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El periódico «La Voz de los Trabajadores»: Edición de marzo-abril

La guerra de Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán es una escalada importante en el Medio Oriente que tiene implicaciones peligrosas para los trabajadores de todo el mundo. La brutalidad del asalto imperialista a nivel internacional va junto con el ataque a las libertades civiles por parte del régimen de Trump dentro de Estados Unidos. Esto incluye las operaciones continuas del ICE y la Patrulla Fronteriza, las amenazas a las elecciones de mitad de período de 2026, los retrocesos ambientales que afectan profundamente a la comunidad negra y la brutalidad policial sin control.
Nuestro editorial en este número nos advierte: «Existe un gran peligro de subestimar la determinación de la élite empresarial estadounidense de llevar adelante esta iniciativa. No podemos confiar en que las sentencias judiciales o las próximas elecciones nos salven. Debemos organizarnos ahora, no solo para realizar manifestaciones masivas y crear redes comunitarias contra la violencia del ICE, sino para encontrar el camino hacia la construcción de un nuevo partido de la clase trabajadora a través del cual podamos organizar nuestra defensa política en todos los planos y todos los días».
En este número también tenemos artículos sobre los archivos de Epstein y la clase dominante, la huelga de maestros de San Francisco y una reseña del nuevo álbum de U2.
La edición de marzo-abril de 2026 de nuestro periódico está disponible en formato impreso y en línea como PDF y contiene articulos en ingles y español. ¡Lee hoy mismo el último número de nuestro periódico con una descarga gratuita en PDF! Como siempre, agradecemos cualquier donación que ayude a sufragar los gastos de impresión.
Haz clic en la imagen para leer el periódico o envíanos un mensaje para recibir una copia impresa:
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Two Days That Shook the Country – ” Burn, Baby , Burn!”
Written by Steven Leigh, Seattle Revolutionary Socialists and RSN (Revolutionary Socialist Network)
Seattle May 30—Seattle was slow to respond to the death of George Floyd. While Minneapolis was burning ,and other cities were clashing with the police, Seattle was quiet. That changed on Friday May 29 and especially on Saturday May 30.
On May 29 hundreds of people gathered at the downtown police headquarters at night after marching from the International District. Through the course of the night , some windows were smashed and a bit of graffiti was painted on store walls. ACAB ( All Cops Are Bastards) was a favorite, though this is a vicious slur against the children of unmarried parents.
On Saturday, again around 500 gathered in front of the police headquarters at noon. The cops protected the building from behind metal barricades. Speeches galvanized the crowd though many were of the liberal variety. “ I love this country” said one speaker. After an hour, people left and many ended up at the 3 PM rally in the center of downtown at Westlake park.
The 3 PM downtown rally of several thousand was planned to be peaceful . The main organizer “ Not This Time” scheduled preachers to inspire the crowd. Not This Time grew out of the protest against the police murder of Che Taylor 4 years ago. It successfully organized a state wide initiative that forced the legislature to increase police training and make it easier to prosecute police who kill. The plan was to listen to speakers and then marched to the nearby Federal Building. The main organizer, Andre Taylor , urged the crowd to be peaceful so that it could be safe for families and children.
The rally went on for an hour and a half and sections of the crowd were clearly getting restless . On the edge of the rally up by 5th and Pine the police aggressively pushed people out of the intersection firing off a series of flash bombs and tear gas. Several times people ran away from the tear gas but then regrouped. The police violence agitated the crowd. At some point, someone was able to set fire to a police car . Over the course of the afternoon and evening several police vehicles were torched. 2 police rifles were stolen. Several store windows were smashed and some stores were looted.
Large numbers of protestors also blocked the south bound lanes of Interstate 5 which runs through downtown
Even before the rally marched to its intended end point, the city imposed a 12 hour curfew from 5 PM to 5 AM on both Saturday and Sunday. This is a longer curfew than in any other city. This gave the police the right to clear the streets. The city also got the state to send in 200 “unarmed” national guard to help the police. The mayor said:
I understand the immense rage, grief, and sense of betrayal felt by not only our community, but communities across our country this weekend. However, the escalated, destructive, and violent incidents that took place during today’s demonstrations cannot, and will not, be allowed to continue. They jeopardize the health and safety of all those involved, from the demonstrators, to our first responders, to civilians just passing by.
Predictably, the local press echoed the mayor and focused on the “violence” while giving only lip service to the issue which caused the protests. The pictures of shattered glass, and littered and tear gassed streets were more fascinating than discussions of police brutality ,systematic racism, and the actual brazen, cruel and vicious murder of a vibrant and loved .human being
Local TV spent hours showing damaged windows and burned out cars but scarce minutes interviewing protestors or broadcasting speakers’ words. . When they did interview protestors they focused on those who opposed the violence by other protestors. One woman interviewed was on the police-community liaison commission.
Lauren Tozzi explained how distorted this coverage was:
NOTHING is being said by the local reporters about the police behavior at the downtown precinct. Hundreds were gathered in front, saying George’s name, many with their hands up in the air. I then saw several officers wearing gas masks….at that point I said to myself…”that’s not a good sign”. I started walking away. I wasn’t but a block away, when BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!!!! People were running trying to get away from the gas. I ran into a family- whose young children were crying and screaming! People had their hands over their eyes…folks were trying to help by pouring water on their faces. It was pretty bad. There was NO PROVOCATION for the police at the precinct to do what they did. There was NO REASON why they had to set off stun guns and gas! THEY WENT OUT OF CONTROL! They created a very bad scene!!! I finally made it home and I have been contacting local news to express my outrage about the lack of reporting on what happened at least where I was. I’m bearing witness to a situation that was peaceful. And all I see on local reporting is about looting and destruction…..Well, I want to say that what I saw with mine own eyes, was police at the precinct WERE OUT OF CONTROL!!!!!! They had NO REASON to d what they did there today. It is unacceptable!
* THIS IS NOT WHAT DE-ESCALATION LOOKS LIKE!!
The protest in Seattle and around the country highlights several issues and raises tactical considerations:
1)The intensity of the protest movement around the U.S. flows from the current political situation. The BLM movement developed during Obama’s presidency in 2014. The horror of racist police murder was tempered by having a Black president, presumably anti-racist in office. Now the President is an incompetent buffoon who is also a vile racist with little talent for pretending compassion. Further George Floyd’s murder happened after a further concentration of wealth and in the middle of the Cornona Crisis which is killing Black people at a much higher rate than whites. Also , it happened during the biggest economic crisis since the 30’s which has again shown the rampant inequality of the capitalist system. As more gallop into poverty, the billionaires have gained BILLION since March! All of this increases the anger of those triggered by the racist murder of George Floyd.
This increased intensity resulted in faster action than virtually any other similar case. Recall that Eric Garner who was likewise strangled on video by NYC police in 2014 never received justice. His murderers are still at large. In this case, Floyd’s murderers were fired within a couple days. The chief executioner was indicted quickly. Obviously, this is not near enough—cops still get special treatment, but it is a reflection of changed circumstances. These changed circumstances will probably result in continued radicalization around these and other issues. Along with continuing right wing organizing, this shows continued polarization in the U.S.
2) The inability of the police to control the few thousand protestors today, shows the potential strength of our side . As the poet Shelly said “ We are many, they are few. The great are only great because we are on our knees. Rise!” Our side was disorganized.
This belies Trump toady Attorney General Barr’s statement:
“Unfortunately, with the rioting that is occurring in many of our cities around the country, the voices of peaceful protests are being hijacked by violent radical elements. In many places it appears the violence is planned, organized, and driven by far left extremist groups and anarchic groups using Antifa-like tactics”
Would that we were that organized! The socialist left is tiny. This is moreso true of the revolutionary socialist left. Anarchists are notoriously disorganized. The point is that with large numbers and more organization we could accomplish much more. If we were more organized , had clear goals and especially if we had the organized support of those who can cut off the flow of profit, we could make a much bigger impact. In the long run, if all these factors are added to the creation of a revolutionary socialist vanguard party, we can not just keep the police on the run and guessing, but actually dismantle the state apparatus. The cat and mouse skirmishes of today can lead to a time when the mouse becomes the cat. Though little was won directly today, it shows how much more can be won tomorrow.
3) This movement will have to resolutely confront the Liberal narrative that peaceful protest is fine but “ violent “ protest is an anathema. What this really means is that ineffective protest is fine but effective protest is unacceptable. The ruling class has the power and it doesn’t want the masses to challenge that power. It wants to preserve the illusion of free speech, elections and other aspects of “democracy”. These illusions help to cement the loyalty of the masses to the current order. We may not have a perfect society, but at least we are not China…Iran…Syria…Russia..( name your favorite repressive regime) so goes the Liberal line. As long as people accept this, they will be less likely to revolt.
This requires a delicate balance by the rulers. They must allow enough protest to preserve the illusion, but not enough to actually disrupt its profit and power. They claim to oppose violent protest. What they really oppose is effective disruptive protest. Remember that they treated the non-violent Civil Rights Movement with dogs, gas, beatings, fire hoses and sometimes murder. Remember the National Guard response to the anti-war movement at Kent State 50 years ago this month. From time to time , they try to label even non-violent protest as “terrorism” .When they attack protest that hurts their interest, we have to vehemently defend it. We have to say clearly, that the issue that caused the protest is more important than the tactics of the protestors. To those who deplore violence, we have to explain that the cause of violent protest is the violence inherent in capitalism. If you don’t like broken windows in stores destroy the capitalist system.
The hypocrisy of the ruling class line is overwhelming. The ruling class and its kept press deplore the looting of stores yet never even mention the looting of the working class that goes on every day. Exploitation is the core of capitalism, but is never even discussed in the mass media. They deplore the violence of demonstrators, but barely mention the daily violence of forcing workers to risk their lives to Covid 19; of unsafe working conditions that kill thousands yearly; the violence of poor or no housing, the violence of no health care ; the violence of U.S. wars , sanctions and drone strikes that kill thousands yearly or the racist and sexist violence that the system condones and promotes. As Kira Woodworth put it:
This is all I have to say to people who say “Its not okay to willfully destroy property.”
There is never a good reason to willfully kneel on someone’s neck until they cry for their mother and die. There is never a good reason to shoot a sleeping woman in her bed. There is never a good reason to willfully stalk and confront a teenage boy and then shoot him. There is never a good reason to willfully shoot a man in front of his partner and child on a routine traffic stop. There is never a good reason to strangle a man on a sidewalk who is saying “I can’t breathe “ for allegedly selling loose cigarettes. There is never a good reason to willfully kill a small child for playing soldier in the park. There is never a good reason to willfully shoot a young father on a subway platform for hanging out with his friends on New Years Eve.
These are just the ones that immediately come to mind.
You care more about personal property than human life. Did you support Colin Kaepernick taking a knee? Or did you say “shut up and play football?” THIS is what happens when peaceful protests are ignored. Don’t like it? Then fight racism instead of turning a blind eye to it. Try and be better. Target and Auto Zone and Old Navy will be just fine. George Floyd is dead forever and the people who loved him will live with that forever. You speak cruelty and I hate it.
As Rev. Martin Luther King Jr said “ Riots are the voice of the unheard”. As long as people feel unheard, as long as people have no effective power, there will be riots !
4) Though we need to defend riots against the hypocritical liberal attacks, we do need to seriously consider the most effective strategies and tactics going forward. We need to choose tactics that can involve the most people. Small numbers, no matter how militant cannot take down this vicious system. -
Commentary by Mumia: ‘I can’t breathe—Part II!’


By MUMIA ABU-JAMAL
The following commentary, “I Can’t Breathe, Part II” was recorded by political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal on May 30, courtesy of Prison Radio.
The furious struggle for justice for the late Eric Gardner took years, long hard years. But his family and friends before a bare pittance was granted in the belated decision to dismiss the cop who choked him to death. Uncharged, I might add. The name Eric Garner has become a catch word for the state of black America for decades, if not centuries, who can barely breathe free air.
The phone cam recording of the police killing of George Floyd in the streets of Minneapolis, Minnesota, by a beefy cop putting his knee on the neck of Floyd provides an eerie echo of Garner’s words from at least five years before. “I can’t breathe.” Floyd, his breath cut off, cries for the person who gave him life: his mama. Within minutes, Floyd is gone.
Eric Garner was approached by a police squad after a merchant complained that he was selling loosies, or single cigarettes. Floyd was approached by several cops after a merchant claimed he passed a forged $20 bill. Think about that. Two men, two fathers, choked to death because of merchant complaints about loose cigarettes and the fake $20 bill, allegedly. This is a statement about how in a capitalist society merchandise is more important than black life.
George Floyd joined the collective he never wanted to join and perhaps never expected to join. It is the roll call of the dead caused by the state and a system of repression that is all pervasive.
Does black life matter? Not yet.
Listen to Mumia’s Commentary on Prison Radio here:
https://www.prisonradio.org/media/audio/mumia/i-cant-breathe-pt-2-304-mumia-abu-jamal-0
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George Floyd murder: Nationwide protests express outrage


Protesters in Los Angeles (Gary Coronado / LA Times) By JOHN LESLIE and MICHAEL SCHREIBER
Saturday, May 30, marked the fifth night of protests in U.S. cities sparked by the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis cops. Demonstrations have taken place in over U.S. 140 cities and are steadily spreading to every region of the country—and even internationally, with a demonstration of thousands in London’s Trafalgar Square and 1500 in Berlin. The scale and character of the protests echoes the rebellions of the 1960s—beginning with the Black community uprising in the Watts section of Los Angeles in 1965 and culminating in events following the murder of Martin Luther King in 1968.

George Floyd. Although the murder of George Floyd precipitated the protests, the roots of the demonstrators’ anger goes much deeper. It reflects the effects of many years of racism and brutality by police, acting in the service of the capitalist ruling class, against the Black community. “We’re sick of it. The cops are out of control,” protester Olga Hall told the Associated Press in Washington, D.C. “They’re wild. There’s just been too many dead boys.”
In many cities, police have reacted with a heavy hand—attacking non-violent demonstrators, spraying them with tear gas and mace, and even shooting them with “non-lethal” rubber bullets. About 1700 people have been arrested nationwide, including 500 in Los Angeles, as fires burned across the city. The National Guard has been activated in 13 states so far, and U.S. Army Military Police have been deployed to Minneapolis. Some cities have invoked nighttime curfews on residents. In spite of the curfew, however, protests continued in Minneapolis.
Members of the press have been targeted. One reporter lost an eye after a cop shot her in the face with a rubber bullet. A CNN crew was arrested early Friday morning while broadcasting live near the site of the burning police station. A Louisville, Ky., news reporter was shot with pepper balls on Friday night by a cop. In Phoenix, the police department issued guidelines stating that reporters would be subject to arrest if they remained in an area after police issued a dispersal order, although the chief of police later apologized.
In several locations, police have attacked medical workers who were administering aid to demonstrators. A medic in Minneapolis posted the following account in an email: “While I was there I witnessed some very horrific things. It was nothing short of a war zone. One man was hit in the head with a flash grenade that blew out his eardrum and knocked him unconscious. Later that day I grouped up with a team of volunteer first aid providers and medics to better provide and care for anyone injured during the protest. One of the volunteers, a licensed medical professional, told me that she was maced while providing care in the field to a downed civilian, despite announcing that she is a medic and sitting on a curb, wearing a nurse uniform and nonviolent in every way … yet she was still attacked by police. …
“We had to set up a medical area with a sign stating that anyone could receive medical care or first aid at that location in the well lit alleyway and were completely separate from the protests happening in the street. We were in the middle of treating a woman when the police attacked us. They fired rubber bullets at us, hitting one of the volunteers twice, and maced us despite the shouts that we were medical volunteers and providing first aid. They chased us down the alleyway and into a parking garage where we hid behind a car for 20 minutes as they rode up and down the road in front of where we were located. They found us though and eventually drove us out of there too which is when we left. They had taken our medical equipment and gear and driven us away from where we were needed most. …
“The police are out of control! This is why the protests are happening! Attacking medics is a crime. We were not violent. We were not in their faces. We were not harassing them or taunting them in any way and weren’t doing anything wrong but they still opened fire on us and treated us like less than human.”
In some cities, cars and buildings have been trashed and set on fire, and looting is taking place. While we don’t call for or endorse property destruction, we cannot condemn the actions of an oppressed people when they fight their oppressor. There is evidence that some of the property destruction in Minneapolis may have been done by police or far-right provocateurs. Far-right discussion boards are filled with posts urging racists to break windows and burn buildings. At least some of the arrested in Minneapolis are linked to white nationalist groups. In Detroit, a protester was killed in a drive-by shooting.
Trump and Attorney General William Barr have helped to egg on the police violence while also energizing their far-right base. Barr tried to revive the old “outside agitator” theme by blaming “anarchistic and far left extremists using Antifa-like tactics, many of whom travel from out of state to promote the violence.”

Trump also blamed “ANTIFA-led anarchists” for disruptions, and tweeted on May 31 that he would label Antifa a terrorist organization. Trump initiated a series of rabid statements on the issue on early Friday, when he tweeted that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.” The phrase was originally uttered by the Jim Crow-era Miami police chief, Walter Headley, in 1967.
As protests got underway near the locked-down White House, Trump, who had hunkered down in an underground bunker, goaded the demonstrators by stating that if anyone had tried to breach the fence, “they would have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons I have ever seen.” Trump’s ugly statement brought back the horror of the dogs that slave catchers and prison guards used to employ to hunt escaped Black people in the South.
Prosecute the cops for murder!
Protesters in some cities chanted: “We want all four of them!” referring to the fact that only one of the cops who held George Floyd down as he was dying has been charged with a crime. Derek Chauvin, who knelt on Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes, has been charged with “third-degree murder,” which typically yields a sentence of 12 ½ years imprisonment if convicted in Minnesota. Many consider the charge to be completely unjust and insufficient for a person who wantonly squeezed the life out of Floyd while disregarding pleas by the victim and numerous bystanders to desist.
The killing of George Floyd, however, was hardly the result of malfeasance by one or a handful of “bad cops.” Data shows that the Minneapolis police department used neck restraints 237 times on people they had apprehended since the beginning of 2015, causing the victims to fall unconscious 44 times. Any one of those victims, especially if they had had contributing health problems, might have died.
Once protests began, the Minneapolis city government, state governor, and police department have steadily escalated the situation, although it is clear that they grasped the potential for the situation to spin out of their control. The Thursday night burning of the 3rd district precinct house and police evacuation of the area reflected the fact that police were running out of tear gas and rubber bullets and were outnumbered by protesters.
It’s encouraging that the protests are multi-racial in character. Latinx people, Black people, and young whites have all mobilized. We have seen some transit workers in Minneapolis refusing to carry arrestees. TWU Local 100 in New York City has also issued a statement calling for their members to refuse to carry arrested persons. Labor statements are very good but not enough; the union members need to be put in motion.
In order to defuse the protests, the liberal wing of the bourgeoisie has tried to shift the narrative. Atlanta’s mayor made a statement invoking Martin Luther King.* CNN wheeled out Andrew Young and other older Black leaders and politicians to invoke King and nonviolence. Many of the cities have Democratic mayors and councils. Yet Obama, in his eight years in office, did nothing to reverse mass incarceration or address racist policing polices like “stop and frisk,” except for making a few sanctimonious statements.
The sources of Black rage
Why is there so much rage? We have experienced decades of the erosion of the gains of the civil rights movement in voting rights and education, mass incarceration, growing income and wealth inequality, lack of access to health care, and the continued lack of opportunity for Black and Brown people.
In fact, police violence against Black and Brown people has continued unabated during the COVID-19 crisis, although the pandemic has impacted Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities disproportionately. Fatality rates for Black and Latinx people are about double the rate for white people. This reflects the fact that generations of institutionalized racism have resulted in higher rates of unemployment and poverty, reduced access to health care, increased exposure to sources of pollution, etc.
The consciousness of Black people, in particular, is formed by their experience of the United States as a racist social formation—from chattel slavery to Jim Crow to mass incarceration. It is also important to note that both the Black and Brown populations are highly proletarianized, and subject to special exploitation as low-wage workers—the last hired and the first fired.
We support the right of oppressed nationalities to self-determination. This extends to the idea that the struggles of oppressed nationalities have their own independent dynamic that, as Black socialist CLR James said, “intervenes with terrific force upon the general social and political life of the nation.”
George Breitman, writing in the 1960s in “How a Minority Can Change Society,” said: “what Trotsky could not teach us completely we have now been able to learn from the actual development of the Negro struggle itself right before our own eyes these last two or three years. What we were not advanced enough in the 1930s to accept as theory, we are now able to apprehend as concrete current event. Because the fact is that the Negroes are already a vanguard. They are already out in front of most white workers. They are more radicalized than the white workers. They are more ready to fight and sacrifice and die in order to change this system.”
Accordingly, we are for Black control of the Black community, and point out the need for grassroots united-front political action committees within that community. Get the cops out of the Black community and replace them with elected community defense units!
This week marks a dramatic shift in the status quo. The current uprising reflects a real political, social, and economic crisis. We can expect more such explosions in the coming period. As people chanted at the large Philadelphia demonstration on May 30: “Tear the system down!” We agree: Tear it down, and work to build a new system, based on the striving to fulfill human needs, not profits.
* The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. would have understood the causes of the destruction in many cities that has followed in the wake of protests against the murder of George Floyd. In response to similar developments in 1967, he said that America “has failed to hear that the plight of the Negro poor has worsened over the past few years. It has failed to hear that the promises of freedom and justice have not been met. And it has failed to hear that large segments of white society are more concerned about the tranquility and the status quo than about justice, equality, and humanity. And so in a real sense our nation’s summers of riots are caused by our nation’s winters of delay. And as long as America postpones justice, we stand in the position of having these recurrences of violence and riots over and over again.”
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Duluth Steelworkers local fights layoffs at Essentia Health


By ADAM RITSCHER
Essentia Health is far and away the largest employer in Duluth, Minn. Its sprawling main campus is a neighborhood unto itself, and its clinics and other facilities spread out across region into almost every community of more than a few thousand people. Its very well-paid CEO and other top executives have overseen year after year of dramatic expansion, and are currently in the process of building a new state of the art $800,000,000 hospital. Business has certainly been good for Essentia Health.
But a big part of Essentia’s growth has come at the expense of its workers. For years they have been made to take on more and more work, while vacancies are left unfilled. This is sadly a common trend throughout health care, and it is nothing short of a slow-motion speedup. Tragically, but not surprisingly, the coming of the COVID-19 pandemic has only thrown more fuel on an already burning fire. Since the pandemic began, hundreds of Essentia workers were furloughed to save costs, while those who remained behind worked even more short staffed, with inadequate PPE (personal protective equipment), and without receiving any kind of hazard pay.
Now, months into the pandemic, despite receiving almost $80,000,000 from the government, the state of Minnesota is allowing health-care providers to start scheduling elective procedures again. Yet Essentia announced last week that they plan on permanently eliminating a shocking 900 jobs, citing losses due to the pandemic.
In their PR statements, they talk about how even the executives at the top are making sacrifices, but the reality is that Essentia Health in no way needs to eliminate 900 jobs to keep the lights on. The fact that they have money to continue building their new giant hospital in Duluth, and to buy a new one in Moose Lake, speaks volumes.
Workers have responded to Essentia’s announcement with outrage. The largest union at Essentia, United Steelworkers Local 9460, has announced a fightback campaign. Instead of just relying on negotiations, the union is planning on taking to the streets, and reaching out to the community. On June 1, the union will be mounting a mass car caravan to converge on Essentia’s main campus, while workers hold a simultaneous informational picket. Other actions are in the works and will take place throughout northern Wisconsin and Minnesota. Billboards, full-page newspaper ads, yard signs, and an online campaign are also planned as part of the fight back campaign.
This showdown between the region’s largest employer and the region’s largest union will no doubt effect workers throughout the region, not just in health care. Now more than ever, it’s crucial for the labor movement to fight back against any and every attempt by employers to take advantage of this pandemic to attack workers.
Stay tuned for more coverage of this important struggle. NO LAYOFFS AT ESSENTIA! SUPPORT HEALTH-CARE WORKERS!
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New Orleans sanitation workers strike for safe work conditions and hazard pay

By MIKE HOWELLSNew Orleans sanitation workers, who went on strike beginning on May 5, were all fired by the city and replaced by prison labor, in an act that perpetuates the old “Convict Leasing” system of the Jim Crow South. Prisoners are paid merely $1.33 an hour—13% of the sanitation workers’ $10.25 wage.
An earlier story, by Mike Howells of the General Assembly of New Orleans and the Revolutionary Socialist Network, appears below.
“All our lives are in danger. If we get sick our families get sick. And if our families get pretty soon everyone gets sick.” — Dartajean Daniels, City Waste Union of New Orleans.
On Monday, May 18, striking New Orleans sanitation workers and their community supporters, about 100 in total, gathered on the steps of New Orleans City Hall to rally in support of the demands being put forward by the City Waste Union. The sanitation workers initiated the strike against Metro Service Group, their de facto employer, at a time when the first local wave of the COVID-19 was at its height.
All the striking sanitation workers are hoppers. Hoppers do the back-breaking work of picking up curbside trash and disposing it into their assigned waste disposal truck. The hoppers are demanding that Metro provide every sanitation worker with PPE worthy of the name, $150 weekly hazard pay, a raise in hourly pay from $10.25 to $15, and formal recognition of the City Waste Union.
For the hoppers the COVID-19 epidemic has brought to a head the longstanding problem of unsafe working conditions. Addressing the rally, hopper D. Daniels noted, “I have worked for Metro for four years and they have never given me PPE.” Another striking hopper, Lemont, observed, “We are not getting PPE or safe working conditions. Lemont added, “We have to deal with hydraulic leaks. They are dangerous.” Jerik Simon, another striking hopper and a father of seven children, stressed that waste disposal work brings hoppers into contact with hazardous materials on a daily basis.
That New Orleans sanitation workers toil for $10.25 an hour without personal protective equipment or benefits speaks volumes about where Metro and City Hall really stand concerning the well being of New Orleans sanitation workers and their families. For public consumption the Metro Service Group claims it provides PPE for all workers who need it. The testimony of the striking sanitation workers exposes this self-serving Metro Group propaganda for what is, a lie! That the Mayor’s Office has done virtually nothing to correct this life-threatening situation at a time when it requires all who enter City Hall to be masked belies the Cantrell administration’s callous indifference to the lives of sanitation workers and their families.
The indifference of City Hall to the physical welfare of New Orleans sanitation workers is not simply a matter of grotesque class bias and the malignant influence of campaign contributions. The city of New Orleans contracts out curbside trash pickup service to the Metro and Richard’s Disposal. City Hall’s $10.7 million contract with the Metro make the city the, by far, largest customer of the waste management corporation. This reality translates into the city being the customer that benefits more than any other customer from Metro’s cheap labor-no benefits regime. Mayor Cantrell and city council, always eager to balance the city budget on the backs of workers, know this.
As the rally progressed it was announced that Jason Williams, a member of New Orleans city council, was attempting to arrange a sit-down meeting so a dialogue between between the hoppers and Metro could be begin. The proposed meeting ended up being scheduled for May 23. The hoppers showed up but Metro did not.
Winning the demands of the hoppers strike necessitates that the City Waste Union and their supporters turn up the heat on the bosses of City Hall, Mayor Cantrell and the New Orleans city council. Convincing City Hall to cutoff payments to Metro till the waste management meets the demands of the City Waste Union would result in an enormous shift in the balance of power in favor of the hoppers. To accomplish this, the hoppers and their supporters must put the political feet of the mayor and the members of city council to the fire of determined mass resistance from below. This can be done. But to do this, hoppers must shed any illusions about City Hall or the Orleans Parish Democratic Party Machine being in their corner.
Photo: GoFundMe / Democracy Now!
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Worker’s Voice Statement on the Epidemic of Police Violence and Murder of George Floyd
Minneapolis is burning. People are enraged, frustrated, and demonstrating a renewed sense of militancy after the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25th. Protests have been brutally repressed across the country. City and state governments are using all of their tools of violence and intimidation to quell this uprising, amidst reports of police provocateurs destroying property to discredit protestors and encourage military escalation.
Our unions and other workers’ and popular organizations need to stand in solidarity and take up the call for justice for George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Armery and all other victims of police murder. We should follow the example of the Amalgamated Transit Union who issued a statement repudiating the murders and encouraging their members to refuse participating in the police repression against the protests,
“our members have the right…to refuse the dangerous duty of transporting police to protests and arrested demonstrators away from these communities where many of these drivers live. This is a misuse of public transit.”
We need to demand an end to the epidemic of police violence, to oppose deployment of the national guard and other methods of state violence that may be employed to repress the demonstrations. In the meantime, we need to support, participate in, and encourage members of our unions and working class organizations to join these demonstrations and develop Planning Committees for Mutual Aid, Solidarity, and Struggle that can organize, independently from the bourgeois politicians and parties (Democrats and Republicans), the deepest solidarity and support for these demonstrations.
The rebellion in Minneapolis, followed by protests and demonstrations in Denver, NYC, LA, Oakland and other parts of the country, erupted following the police murder of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who was killed by Minneapolis police. This recent killing was followed by the police murder of Emergency Medical Technician Breonna Taylor in her own home in Louisville, Kentucky in March, and the killing of 25 year old Ahmaud Arbery who was shot to death while out on a jog by a former police detective and his son in Georgia in February. These episodes of police violence reveal the deep-rooted racism inherent to capitalism. While police officers tortured George Floyd to death, kneeling on his neck for 9 minutes, Floyd was heard repeatedly saying, “I can’t breath,” a common slogan of the Black Lives Matter movement originating from Eric Garner’s last words after being choked to death in 2014 by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo. Mass demonstrations are occurring across the country, with protestors taking to the streets and taking over highways to demand justice for Floyd. Garner’s murder had set in motion the Black Lives Matter movement, and the recent police killing of Floyd sparked protests, a rebellion in Minneapolis leaving a burned out police station, and the beginnings of a new movement against police violence in the US.
The COVID-19 crisis has already resulted in people of color disproportionately dying from the virus, as has been reported in places like Chicago and Louisiana. Police have also been detaining and harassing people of color for violating stay at home orders at higher rates than white people, seen in places like NYC under Mayor De Blasio . These protests represent the first time people are taking to the streets in mass numbers during the crisis and the pandemic may be used as an excuse for escalating repression against activists.
The hypocrisy of any sense of ‘justice’ or ‘equality’ of the US judicial system, predicated on white supremacist violence, capitalist laws, and state violence and repression, has been blatantly revealed when comparing the police response between these protests and the largely white protests in Michigan and elsewhere demanding the ‘re-opening of the economy’ which had been organized and funded by a shadowy right-wing non-profit with links to billionaires like Betsy DeVos’ and others like Paul Weyrich, co-founder of Heritage Foundation and ALEC. The police ensured the protection of these protestors, who were armed and entered the Michigan state house with large assault rifles, and had been encouraged by Trump as he told Governor Whitmer to negotiate with the protestors. On the other hand, the police have violently repressed protestors demanding justice for Floyd in Minnesota and across the country shooting rubber bullets at protestors, throwing flashbang grenades and tear gas and employing other militarized methods of violence and intimidation which Trump has openly supported, tweeting “…when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” along with threats to send in the National Guard. Police in Minneapolis have even attacked and arrested journalists who were covering the protests, like Black CNN reporter Omar Jimenez.
More protests are soon to emerge across the country as the movement builds – but this will certainly be met with escalated levels of state violence and repression. We had already seen the Mayor of Minneapolis Jacob Frey and the Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, both Democrats, call on the National Guard to quell the rebellion.
Worker’s Voice / La Voz de los Trabajadores reaffirm our indignation and repudiation of this latest police murder, and offer solidarity to their families and unconditional support for the struggles and uprisings in the streets of Minnesota and other cities across the US. Until they stop killing, exploiting and oppressing us, we will not stop fighting racism and all its forms of violence against our class. As C.L.R. James wrote in 1948, the black struggle
“has a vitality and validity of its own…it has deep historic roots in the past of America and in present struggles; it has an organic political perspective…[and] is able to intervene with terrific force upon the general social and political life of the nation…It is able to exercise a powerful influence upon the revolutionary proletariat…it has got a great contribution to make to the development of the proletariat in the United States, and that it is in itself a constituent part of the struggle for socialism.”
Capitalism and racism kill! Death to capitalism and racism!
Jail Killer Cops! Justice for George Floyd. Justice for Amaud Arbery. Justice for Breonna Taylor.
Cut Police Budgets and Use Resources to Meet the Needs of the People – Housing, Unemployment Benefits, Education, Healthcare, Public Transit
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Hong Kong mass movement challenges China’s National Security Law


Photo of Hong Kong protesters by Lam Chi Leung. ERNIE GOTTA interviews LAM CHI LEUNG
Mass protests are erupting in the streets of Hong Kong, as they did in the 2019-2020 demonstrations that saw intense fighting between the government and the mass movement. The COVID-19 crisis has had an impact on the social movements’ ability to mobilize, in a similar manner as to what happened in the United States and other countries. As the virus subsides in Hong Kong and the political situation intensifies, people are again mobilizing in the streets.
The fight for residents of Hong Kong is centered around the repressive “National Security Law” imposed by China, which will have a deeply negative impact on the working class. In response to China’s passing the National Security Law, President Trump, raising xenophobic fears of spying, has threatened to revoke the visas of thousands of Chinese students. Trump’s power play is not meant to assist the mass movement in Hong Kong. Trump and U.S. imperialism aim to scapegoat domestic issues on a world rival as it did by labeling COVID-19 the “China Virus.” Workers in the U.S., Hong Kong, and China have nothing to gain from this inter-imperialist conflict. Instead, we should extend our solidarity across borders to build an international working-class movement that confronts the capitalist class for power across the globe.
Socialist Resurgence interviewed Lam Chi Leung about the dynamics of the recent demonstrations. Lam is an independent socialist based in Hong Kong and editor of the Chinese-language edition of the Marxists Internet Archive.
Ernie Gotta: What is the meaning of the National Security Law for working people in Hong Kong, and why are people taking to the streets?
Lam Chi Leung: Today (May 28), the National People’s Congress in Beijing approved its “Resolution on Establishing a National Security Law in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.” There will be two or three months from the passage of the resolution to the enactment of any legislation, but the basic intent of the resolution is already obvious enough. According to the terms of the resolution:
- It will be forbidden for Hong Kong residents to engage in separatism or subversion of the state (including the Hong Kong SAR government), or to collaborate with foreign forces to interfere in Hong Kong’s affairs or organize terrorist activities. This will draw on longstanding judicial practice in mainland China, and on the draft text of the “anti-subversion” legislation under Article 23 of the Hong Kong Basic Law that they tried to pass in 2003 (but which was set aside because of mass demonstrations). As such, the scope of “subversion” will be extremely broad. Buying anti-government publications, for example, or openly calling for an end to the CCP’s single-party rule, will likely be considered breaches of the law.
- China’s Ministry of State Security will be able to directly establish its official organs in Hong Kong. Previously, when they wished to seize someone in Hong Kong, they had to do it surreptitiously. Now they will be able to simply detain and interrogate them.
- Hong Kong’s local Security Bureau and the Ministry of State Security’s Hong Kong organs will be able to arrest anyone at any time on the grounds that they oppose the mainland regime. Hong Kong will have to enact laws concerning national security that are similar to those in Mainland China. In terms of putting these laws into practice, not everything will be accomplished at once, but their objective will be to gradually force their implementation.
- Hong Kong will be required to institute political and ideological education akin to that of Mainland China.
In 2003 some 700,000 Hong Kong residents (out of a total population of 7.5 million) took to the streets and successfully resisted Article 23 of the Basic Law. Beginning in June last year, Hong Kongers demonstrated on many occasions in opposition to the Hong Kong government’s revised extradition legislation (the revision would have enabled Hong Kong residents to be extradited to Mainland China), with rallies of up to 2 million people. Although Carrie Lam withdrew the extradition bill, the city’s residents did not end their struggle there. They demanded the establishment of an independent commission into police violence, and the right to directly elect the Legislative Council and Chief Executive. In the District Council elections held in November last year, the opposition won a big victory.
There’s reason to believe that the Beijing regime worries that the opposition will triumph again in the Legislative Council elections scheduled for September, or that the Hong Kong struggle may provide an example for people elsewhere in southern China to follow, and has therefore decided to bypass the Hong Kong SAR government and legislate directly from the center. Their aim is to stifle the resistance of the Hong Kong masses, particularly of the city’s youth.
EG: Who is leading these demonstrations and are these protests related to mobilizations we saw last year?
LCL: The resistance is still lacking in organization for the most part, and relies on spontaneous calls that are issued online. Hong Kong residents have been demonstrating continuously ever since last Friday (May 22), when Beijing announced the resolution. Because of the ongoing pandemic, the government has forbidden public gatherings, and so, separate acts of resistance are taking place in multiple locations. The police have been more heavy-handed than they were last year in dealing with demonstrators, even arresting high school students. The scenes of street fighting are very similar to last year’s mass mobilizations.
It’s noteworthy that on this occasion protesters have taken up the slogan “Hong Kong independence is the only solution,” and have not been particularly friendly to mainland visitors or recent migrants from the mainland to Hong Kong (e.g. yelling at them to go back to the mainland). This is a worrying xenophobic trend, which seems to be gradually gaining ground within the opposition movement, particularly among the militant youth. Naturally, it’s not the case that all protesters endorse this trend.
EG: What way forward do you see for the working class in Hong Kong? What are your thoughts on strategies and tactics?
LCL: Since Hong Kong returned to China, the working-class struggle has made some steps forward, including the 2000 public sector strike against privatisation, the 2007 construction workers’ strike, and the 2013 dockworkers’ strike. But generally speaking, the level of activity and class consciousness among workers here can’t be described as high.
Last year’s campaign against the extradition bill for the first time put the question of the political strike on the agenda of the mass movement (the last such political strike was in 1967), and one such strike was actually carried out on Aug. 5, with some 300,000 cabin crew, airport staff, social workers, and teachers participating in the action. Although it was only a symbolic, one-day strike, it was nevertheless a breakthrough.
Building on the momentum of the anti-extradition movement, at the end of last year a series of new unions were set up. These include the “Hospital Authority Employees Alliance,” which was established by frontline public-health workers. They recruited 20,000 members, and on Feb. 3-7 took five days of strike action, calling on the Hospital Authority to provide adequate personal protective gear to doctors, nurses, and staff.
In my opinion, whether the goal is to resist the national security law, to defend political freedoms, or to campaign for democracy, there is a need to mobilise the mass of ordinary Hong Kong residents to participate in the struggle. Working-class self-organisation and widespread strike action should play a central role here, because these have the greatest potential to force the authorities to back down.
EG: How has COVID-19 impacted the mass movement?
LCL: COVID-19 was at its most serious in Hong Kong from February to April, and since May the situation has gradually been improving. However, despite the fact that the pandemic has been easing, the Hong Kong government has not lifted its directives restricting public gatherings, and prohibited an International Workers’ Day march on May 1.
I anticipate that the government will continue to use these directives to prohibit mass rallies on the upcoming “sensitive dates” of June 4 (commemorating the Tiananmen Square protests), June 9 (the one-year anniversary of the movement against the extradition bill), and July 1 (the 23rd anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to China).
Still, by the time the pandemic subsides, around August-September, it will be the eve of the formal passage of the “Hong Kong National Security Law,” and Hong Kong will definitely see mass rallies. The number of people joining the marches may be even greater than last year.
EG: Do you have any final thoughts you’d like to share?
LCL: The security of the state is not the same as the security of the people. Unless the state reflects the “community of freely associated individuals,” people have no obligation to support state security.
The working masses of Hong Kong need to organise themselves, and unite with all forms of working-class struggle and campaigns in defence of people’s rights in mainland China. Only in this way can political freedoms eventually be won throughout China, and Hong Kong’s democracy autonomy be secured. To mobilise wider layers of workers to defend these freedoms, it’s necessary to combine demands for political rights with the working class’s demands for social and economic equality: an anti-capitalist program is needed. We should learn the lessons from last year’s struggle against the extradition bill: back then, the movement did not raise demands for social and economic reform, and found it difficult to draw more workers to participate in it.
In contrast to mainland China, Hong Kong residents have enjoyed basic freedoms for a long time. There exist all kinds of community organisations, media, and political parties, and most people do not support the Chinese authorities. This situation won’t fundamentally change in a short space of time just because of the “Hong Kong National Security Law.” Likewise, the direction of public opinion among city residents won’t be reversed simply because one or two movements experience defeats. These are factors that will sustain the current campaign against the National Security Law. Right now, a lot depends on the resolve and ingenuity of the mass struggle.
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Minneapolis labor unions call for justice for George Floyd


Protesters climb over the fence surrounding the 3rd precinct police station in Minneapolis on May 28. (David Joles / AP) By ERNIE GOTTA
The streets of Minneapolis are on fire. A rebellion is underway demanding justice for George Floyd. On Thursday, May 29, protesters marched to the 3rd police precinct to raise their demands. The protesters forced an evacuation of the building and the building was set on fire.
Governor Tim Walz is set to send in the National Guard—whose presence will only create a more dangerous situation. Protesters are demanding the arrest and prosecution of the police officers. Why is the governor denying their demands, while instead, dozens of cops and National Guard troops are sent to protect the home of the officer who committed the murder?
(See newly released footage below, which shows three police officers hold George Floyd down as he moans that he cannot breathe.)
The masses in the streets are hungry for justice, but instead all they are getting is rubber bullets and tear gas. As protests spread nationwide, members of oppressed communities and the working class in general are often setting aside considerations for their own personal health, risking exposure to COVID-19, in order to demand justice for George Floyd.
Demands and actions for other victims of police brutality, like Breonna Taylor, have hit the streets. The heroic efforts of frontline workers during the COVID crisis is now taking a political turn as the working class spills over into the arena of political struggle.
Minneapolis transit workers speak out
Virtually all transit operations were suspended in Minneapolis, as the drivers in ATU Local 1005 expressed their anger and frustration. Earlier, some drivers said that they would refuse to operate their buses to convey detained protesters to jail, as the police department had stated it would ask them to do. On Facebook, the union in a statement said, “Police brutality is unacceptable! This system has failed all of us in the working class from the Coronavirus to the economic crisis we are facing. But this system has failed People of Color and Black Americans and youth more than anyone else.
“More than ever we need a new Civil Rights Movement. A Civil Rights Movement that is joined with the labor movement and independent of the corporate establishment’s political parties, so all workers from every religion, race, and sexual identity can struggle together for a better future for people of color and for our collective liberation as working people—for economic justice, racial justice, and the end to all oppression and hate in all its forms…
“We say ‘NOT ONE MORE’ execution of a black life by the hands of police. NOT ONE MORE. JUSTICE FOR GEORGE FLOYD!”
Labor unions call for justice
Unite Here Local 17 in Minneapolis was the first to have a strong statement demanding justice. Local 17 wrote, “We stand in solidarity with George Floyd’s family. We demand justice for George Floyd. We demand a stop to the unnecessary violence at the hands of those who have sworn to ‘serve and protect’ us. … Our union stands on the side of justice. Our union stands for #blacklivesmatter.”
Shortly afterward, Unite Here put out a statement nationwide saying, “For months we have grappled with ‘the new normal’ of living in the midst of COVID-19. We’ve struggled with job loss, with wearing masks, with the need to socially distance. What we need to grapple with, and change, is the historic normal. The commodification and the brutalization of Black people. From Emmett to Trayvon to Sandra to Tamir to Eric to Philando to Botham to Breonna to George Floyd and too many others—it has become ‘normal’ to see our Black Brothers and Sisters being killed, and we cannot and will not stand idly by.
“Our heartfelt condolences go out to the family and friends of Mr. Floyd. Black Lives Matter, George Floyd’s life matters. Justice must be served, and our country must change, because this “normal” should not be normal.”
National Nurses United writes, “Even in the midst of a pandemic, societal racism continues to be a national plague, says NNU. That is seen in harassment and threats of Asian-Americans targeted by those blaming them for the virus, racist signs carried by some of those protesting sheltering policies, as well as disproportionate COVID-19 deaths of African Americans, Latinos and Native Americans…”
At the NNU Convention in 2018, the statement points out, “NNU members cited ‘the pervasive problems of racial, economic, and social injustice that have so stained our nation and undermined the promise of democracy’ and re-emphasized that ‘as nurses, we are dedicated to prevent all forms of illness, protect health, and alleviate human suffering.’”
Connecticut Workers Crisis Response, a rank and file lead labor group writes, “The murder of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police and Breonna Taylor murdered by police in Louisville, Ky., is outrageous. CT Workers Crisis Response (CWCR) stands in solidarity with the movement to demand justice for Floyd, Taylor, and all victims of police brutality. The racism inherent in the so-called justice system has left numerous families grieving untimely and needless deaths. In Connecticut, our home state has denied justice in the case of the police murdering Jayson Negron, Zoe Dowdell, Anthony Vega-Cruz, Jose Soto, Mubarak, and others.”
The United Steelworkers Union writes, “Our union, the United Steelworkers, is great because of our solidarity, our respect for each other, and our unyielding commitment to justice, fairness and equality. The labor movement gains its strength from our common belief that all people are inherently valuable and have an undeniable right to a fair, just and dignified life, regardless of race, religion, gender or sexual orientation.
“Many of us, as a result, were not only appalled but distraught to witness the killing of a Black man in Minnesota, George Floyd, at the hands of Minnesota police officers while lying on the ground handcuffed. One of the officers kneeled on Mr. Floyd’s neck as he begged for his life with those now familiar words, ‘I can’t breathe.’”
The protest phrase “No Justice, no peace!” is being tested in Minneapolis right now. Governor Walz, instead of granting justice, has decided to shield police officers. This has stirred up memories of the past when Joe Biden’s now vice presidential hopeful Amy Klobuchar, as Hennepin County attorney in 2007, refused to prosecute the same officer who murdered Floyd.
As the National Guard readies for deployment, labor unions should bring their workers out on strike and help lead the mobilizations on the street. Call for the National Guard to stand down and refuse to suppress the demonstrations! Demand that the National Guard show their solidarity by refusing to deny justice to the masses of oppressed working people and refusing to be a tool of repression like Amy Klobuchar and her buddies across the political spectrum.
Justice for George Floyd! Solidarity with the uprising in Minneapolis! End police brutality everywhere! Jail killer cops! Abolish the police!
https://www.instagram.com/p/CAqt_gHgAxk/?utm_source=ig_embed
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George Floyd, Present! The Fight Against Racism in the USA and in the World!




