rates again will severely affect millions of working-class families, shattering whatever remained of the Albanese Labor government’s claims to have “turned the corner” in resolving the cost-of-living crisis.

Not only did the RBA, the capitalist class’s nominally “independent” central bank, raise its cash rate to 3.85 percent from 3.6 percent. Its forecasts indicated a re-acceleration of inflation, increasing the likelihood of two more 0.25 percent rate hikes by the end of the year, accompanied by deeper cuts to workers’ real wages.

Yesterday’s rate hike alone will add about $105 a month, or nearly $1,300 a year, to repayments on average home mortgages, which now sit at around $700,000 in working-class areas due to soaring house prices.

While many corporate media commentators say households can handle this, recent Roy Morgan survey data estimated that it could cause “huge financial losses” for many people, throwing 1.3 million households into mortgage stress. Mortgage stress is generally defined as spending 30 percent or more of pre-tax income on home loan repayments.

*****

The RBA admitted the resurgence in inflation was more broad-based and persistent than it had expected when it made three 0.25 percent cuts last year, largely driven by fears of a global recession triggered by the Trump administration’s tariff war.

Significantly, in comments not reported in the corporate media, the RBA’s statement on monetary policy warned that this prospect could quickly re-emerge, with severe implications for Australian capitalism. “The recent escalation in geopolitical tensions has had a limited economic effect on Australia and its trading partners to date,” it said. “However, these pose upside risks to the global inflation outlook, particularly in the near term.”

Noting the depreciation of the US dollar and rising prices for gold and other precious metals, the bank stated: “If key downside risks to economic activity were to materialize or be reassessed by financial markets, this could prompt a sharp tightening in global financial conditions with potential consequences for the global economy and, in the extreme, financial stability.”

In other words, the global shock waves produced by the Trump administration’s economic warfare to try to reassert post-World War II US dominance could produce a crash that would dramatically further worsen economic and social conditions internationally, including in Australia. 

*****

The ruling class has seized upon the rate hike to escalate a drumbeat of demands for the Albanese government to further slash social spending in the May federal budget, if not before. 

Today’s Murdoch media Australian carries an editorial demanding a “wholesale pruning of public spending” such as “increasing Medicare bulk billing, relieving student debt, free TAFE places and generous childcare handouts.” 

Business chiefs are insisting that the government must cut at least $50 billion a year from essential social services. The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) issued this demand on Monday in its pre-budget submission to the government, specifically targeting the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), childcare, aged care and health. 

Such brutal cuts are supposedly designed to tackle inflation and overcome “unsustainable” budget deficits over the next decade. In reality, the only concern in corporate boardrooms is to ramp up profits at the expense of the working class. 

*****

In efforts to satisfy the corporate elite and money markets, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Treasurer Jim Chalmers have boasted that the Labor government has delivered “$114 billion in savings” since taking office in 2022, but that is nowhere enough to satisfy the financial oligarchs.

At the same time, the Trump administration is demanding that military spending rise to 5 percent of GDP, far above the Labor government’s latest pledge to reach 2.4 percent by 2033–34. That inevitably means diverting billions of more dollars a year into AUKUS-related military outlays at the expense of social programs.

These marching orders are being handed to the Labor government under conditions of enormous anxiety in ruling circles over the disintegration of the Liberal-National Coalition that has been, together with the Labor Party, a central pillar of the political establishment since World War II. Today’s Australian editorial lashed the Liberal and National leaders for not resolving their “internal squabbles” and “holding the government to account.”

Far from “squabbles,” the continuing Coalition bust-up is a sharp expression of an historic crisis of the entire parliamentary set-up that has defended capitalist rule since World War II. That has increased the dependence of the ruling class on the Albanese government and its partners in the union bureaucracy to deepen the assault on working-class conditions, and this is already fueling social and political discontent.

12. Washington escalates aggression against Mexico in bid to impose rule over the Americas

Washington is ramping up aggression against Mexico. This is reflected along three axes: its war proclaimed against Mexican drug cartels, its push for Mexico to abandon its longstanding relations with Cuba, while pressuring Mexico as to its oil production, and an aggressive stance over renewing its trade pact with Mexico.

*****

A year ago, the Trump administration designated six Mexican cartels as “foreign terrorist organizations,” a move Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum then criticized as threatening Mexico’s sovereignty.

In November, NBC News reported that the US military was already training for ground operations in Mexico. On January 8, in the wake of the January 3 US invasion of Venezuela and abduction of its president, Trump said that the United States was “going to start now hitting land, with regard to the cartels,” a remark that increased expectations that a US military strike on a cartel target in Mexico was forthcoming.

*****

After a lengthy phone call on January 12 with Trump, Mexico’s President Sheinbaum purported to “rule out” US “military action” in Mexico, claiming that Trump had said only that the United States could provide “additional assistance” to combat cartels if Mexico requested such help.

At the same time, Sheinbaum called for “stronger coordination” with the US on maritime security. She said, “we want to continue working as necessary to further strengthen coordination within the framework of defending our water sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Mexico.”

Soon thereafter, on January 22, alleged drug trafficker Ryan Wedding, a 44-year-old former Olympic snowboarder wanted on US drug trafficking and murder charges, was apprehended in Mexico City under murky circumstances. Sheinbaum claimed that Wedding turned himself in at the US Embassy in Mexico City. His lawyer disputed the surrender narrative. 

*****

As to trade talks with the United States, Sheinbaum told reporters on January 29 that “there’s nothing concrete yet, but things are progressing very well.”

Mexico is seeking relief from tariffs the Trump administration has imposed on a range of Mexican goods, including steel, aluminum and vehicles.

US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer met on Wednesday, January 28 with Mexican Secretary of Economy Marcelo Ebrard to discuss bilateral trade relations and the upcoming USMCA (US-Mexico-Canada) “Joint Review.” According to Greer’s office “both sides recognized substantial progress in recent months and agreed to continue intensive engagement to address non-tariff barriers.”  

Sheinbaum is advocating for maintenance of the current trilateral trade pact. She said she discussed Canada during her January 29 call with Trump, and that she spoke in favor of “maintaining the USMCA with the three countries.” 

*****

Even if Mexico, the United States and Canada don’t agree to extend the USMCA during this year’s review process, the pact by its terms would not be terminated for 10 years, until 2036. Trump, however, is fully capable of blowing up those terms and the pact.

Amid these controversies and geopolitical tensions over trade, the Mexican economy delivered a record export performance that barely prevented a recession after the economy shrank 0.3 percent in the third quarter. December saw exports climbing 17.2 percent compared to the previous year, so exports reached $664.8 billion in 2025, a 7.6 percent increase, the strongest growth since 2022.

This created Mexico’s first trade surplus since 2020—a modest $771 million that nonetheless contrasts sharply with 2024’s $18.5 billion deficit. Capistrán Carmona told Forbes that exports will once again be Mexico’s economic engine in 2026, forecasting growth above 5 percent. But that is wishful thinking at best.

Regardless of the ruling Morena party’s populist guise, the interests of the Mexican ruling class foreclose any response that rallies Mexicans in defense of democratic and social rights. It instead requires that the Mexican working class continue to supply cheap labor for finance capital. And if growth stagnates, there will be growing pressures by creditors to cut Morena’s limited social programs and pensions.

At the same time, the Mexican ruling class as a whole is fearful that opposition to the government will grow over its subservience to Trump, exposure of corruption and planned social cuts.

Under these conditions, the trajectory is further class struggle, economic oppression and US depredations and piracy.

13. 71-year-old subcontractor killed after falling into industrial vat at New Jersey chemical plant

A 71-year-old worker was killed on Monday, January 19, after falling into a large industrial container at the Bayway Chemical Plant in Linden, New Jersey. According to police, the man was working on top of a 6,000-gallon vat being filled with mineral oil when he fell inside. Emergency responders recovered his body from the container, where he was pronounced dead at the scene. 

The worker, a resident of Iselin, New Jersey, was employed as a subcontractor at the Bayway Chemical Plant, which is operated by Infineum, a global chemical company that produces lubricant additives. Neither his name nor the subcontracting firm that employed him have been released.

The incident is being investigated by the Linden Police Department, with a separate inquiry launched by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). No findings have yet been released by either agency.

In a statement, Infineum claimed that it would conduct its own internal investigation into the death and that it was “cooperating with all agencies in their investigations.”

The Bayway Chemical Plant, operated by Phillips 66 affiliate Infineum, is part of a network of aging industrial facilities that line New Jersey’s manufacturing corridor. The sprawling complex extends across a large tract of land adjacent to residential neighborhoods, underscoring how hazardous infrastructure is routinely embedded within working-class communities.

Many of these facilities—built decades ago and operating far beyond their intended lifespan—are marked by deteriorating equipment, extensive chemical handling systems and constant maintenance demands. Despite corporate claims of safe, modern operations, workers routinely confront dangerous conditions involving bulk liquids, confined spaces and elevated platforms—hazards frequently intensified by deferred maintenance and the use of subcontracted labor.

That the victim was employed as a subcontractor is a critical aspect of the case. Subcontracted workers are routinely assigned the most dangerous jobs in industrial settings, including maintenance, cleaning and tasks involving confined spaces and large containers.

This employment arrangement fragments responsibility between plant operators, contracting firms and regulatory agencies, allowing accountability for serious injuries or deaths to be deflected or delayed. In many cases, the identity of subcontracting firms is not publicly disclosed, and workers’ safety concerns are lost as responsibility is shuffled between contractors and plant owners. 

*****

The death in Linden follows a series of recent workplace fatalities in which official investigations were announced, not to expose the conditions that led to the deaths, but to contain scrutiny while operations continued uninterrupted. 

A short list includes the deaths of U.S. Postal Service workers Nick Acker, who was killed after becoming trapped in a mail-sorting machine during maintenance, and Russell Scruggs Jr., who died after falling and striking his head at a processing facility, as well as the death of Stellantis autoworker Ronald Adams Sr., who was crushed while performing maintenance work at an engine plant in Michigan. In each case, lethal hazards emerged in the course of routine operations, and official inquiries functioned to process the fatalities as isolated incidents, severed from broader questions of workplace organization, safety practices and responsibility.

Workplace fatalities remain a regular feature of life in the United States. Federal data show that thousands of workers are killed on the job each year, with many more suffering life-altering injuries.

Older workers and subcontracted employees—like the 71-year-old killed in the Linden incident—are among the most vulnerable, routinely exposed to hazardous conditions with limited protections and little public accountability when deaths occur. These conditions are being intensified by the dismantling of workplace safety regulations under the Trump administration, following decades in which such protections have been systematically weakened by successive administrations, both Democratic and Republican. 

*****

The continuing toll of workplace deaths reflects what Friedrich Engels described as “social murder,” in which workers are killed by conditions deliberately tolerated in the pursuit of profit. These deaths are outcomes of a social system that subordinates human life to production and treats worker deaths as an acceptable cost. 

14. The European Film Awards favor films celebrating family (Sentimental) values and “dancing in the face of oblivion”

In comparison with the bombastic and commerce-oriented US Golden Globes and Oscar ceremonies in Hollywood, the European Film Awards (EFA), whose 38th edition took place this year in Berlin January 17, is a more sober affair offering somewhat more room for political and social commentary.

Nonetheless, tellingly, the date of this year’s ceremony was moved forward from early December to mid-January evidently in an attempt to better position European films for the Academy Awards ceremony in mid-March.

The most notable political issue addressed at this year’s 38th awards ceremony was the situation in Iran. After a brief opening announcement, the stage was given over to the veteran Iranian director Jafar Panahi who was greeted with a standing ovation. Panahi has a lengthy history, having directed a number of remarkable works in the 1990s and early 2000s: The White Balloon, The Mirror, The CircleCrimson GoldOffside.

Speaking about the current developments in Iran, Panahi declared: “When truth is crushed in one place, freedom is suffocated everywhere [...]. That is why no one is safe anywhere in the world. Not in Iran. Not in Europe. Not in the United States. Not anywhere on this planet. And that is precisely why our task as filmmakers and artists is more difficult today than ever before. If we are disappointed with politicians, we must at least refuse to remain silent.”

*****

Panahi is an important filmmaker and critic of the reactionary Iranian regime, but the readiness of the EFA to provide him a stage for his comments should give pause for thought. German chancellor Friedrich Merz has made clear his own support for a regime change orchestrated by the Trump government, and in a recent interview Panahi shamefully refused to criticize a return to power by the late Shah’s son Reva Pahlavi.

It should be noted that while Panahi criticized Israel for its massive bombardment of Iran in June 2025, calling for the intervention of the United Nations, he has failed publicly to condemn the Zionist genocide in Gaza. Panahi’s outrage is selective. Following previous mass mobilisations against the regime, Panahi and other dissidents threw their weight behind the bourgeois Green movement. The danger remains that following the latest mass movement against the regime, Panahi and related dissidents could support either the return of the Shah’s son or even a regime change operation organized by the Trump government.

In 2011, writing in unequivocal defense of Panahi and fellow filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof and other victims of the Iranian government’s “barbaric treatment,” we noted that such a defense “should not be taken, however, as an expression of agreement with those who champion the [upper middle class] Green movement.”

*****

All that being said, Panahi’s It was Just an Accident is no doubt a serious attempt to come to grips with certain aspects of Iranian social and political reality. The film is based on his own experiences as a prisoner in Tehran’s dreaded Evin prison. Throughout his incarceration, Panahi, like other prisoners, was blindfolded and never able to see the face of his interrogator/torturer.

*****

The Norwegian filmmaker and actress Liv Ullmann was honored for her career with a lifetime achievement award and, with US president Trump obviously in mind, declared in her acceptance speech: “I am Norwegian, we give a Nobel Prize to someone who deserves it, and suddenly it goes to someone else. It’s so strange ... and that’s why I’m happy that we have laws that say that if you misuse the Nobel Prize, it can be taken away from you. Someone with power in the US may be disappointed. He will lose it, and I am happy about it.” 

In her rather smug statement, what Ullman failed to point out, however, was that the actual recipient of the Norwegian peace prize, the right-wing Venezuelan war hawk and CIA stooge María Corina Machado, was just as unqualified to receive the prize as the US president.

*****

The prize for best film went to Sentimental Value from Norwegian director Joachim Trier. The film centers on the figure of an older, egocentric Norwegian filmmaker Gustav (Stellan Skarsgård) who tries to reconnect with his adult children whom he largely neglected as their father. One of his daughters, Nora, is an actor. 

*****

In Sentimental Value we are treated to a number of scenes dealing with the inside workings of both the theatre and film industries—the stresses and strains behind the scenes of leading theatre and film productions. This clearly went down well with the over 4,200 film professionals who decide which films should receive the EFA prizes. 

*****

The second biggest EFA prize winner was the apocalyptic road movie Sirât by French director Óliver Laxe. Sirât (according to Islamic faith, the road to paradise) deals with the raver scene in Morocco where European social outcasts gather to escape the stress of modern society by dancing to trance music in the middle of the desert.

*****

Against a background of war and genocide Laxe’s film pays tribute to a group of people who seek, in the words of the director, “transcendence” rather than coping with reality. 

*****

A final mention should be made for the film On Falling, which did win the ceremony’s Honorary Discovery Award. Made by Portuguese director Laura Carreira and produced by Ken Loach, the movie deals with the extreme exploitation of workers in an Amazon-type warehouse, reflecting the experiences of countless workers all over the world. 

15. Canada’s Unifor union urges conversion of auto plant to war production

Unifor Local 88 Plant Chair Mike Van Boekel revealed last month that discussions have been held with General Motors management on producing military vehicles at the currently idled CAMI auto assembly plant in Ingersoll, Ontario. The discussions are “pretty secretive,” he said. “It looks like there’s a market for it—we just need a green light from the government to go ahead and do it,” he enthused.

Officials at GM and in the federal Liberal and Ontario Progressive Conservative governments have thus far remained non-committal about converting the CAMI plant to military production, and have not been forthcoming with details.

The federal Ministry of Industry—which formed a working group with GM, the union and the right-wing Progressive Conservative provincial government after GM shuttered the CAMI plant last October—has declared the expansion of Canada’s armaments industry a governmental priority.

For her part, Lana Payne, president of Unifor, Canada’s largest private-sector union, joined with Ontario Premier Doug Ford to pressure Prime Minister Mark Carney and his Liberal government on the basis of a bogus cross-class appeal to common national interests between bosses and workers. “Canada must respond with a real industrial strategy that defends Canadian jobs, leverages our market, and pushes back on Trump’s economic bullying,” said Payne.

Unifor has led the entire union bureaucracy in championing reactionary “Team Canada” nationalism in response to US President Donald Trump’s threats to annex Canada as the 51st US state and destroy its industrial base as part of his “America First” agenda. In so doing, Unifor has urged workers to line up behind the former central banker and blue-chip executive Carney, who in the name of opposing Trump has spearheaded a dramatic shift right.

Carney’s Liberal government is imposing sweeping public spending austerity and mass lay-offs to pay for an explosion in Canada’s military budget and handouts to the financial oligarchy. Unifor endorses this agenda, as shown by a series of policy papers released over several years advocating the creation of a “national industrial strategy” based on the strengthening of aerospace and “defense” manufacturing, i.e., domestic production of military equipment for war. 

*****

Last October, company management suspended all production at the CAMI plant indefinitely. It cited decreased market demand and high inventory levels for its BrightDrop electric delivery van as the reason for the shutdown. About 1,000 assembly workers lost their jobs.

After production of the Equinox internal combustion vehicle ended in 2021, workers at the plant had been forced to struggle through a lengthy layoff for e-vehicle retooling. This was followed, in the ensuing years, by sporadic periods of downtime and continuing layoffs.

The closure decision came alongside Stellantis’ move to indefinitely mothball its assembly plant in Brampton, Ford’s continuing idling of production at its Oakville facility and last week’s elimination of the third shift at GM Oshawa. It is closely tied to moves by the Detroit Three auto companies to go all in on US President Trump’s strategy of using tariffs and other economic sanctions to “reshore” manufacturing capacity to the US.

The Carney government has placed rearmament at the center of its economic strategy, channeling vast public funds into weapons procurement and building a domestic military-industrial base. Ottawa’s budget and policy documents commit hundreds of billions to expanding armaments production over the next decade and a new “Defense Industrial Strategy” that treats every firm as a potential “defense” supplier. This agenda aims to equip Canadian imperialism to wage war around the world as a new redivision of the globe between the great powers escalates. 

*****

The additional monies to stoke the Canadian war machine will come from the blood and sweat of the working class in the form of more cuts to public services, public sector jobs, Medicare and other social supports and the overall living standards of workers from coast to coast. And in expectation of working-class resistance to this class-war agenda, the Carney government, with the support of all the parliamentary parties, has already embarked on an assault on the basic democratic rights of the population. Major strikes are quickly outlawed on the orders of the government as a matter of course. Rights to assemble and protest are being squeezed. Critics of government policies find themselves cancelled, vilified, charged with offenses and even jailed. 

*****

Military vehicle production is already growing at Canadian industrial facilities. Roshel’s Senator-style armored combat vehicle, built in Brampton, Ontario, has been supplied in the hundreds to the Ukrainian military since the beginning of the US/NATO-instigated war with Russia. Just last November, ICE placed an expedited order with Roshel for a fleet of 20 of these armored vehicles to support its fascist-style raids on immigrant communities across the US. Photographs have already shown them appearing on the streets of Minneapolis, where ICE agents shot and killed two people last month.

In London, Ontario General Dynamics has for decades produced light-armored vehicles for the Canadian Armed Forces. Over the past decade, the company has fulfilled a lucrative contract with the despotic Saudi Arabian regime to provide 742 vehicles worth $15 billion. So controversial was this project that Unifor officials, who organized workers in the plant, tried to keep the contract with the Saudis “under wraps” until, much to Unifor’s embarrassment, then NDP leader Tom Mulcair wielded the information to attack Prime Minister Stephen Harper during a 2015 federal election debate. 

*****

Nationalism and pro-imperialist militarism offer no basis upon which workers can defend good-paying, secure jobs under conditions of an ever deepening capitalist crisis. The task facing workers in Canada threatened with layoffs due to the trade war with the US and the accelerating shift from civilian to war production is to unify their struggles with workers in the United States, who are engaging in ever broader struggles against Trump. “America First” protectionism and “Team Canada” nationalism express the interests of competing imperialist powers, both determined to offload the costs of their conflicts onto the working class. Workers across North America must advance their independent class interests by adopting a socialist-internationalist program and fighting together for the establishment of workers governments that put social needs before private profit by transforming the banks and key industries into public utilities under workers’ control.

16. As the US prepares war against Iran, NATO ally Türkiye attempts to mediate

As President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government deepens cooperation with the Donald Trump administration, Türkiye is attempting to mediate against the US’s upcoming attack on Iran. In recent days, Turkish government officials have voiced growing concerns and made efforts to establish diplomatic relations between Washington and Tehran.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian announced on social media that he had instructed Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to begin negotiations with the US. Erdoğan embarked on a two-day trip to Saudi Arabia and Egypt on Tuesday and said that discussions would cover “what can be done to prevent the Iran crisis from escalating further.”

According to a report on Axios, “White House envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi are expected to meet on Friday in Istanbul together with representatives of several Arab and Muslim countries to discuss a possible nuclear deal, according to two sources with knowledge and a U.S. official.”

This meeting was planned after a meeting between Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan and Araghchi in Ankara on January 30. During a joint press statement, Fidan said, “...we are against resorting to military options to resolve the issues. We do not believe that [the military option] will be very effective. We advocate negotiation and diplomacy.” “We call on the parties to come to the negotiating table,” Fidan said, adding that negotiations “will pave the way for Iran’s integration into the international system.”

Fidan stated in an interview with Al-Jazeera television at the end of January, “It’s wrong to attack Iran. It’s wrong to start the war again. Iran is ready to negotiate on the nuclear file again.” 

*****

A new imperialist attack on Iran, with its population of 93 million, carries the danger of turning into a regional war that rapidly draws in US-allied forces, including Türkiye. Such a war would deepen geopolitical instability across the Middle East, radicalizing the working-class and youth masses who despise imperialism and Zionism, thereby shaking the collaborative regimes.

The Trump administration, has amassed a large military buildup in the Middle East and threatened Iran with a new war following last June’s illegal attack. Meanwhile, speaking in Tehran Sunday, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, warned, “They should know that if they start a war this time, it will be a regional war.”

In mid-January, while Trump threatened to strike Tehran, exploiting the ongoing protests in Iran for its own benefit, an unnamed senior official reportedly stated that Iran had asked regional states to prevent a US attack. According to Reuters, the same official said, “Tehran has told regional countries, from Saudi Arabia and the UAE to Türkiye, that US bases in those countries will be attacked.” Türkiye hosts the Incirlik air base, which the US uses for its operations in the region. The radar base in Kürecik provides intelligence against Iran and its allies.

After Venezuela, the Trump administration wants to seize Iran’s energy resources and control the energy and supply chains of its global rivals, primarily China. Türkiye, led by Trump’s “friend” Erdoğan, fears that a large-scale US-Israel war against Iran could negatively affect it as well, and is playing the role of “good cop” in helping Washington achieve its goals through negotiation. Türkiye’s ruling elite is concerned that such a war could eliminate Iran’s role as a counterweight, further increasing Israel’s regional influence and encouraging Kurdish separatism in Iran. 

*****

The Turkish bourgeoisie is not a victim of 35 years of imperialist aggression now targeting Iran in the Middle East, but an accomplice. The Turkish ruling elite directly aided the US in its crimes across the region, from the attack on Iraq to the regime change wars in Syria and Libya. As a result of these imperialist attacks and regime change wars, Ankara has established strong ties with the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq, despite occasionally threatening it. On the other hand, Türkiye has attempted to suppress the de facto Kurdish autonomy that has emerged in Syria and make it subordinate to the new Damascus regime.

Türkiye’s ruling elite played a hypocritical and facilitating role in Israel’s genocide in Gaza, made possible with US support. Ankara aided Israel’s war machine by indirectly continuing trade and facilitating the flow of Azerbaijani oil through Türkiye. Meanwhile, as competition with Israel intensified in Syria and the Middle East in general, Erdoğan attempted to position himself as a defender of the Palestinians by using anti-genocide rhetoric. Ankara also played a role in getting Hamas to accept Trump’s new colonialist Gaza “peace” plan. Erdoğan now gladly accepts membership in Trump’s “Peace Council” in Gaza.

The current border between Türkiye and Iran is largely based on the 1639 Treaty of Qasr-e Shirin. Since this treaty ended the Ottoman-Safavid War of 1623–1639, the two countries have not fought each other. Iran is also a major supplier of natural gas to Türkiye, with 15-20 percent of Türkiye’s annual consumption supplied by Tehran.

However, neither the concerns of the Turkish ruling elite nor the bankrupt attempts at compromise by the bourgeois-clerical regime in Iran can put an end to imperialist aggression and the new colonial war in the Middle East. Imperialism pursues total submission and domination everywhere. There is no way forward other than a revolutionary strategy that will eliminate imperialism.  

The Sosyalist Eşitlik Partisi (Socialist Equality Party), the Turkish section of the International Committee of the Fourth International, calls on the working class in Türkiye, the Middle East, and worldwide to unconditionally oppose and take action against the threats of war against Iran, a historically oppressed country, by US imperialism and Israeli Zionism. US-NATO bases in Türkiye must be closed, and Ankara’s support for imperialist-Zionist aggression must end.

17. Striking workers speak from picket line at the National Coal Mining Museum for England:

A World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) reporting team spoke to striking workers who are members of Unison on their picket line outside the National Coal Mining Museum for England (NCMME) in Wakefield, Yorkshire about their 5-month-long strike and distributed the article UK National Coal Mining Museum management issues disciplinary threats against strikers.

Two workers employed as underground guides at the museum gave interviews. Both had formerly worked as miners at the UK’s last remaining deep coal mine – Kellingley Colliery, before it was closed in 2015. 

*****

Asked to respond to management allegations of “abuse, harassment and extreme bullying” by those on strike, Trevor said, “Well, the bullying and the insults, that’s what we received because they [management] had a security company here originally and from day one, all they wanted to do was antagonize us to get a reaction. Yeah, provocation. We believe that they brought in a proper antagonist, you know, who stood there just called us every name under the sun. You’ve probably seen the videos. I just went up and said, “who are you?” You probably saw the reaction I got off him. I didn’t curse and swear at him. Yeah, we just asked who he was. We got abuse.

“He threatened us. He says, tomorrow I’ll have 100 people here. He said, basically they will knock us off the picket line. Well, he didn’t come the next day.”

A veteran of the 1984-85 Miners’ strike, when the full force of the British state was employed to smash the miners’ struggle and the media regularly vilified them, Trevor recounted the series of horrendous provocations employed by management against the pickets.

*****

Trevor recounted how he had narrowly avoided a car that was driven at him.

Proving that for those like Trevor the job is a labor of love and a million miles away from seeking financial rewards, he concluded, “Pay is nothing to us really. It’s our heritage. It’s what we’re fighting for. That’s what means more to me than anything else, more than any pay or anything like that.”

*****

Russ was asked why after five months on strike, over pay that is close to the minimum wage, did he think management has chosen confrontation rather than settling a dispute:

“They can clearly afford it. I don’t know. It’s just a question of, ‘I’m in charge. You’ll do what I say’. It’s very Victorian values. It’s not democratic. We’re a very democratic union. We go on numbers, so we’ll have meetings every so often, and rather than one person saying we’re going to do this, we vote on things, and it’s done democratically... We’ll never accept anything where they’re going to discipline somebody.

“They’ve taken advantage of our goodwill. We did everything here on basic wages. Built everything and willing to help share our history and this heritage. We need to tell people how big it is.”

There was a palpable sense among the pickets that their struggle was part of something much larger. Russ added; “It’s just not just. The poor old bin workers [Birmingham refuse workers], they’re not asking for anything. Not asking for a change in the system. And they’re going to take eight grand [£8,000] a year off them. What do you do if they’re going to take eight grand a year off you? It’s similar to our dispute. And I just can’t believe the Labour government is letting all this happen.”
The discussion continued among the pickets over broader political and historical issues with copies sold of a WSWS pamphlet marking the 40th Anniversary of the 1984-5 strike which addressed the lessons for the class struggle today.

A recognition that this is part of a broader clampdown by the Starmer government to impoverish workers underlines the need to overcome the isolation of just 40 workers making a defiant stand: Unison the largest union in the UK has 1.3 million members.

As the WSWS article explained: “The five-month isolation of Unison members at the coal mining museum highlights a broader imperative: to remove the dead hand of the union bureaucracy that has blocked resistance across councils, the NHS, and other workplaces. This would unleash workers’ collective strength in a genuine fight that draws together all confronting austerity, irrespective of sector, profession, or employer.”

18. Deepening poverty in the UK under Starmer Labour government says major charity

The social inequality charity Joseph Rowntree Foundation summarized two decades of UK poverty data starkly: “Nothing’s changed? Everything’s changed. It’s worse.”

Its report published last month, “UK Poverty 2026: The essential guide to understanding poverty in the UK”, paints a devastating picture of worsening impoverishment for a substantial section of society, with no prospect of alleviation.

Poverty remained consistently high the last 20 years and the JRF anticipates no change under the Starmer led Labour government due to continuing low economic growth and stagnation—the trajectory since the global financial crash in 2001.

Overall poverty blighted between 20-22 percent of the population from 2005/06 up to the general election 2024. This translates to one in five or 14.2 million people, including two in every 10 or 7.9 million adults of working age, three in 20 pensioners and three in every 10, or 4.5 million children.

The areas with the highest poverty rates include the capital, London, at 26 percent, the West Midlands region at 24 percent, the North West at 23 percent and Yorkshire and Humber at 23 percent. Across the UK, figures for Wales are 22 percent, Scotland 20 percent and Northern Ireland 17 percent on average from 2021-24.

Most disturbing, the number and proportion of children living in poverty rose the last three years, up 600,00 from pre-pandemic levels. In 2017, the Conservative government introduced the sadistic two-child benefit cap that limited benefits to the first two children in a family.

The Starmer government have trumpeted their row back of the two-child benefit limit, but the JRF points out that Labour’s Child Poverty Strategy will still leave 4 million children in poverty by 2029/30.

Relative poverty in the UK is defined as earnings 60 percent below the national median income, at present £39,000, less than £23,400. The small reduction in the latest overall poverty figure to 21 percent reflects the fact that average incomes have fallen. 

*****

The number of people classed as destitute, “unable to stay warm, dry and fed,” more than doubled from 2017 to 2022 to 3.8 million, including one million children. Between 2021/22 and 2023/24 the number of people classed as food insecure increased by 60 percent.

The disabled, some ethnic minorities, larger families or single parent families, informal carers, and those in rented accommodation are at particular risk. 

*****

Disabled people are at higher risk of poverty than the general population, due to extra health costs and inability to work. The poverty rate for this group is 28 percent (8 percent higher than those not disabled). The disabled are caught in the crosshairs of the Starmer government’s intent to massively reduce the welfare bill.

The policy of both Labour and previous Tory governments is to get the sick and disabled off benefits and into work, enabled by tortuous assessments and the trap of benefit sanctions which are easily incurred. 

*****

Despite the government promising to invest in the most deprived districts, a study by the Independent Commission on Neighbourhoods predicts higher unemployment and crime in the industrial wastelands of the Midlands and the North.

The claim by Labour—repeating the mantra of every right-wing government before it—that employment is a route out of poverty is disingenuous. Being in work is far from guarantee against poverty due to abysmally low wages and insecure or part-time employment overseen by the corporatist trade unions over decades.

19. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Belo Horizonte sanitation workers strike over deadly working conditions

Canada:

Montreal municipal workers set for one-day strike

Mexico:

First Brands declares bankruptcy, workers occupy plants

Peru:

“March for Sacrifice” reaches Lima

United States:

Healthcare workers strike two Orange County California hospitals over wages and unsafe staffing levels

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk and Leon Trotsky

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.