Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:
On Sunday, November 16, at 3:00 p.m. US Eastern Time, the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) and the Socialist Equality Party (US) are holding an online public meeting to organize the fight against layoffs and hunger. Register here to attend.
1. Stop Trump's deportation flight of Ukrainian immigrants into forced conscription!
On Monday, the Trump administration plans to deport 83 people from the United States in the first mass deportation to Ukraine in years.
If the flight is allowed to take place, the men will be flown to Poland and then driven to the border with Ukraine, where Ukrainian officials will conscript them into the armed forces and send them to the front. As one anonymous adviser to Zelensky thuggishly told the Washington Post while confirming Monday’s flight, “The US can deport as many as they want. We’ll find good use for them.”
Among the detainees are individuals who have lived in the US since they were children. Many have US citizen spouses and children who fear Monday’s flight like they would fear their spouse’s execution. Most do not even speak Ukrainian, and many are not even Ukrainian citizens, having been born in the Soviet Union before Ukraine existed as a separate country.
The Socialist Equality Party (US) demands the immediate cancellation of the deportation flight and the immediate release from immigration detention of each individual in question. Those who face deportation on Monday may face death on Tuesday. Not a single Democratic politician has so much as tweeted about the deportation flight. Ocasio-Cortez, Sanders, Mamdani and the rest are so hell-bent on presenting the corrupt dictator Volodymyr Zelensky as a beacon for “democracy” that they allow Trump to execute the flight with a cover of silence.
If Monday’s flight takes place, it will be the modern “Voyage of the Damned.” This was the term used to describe the US government’s 1939 refusal to allow the ship MS St. Louis and its hundreds of Jewish passengers seeking refuge from Hitler from docking in Cuba. The Democratic administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt refused to allow the ship to dock and turned it back to Europe. A large portion of the ship’s passengers returned to Belgium and France. Between 200 and 300 of them were murdered in the Holocaust. It is a dark historic irony that the fascists and Nazi adulators in the Ukrainian government evidently made Monday’s flight possible.
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In a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, one of the lawyers challenging the deportations, Eric Lee, quoted the State Department’s own 2024 Human Rights Report on Ukraine. It reports “[s]ignificant human rights issues involving Ukrainian government officials included credible reports of. . . torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment;” “arbitrary arrest or detention;” “serious restrictions on freedom of expression and media freedom, including violence or threats of violence against journalists.” The report notes that “[s]ome of these human rights issues stemmed from martial law, which continued to curtail democratic freedoms due to wartime conditions, including freedom of the press and legal protections.”
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The modern-day Voyage of the Damned places added urgency on the case of Bogdan Syrotiuk, a 26-year-old socialist imprisoned by the Zelensky government on baseless “treason” charges. Syrotiuk’s only “crime” was to oppose the NATO-backed war and advocate unity between Ukrainian and Russian workers against the capitalist oligarchies and imperialist powers driving the conflict. He has been detained for a year-and-a-half under deplorable conditions in Nikolaev.
That the US government would now forcibly send longtime US residents into this same authoritarian state—where political dissenters like Syrotiuk are silenced, jailed, and branded as traitors—underscores the criminal character of both the Trump and Zelensky regimes. The campaign to free Bogdan Syrotiuk is inseparable from the demand to halt the deportation flight: both stand for the defense of democratic rights and opposition to the war which threatens to spiral into a nuclear conflagration.
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The working class must oppose Monday’s deportation flight with all its strength. It must come to the defense of immigrants and refugees not as an act of charity, but as part of a unified struggle against dictatorship, imperialist war, and capitalist exploitation and a demonstration of international class unity.
The fight to defend democratic rights begins with the defense of the most vulnerable—and it must be armed with a socialist program to put an end to the system that breeds war, repression, and inequality.
2. More than 1,000 artists and labels join international campaign to remove their music from Israel
There is no doubt that No Music for Genocide and the response of large numbers of performers and musicians speak to the broad leftward shift currently under way. The Zionists’ horrific crimes, backed to the hilt by all the great powers, have opened the eyes of tens of millions, especially among the young, to the nature of the present social and economic order.
3. Stop the censorship of anti-fascist meetings at Berlin universities!
While students face ever greater restrictions on their right to freedom of expression, German universities themselves are by no means neutral. They increasingly take sides with German militarism and defend far-right political positions.
4. “100% preventable”: Postal workers demand answers on death of Nick Acker
Nick Acker, the postal worker who died at the Allen Park Detroit Network Distribution Center (DNDC) facility on November 8, was laid to rest on Friday. Many questions remain unanswered in the days since his death, and no official cause has been released. His coworkers, however, are speaking out and demanding answers.
Nick arrived at work around 11:00 a.m., but his body was apparently not recovered until 12:30 p.m. the following day. Firefighters told local media that he had been dead for approximately six to eight hours before he was found. While management told the press that his fiancée contacted police when he did not return home from work, she stated that she waited outside the facility for three hours before receiving help, and that she did not contact the police. Nick’s coworkers confirmed this in comments to the World Socialist Web Site.
5. Australia’s Liberal Party shifts further to the right dumping “net zero”
At a party room meeting on Wednesday, the Liberal Party voted to ditch their nominal commitment to reduce carbon emissions to “net zero” by 2050. The next day, Liberal leader Sussan Ley publicly announced the policy change.
The shift goes far beyond the intrinsic significance of the policy itself. The climate targets of all of the major parties are a sham, which they willfully violate, including the current federal Labor government, under which emissions are increasing.
Of greater significance is the fact that the change marks a further shift to the right by the Liberals, under conditions where they are facing an existential crisis.
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In announcing the change, Ley was reduced to a pathetic incoherence. While the Liberals would no longer have a policy of “net zero,” they would be pleased if such an emissions reduction were to occur by 2050.
The Liberals would support Australia remaining a signatory to the Paris climate agreement, even as they rejected measures to achieve the nominal emissions reductions that the agreement calls for. The Liberals would repeal existing emissions mechanisms, and replaced them with an unspecified “technology-led” approach.
The mishmash of Ley’s presentation was aimed at presenting the new policy as a compromise between the right-wing factions and the “moderates,” who had wanted to retain “net zero.” The obvious contradictions in Ley’s statements make clear this is not the case. The outcome of the meeting was a rout for the “moderates,” whose own political capital within the Liberal Party is approaching “net zero.”
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The Liberals have largely lost their inner city seats to “Teal” independents. Many of them are former Liberals or have had longstanding connections to the party. While being rabidly pro-business, they have pitched to concerns over the environment and have presented the Liberals hostility to measures to address climate change as being out of step, including with substantial sections of business.
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As the World Socialist Web Site has explained, underlying the Liberal crisis are profound shifts in class relations. The relatively broad middle-class of the post-World War II era, upon which the Liberals were based, no longer exists. Many small businesspeople face a precarious and uncertain existence. Layers of professions, such as teachers and health staff, have been proletarianized and increasingly identify their own social plight with that of the broader working class.
Meanwhile, the social polarization of the past four decades has changed the composition and character of the upper classes. In addition to the financial elite, there is a privileged and grasping upper middle-class, narrower and with greater access to wealth, than the middle-class of old. It is these layers that the Teals speak for.
The ditching of “net zero” makes clear that Ley’s attempts to hold the Liberal Party together are doomed to failure. While she remains the leader for now, she has capitulated to the right, rendering her little more than a figurehead.
6. Measles outbreak in New Zealand
On November 9 an individual in the city of Nelson, New Zealand, was diagnosed with measles, the 18th case identified in an outbreak affecting different parts of the country, including Auckland, Wellington, Manawatū and Taranaki. Thousands of people have been potentially exposed to the virus.
hile 17 previous cases—mostly confirmed in October—are no longer infectious, the most recent case had no known links to any of them, indicating that the highly contagious and potentially deadly virus is spreading undetected. Health NZ warned: “New Zealand continues to remain at high risk from measles.”
Measles is preventable through vaccination, but New Zealand’s vaccination rate has fallen over recent years. The re-emergence of the disease in developed countries around the world is an indictment of capitalist governments, which are dismantling public health systems and promoting anti-vaccination charlatans such as US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
In the United States, over 1,281 confirmed cases of measles were reported in July, the highest number in three decades, with cases in at least 38 states.
Radio NZ (RNZ) reported on October 22 that “only about 80 percent of New Zealanders have immunity against measles—much lower than the 95 percent needed to prevent a widespread outbreak.” After the National Party government belatedly appealed for people to vaccinate their children, the percentage of children under 2 years old who had received the vaccine increased to 82.6 percent, as of November 11, up from 75.1 percent a year ago.
Vaccination is lowest in Māori and Pacific Island communities, which are among the poorest sections of the working class.
In late 2019, under the previous Labour Party-led coalition government of Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand experienced a severe measles outbreak, with 2,194 reported cases, 35 percent of which required hospitalization. The worst complications involved encephalitis (brain inflammation), pregnant women losing their babies and live-saving treatment for children.
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Following the 2019 outbreak the Labour-led government allowed measles vaccination rates to plummet from 91 to 84.4 percent for under-two-year-olds by 2021. While the Ardern government initially implemented strict lockdowns and an elimination strategy for COVID-19, measles preparedness was criminally neglected.
In late 2021, the government caved to the demands of big business for an end to the “zero-COVID” policy. Labour, with the crucial collaboration of the trade union bureaucracy, imposed the same disastrous “let it rip” policy that had already led to millions of deaths worldwide. Thousands of people died in 2022 and 2023, as under-staffed hospitals were overwhelmed by COVID patients.
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In total, 5,475 people are reported to have died from COVID since the pandemic began, including four deaths in the week ending November 9. More than 47,000 people have been admitted to hospital with the virus.
The same utterly negligent approach has been taken with measles, despite repeated warnings from experts about the low vaccination rate. Modelling by the New Zealand Institute for Public Health and Forensic Science has warned that as many as 150 people a week could get infected with measles if an epidemic takes hold.
Since the pandemic, the public health system has been further starved of funding, by both Labour and National governments, in order to cut taxes for the rich and to transfer billions of dollars to the military.
7. Australian public tower residents further victimized by Homes Victoria
Following the decision by the Labor state government in Victoria to demolish 44 public housing towers in inner Melbourne, the residents remaining in the targeted flats are being subjected to a war of nerves by the government agency Homes Victoria.
Premier Jacinta Allan’s government wants to demolish the public housing in the state capital, starting with the towers in Flemington and North Melbourne, in order to cede the valuable land to property developers for 40 years. The developers intend to build their own high rises to reap a handsome profit.
There are about 10,000 residents in the public towers. Under Labor’s plan, the developers will construct 30,000 units but only 11,000—about one-third—are earmarked for so-called social housing, which is far inferior to the existing public housing in security of tenure. Public housing has permanent tenure so many residents have been able to live in the towers for decades, but tenure in social housing can be as short as two years.
Residents remaining in the towers are living in limbo while they wait for Homes Victoria relocation officers to organise possible transfers for them to supposedly suitable housing. The balance of power is weighted against them in their dealings with the officers.
Many of the residents come from refugee backgrounds, with their lives upturned by war and dislocation, and English is not their first language. In particular, documents in official English can create enormous stress.
Negotiations between the relocation officers and the residents have consisted of to-ing and fro-ing about possible relocations, where at any point the officers can send a resident an official letter to speed up the process.
These letters are couched in terms that the residents cannot easily understand, conveying threats that if they do not quickly accept an “offer” they will have their priority removed. That would leave them vulnerable to homelessness while languishing on the Victorian Housing Register, which has 60,000 applicants for public or social housing, few of whom receive homes.
8. Verizon announces 15,000 layoffs in latest jobs bloodbath
The telecommunications giant Verizon will lay off 15,000 people, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday, its largest job cut ever, amounting to 15 percent of its workforce. The corporation will spin off 200 stores as franchises, the newspaper said.
This is the latest in a series of mass layoff announcements throughout the US economy, as companies respond to a deepening economic slowdown and the proliferation of AI technology with job cuts and speed-ups.
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Verizon had 100,000 employees in February after cutting 20,000 jobs over the course of three years. Reuters reported that the company expects to reduce its non-union management jobs by more than 20 percent.
Verizon, the largest telecommunications provider in the US, is facing growing competition from cable internet providers, such as Comcast, which are expanding into the mobile phone space by bundling home internet and mobile phone plans. As a result, Verizon has lost 7,000 subscribers over the past quarter.
Last month, Verizon named Daniel Schulman, former CEO of PayPal and Virgin Mobile USA, as its new CEO. Schulman said he intended to navigate the company out of its crisis through cost-cutting, i.e., mass layoffs.
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While the immediate cause of the mass layoffs may be the vertical consolidation of Verizon’s rivals, they take place in the context of a surge of layoffs throughout the American economy.
- On October 28, the online retail monopoly Amazon announced that it had cut 14,000 jobs. In a message to employees, a senior vice president at the company said that artificial intelligence was “enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before.” In order to thrive in the new environment, he added, “we’re convinced that we need to be organized more leanly, with fewer layers.”
- Also on October 28, the retailer Target announced that it would cut 18,000 corporate jobs, eliminating 8 percent of corporate positions worldwide. As with the Amazon layoffs, Target cited a desire to get rid of complexity, writing in a memo: “The truth is, the complexity we’ve created over time has been holding us back. … Too many layers and overlapping work have slowed decisions, making it harder to bring ideas to life.”
- UPS, the package delivery company, has laid off 48,000 employees so far this year. Altogether 34,000 delivery drivers were fired, together with 14,000 in management.
- Last month, Microsoft announced that it would lay off 9,000 people, or 4 percent of its workforce.
- Other mass layoffs have been announced at social media company Meta, automaker Rivian and IT company IBM.
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For those who have lost their job, the prospect of finding another is getting worse and worse. In a survey conducted by the Wall Street Journal, only about 20 percent of Americans surveyed said they thought they could find a good job if they wanted to.
Declaring, “It’s the worst time to be a college graduate in years,” Newsweek noted:
Freshly minted graduates are increasingly walking out of commencement ceremonies and into a labor market that seems defined less by opportunity, and more so by the obligation of endless applications and interviews with little promise of a payoff.
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The mass layoffs, coupled with the surging cost of living, are driving a rise in credit delinquencies. According to a report by CU Repossession, over 2.2 million vehicles have been repossessed so far this year in the United States, a figure that is expected to hit 3 million by the end of the year—a number comparable to that seen during the 2008 crisis.
9. Human Rights Watch reveals torture inside El Salvador’s CECOT, a model of capitalist repression
On November 12, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Cristosal (a human rights organization for El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras) released a damning report on the inhumane and illegal treatment of 252 Venezuelans detained for four months in CECOT (Center for the Confinement of Terrorism), El Salvador’s maximum security torture prison. The 236-acre facility is staffed by 1,000 prison guards, 250 riot police and guarded by 600 members of the armed forces.
“You have arrived in hell. Here you will spend the rest of your lives.” With this declaration, the director of El Salvador’s CECOT greeted the hundreds of men dragged into the country’s maximum security torture camp.
The report documents an extensive, coordinated and deliberate series of incidents of physical, psychological, sexual abuses, deprivation and torture carried out with the express intent to subjugate and humiliate detainees.
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The most severe beatings occur in a punishment area called “the Island,” consisting of six small solitary confinement cells. Detainees are taken there under various pretexts and beaten with batons, fists and kicks before being left locked inside for hours or days without adequate food, water or light.
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Despite prior reports of abuse and torture in CECOT, the United States nonetheless sends the detainees to the facility—a violation of the principle of non-refoulement in the UN Convention Against Torture (CAT). Non-refoulement is an international legal principle that prohibits a country from returning refugees or other individuals to a place where their life or freedom would be threatened, or where they would face torture, cruel or degrading treatment.
Of the 252 Venezuelans who were subjected to arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance, ICE data shows that of those sent to CECOT, 49 percent had no criminal record at all. Only 3.2 percent had violent or potentially violent charges. This flies in the face of the deluge of propaganda from the US government that those detained were gang members or terrorists.
Following massive public outcry, on July 18, the detainees were released in an exchange with Venezuela, where they continue to face the very same danger and uncertainty they sought to flee from, including the threats of war.
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The scenes now unfolding in Chicago, Los Angeles and major cities across the country, where federal agents and militarized police assault workers, are test runs for a broader campaign of state violence.
As Trotsky explained in his analysis of the rise of fascism in the 1930s, the bourgeoisie turns to dictatorship when it can no longer rule through the traditional forms of democracy. The descent into torture, indefinite detention and mass deportation is inseparable from the catastrophic levels of inequality and social misery produced by American capitalism.
The fight against these crimes cannot be waged through appeals to the Democratic Party or any faction of the existing political establishment. It requires the independent political mobilization of the working class across national boundaries, armed with a socialist program to dismantle the apparatus of repression and bring those responsible for these atrocities to justice.
Only such a movement can prevent the spread of the CECOT model internationally and halt the drive toward dictatorship.
Just hours before Tremane Wood was scheduled to die by lethal injection on Thursday, November 13, 2025, Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt granted him clemency, commuting his sentence to life in prison without parole. Wood, 46, had been condemned to die for his role in the 2001 fatal stabbing of 19-year-old farmworker Ronnie Wipf during a botched armed robbery at an Oklahoma City motel.
While Tremane Wood’s attorneys did not deny his participation in the robbery, they maintained that his older brother, Zjaiton “Jake” Wood, was the one who delivered the fatal blow. Jake Wood testified in his younger brother’s defense prior to his own trial. He said he stabbed Wipf with a knife and that his brother had not been at the motel, a claim contradicted by other testimony. Jake Wood had confessed to the murder and received a sentence of life without parole. He died by suicide in prison in 2019.
At his last-minute clemency hearing, the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-2 to recommend mercy. The board cited possible prosecutorial misconduct and, critically, Tremane Wood’s grossly ineffective trial attorney, John Albert, who admitted to drinking heavily and using cocaine during the trial. Albert later apologized to Wood, writing, “I’m sorry,” and noting, “You got me at a bad time.”
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Bryan Jennings, a former US Marine, was executed by lethal injection at 6:20 p.m. local time on Thursday, November 13, 2025. He was put to death for the 1979 rape and murder of 6-year-old Rebecca Kunash on Merritt Island.
Jennings was the record 16th inmate executed in Florida in 2025, a nation-leading total that doubles the state’s previous record of eight executions set in 2014.
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During his third trial, Jennings’ mother told jurors he never knew his biological father and was a “problem child from birth,” describing him as “very destructive and hyperactive.” She recounted wanting to admit him to a mental hospital in Boston on a doctor’s recommendation, but she changed her mind, fearing the stigma would prevent him from joining the military.
More recently, Jennings’ lawyers argued he was left without representation for months after his counsel died in 2022, which they contended denied him due process and monitoring of his mental health. The Florida Supreme Court rejected this contention. The US Supreme Court denied Jennings’ last-minute appeal for a stay of execution.
Jennings, a former US Marine, was one of six veterans executed in Florida so far this year. Also put to death were:
- Edward James: executed March 20, 2025. US Army veteran convicted for the murder of an eight-year-old girl and her grandmother in 1993.
- Jeffrey Hutchinson: executed May 1, 2025. US Army Ranger who served during the Gulf War, convicted of the murder of his girlfriend and her three children in 1998.
- Edward Zakrzewski: executed July 31, 2025. US Air Force technical sergeant in Korea, convicted of the murder of his wife and two children in 1994.
- Kayle Bates: executed August 19, 2025. National Guardsman deployed during the 1980 Miami riots, convicted for the 1982 murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and attempted sexual battery of a woman in Bay County.
- Norman Grim Jr.: executed October 28, 2025. US Navy, convicted for the 1998 rape and murder of his neighbor.
The executions of these veterans are a demonstration of the US military’s brutality in its imperialist exploits around the world, the impact on those sent to do the fighting, and the callousness with which the government is willing to send them to their deaths after they have served their tours.
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On Friday, November 14, 2025, South Carolina executed Stephen Bryant, the third inmate in the state to die by firing squad in 2025. Bryant is the third man executed by this controversial method in South Carolina in 2025. Prior to this year, only Utah had used the firing squad in modern history, doing so in 1977, 1996 and 2010.
Bryant was convicted for the murder of three people during an eight-day killing spree in 2004. He received the death penalty for the murder of Willard “T.J.” Tietjen, who was shot nine times after allowing Bryant into his home. After the murder, Bryant used Tietjen’s blood to scrawl a taunting message on the wall: “Victem 4 in 2 weeks. Catch me if u can.”
Bryant’s attorneys argued he was deeply troubled in the months leading up to the crimes, having begged for help from a probation agent and his aunt because he was obsessed with thoughts of being sexually abused as a child by relatives. He attempted to cope using meth and smoking marijuana sprayed with bug killer.
Bryant was executed at the Broad River Correctional Institution in Columbia. He made no last words. He was strapped to a chair and a hood placed over his head. A red bull’s-eye target was placed over his heart. Three volunteer corrections officers fired at him with high-powered rifles from 15 feet way. The 44-year-old was declared dead at 6:05 p.m.
11. Jacobin calls for union leaders, Democrats to pressure Trump, Republicans
Without a trace of a class analysis, and employing the most banal tropes of protest politics, Jacobin seeks to channel the growing revolt of workers and youth against dictatorship, war, genocide and inequality back behind the Democratic Party.
12. United Kingdom: Zack Polanski’s Greens are no alternative to Your Party’s debacle
The Green Party under Zack Polanski has rapidly become Britain’s largest left-wing opposition to the Labour Party, outstripping Jeremy Corbyn’s Your Party at this stage.
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New enthusiasm for the Greens has been driven by Polanski’s self-described “eco-populism” tied to effective media campaigning. He has called for a wealth tax and abolishing landlords, acknowledged the Israeli campaign in Gaza as a genocide, questioned British membership of NATO, called out the “creep of fascism” represented by Reform and opposed Labour’s anti-migrant rhetoric.
There are strong echoes of Zohran Mamdani in New York City. Like Mamdani’s election as mayor, Polanski’s rise to Green Party leader, and in the polls, reflects a surge of left-wing sentiment looking for a home under conditions in which Keir Starmer’s Labour Party is an utterly discredited right-wing monstrosity.
That the Green Party has been able to play this role is down to the failings of Corbynism more than the virtues of Polanski and the Greens.
13. UK Diligenta workers set to strike against real terms pay cut
Around 1,000 administrative and call center workers employed by UK-based financial services outsourcing firm Diligenta will walk out on November 18, against a pay award imposed in June which is a real-terms wage cut. The 2–3 percent “increase,” graded by salary level, falls well below the Retail Price Index (RPI) inflation rate in the year to September of 4.5 percent.
The strike will involve Unite union members across five sites—Liverpool, Reading, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Stirling—working in call centers, back-office administration and customer complaints for major finance houses Lloyds, M&G, Aviva and Phoenix. These corporations outsource operations to Diligenta to cut costs and boost shareholder returns. The company’s efficiency drive has been built on suppressing wages and intensifying workloads for its 5,000 UK employees.
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Unite General Secretary Sharon Graham responded with her familiar rhetoric: “Diligenta is a profitable business making millions… yet disgracefully denying workers a fair pay deal.”
Unite’s leadership uses militant-sounding statements only to contain anger and steer struggles back into “negotiations” with management and appeals to the Labour Party—the political representatives of big business. The fight Diligenta workers are seeking to wage requires taking an independent path of mobilization which can win broad support in the working class against the enrichment of the corporate oligarchy they confront.
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Diligenta workers cannot win “decent pay” on Unite’s terms. The union apparatus treats each workplace fight as a bargaining chip in its own negotiations with the corporations and Labour authorities to pre-empt any broader struggle across sectors and industries in a frontal challenge against big business and austerity.
Workers must draw the necessary conclusion: Unite is not an instrument for struggle but an arm of corporate management and corporatist ally of the government.
14. Workers Struggles: Asia and Australia
Bangladesh:
Teachers from government primary schools strike over assaults by Dhaka police
Pharmaceutical workers demonstrate to demand reinstatement of co-workers
Former migrant workers protest in Dhaka over mistreatment while working in Malaysia
India:
Synergies Castings factory workers in Andhra Pradesh demand overdue wages
Tamil Nadu outsourced municipal workers in Sirkazhi end protest
Uttar Pradesh: Sanitation workers in Bhopal hold flash strike
Taiwan:
Australia:
Northern Territory public health sector workers prepare to strike
Pacific National rail workers in Queensland begin industrial action
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.

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