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ckaihatsu
2nd May 2017, 14:48
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/05/02/mday-m02.html


International May Day 2017: Mass marches and police repression

By Patrick Martin

2 May 2017

May Day, the day of the international working class, saw mass marches and protests on every continent, as well as scattered strikes, as workers sought to demonstrate their opposition to the policies of right-wing governments and their solidarity with their class brothers and sisters around the world.

In country after country, workers raised the same issues—low wages, the growth of “contingent” labor, the slashing of benefits and pensions—underscoring the common struggles confronting the working class internationally. Governments around the world are imposing ever more vicious austerity measures in response to the global crisis of the capitalist system, while diverting greater and greater resources into military spending and war preparations.

The day’s events demonstrated that the objective conditions produced by the development of global production have created the basis for the unification of the working class as an international class. But workers are held in enforced disunity by the nationally-based trade unions and “labor” parties that serve as the direct instruments of big business in every country.

In several countries, protests on the traditional holiday of the world working class were met with violent provocations on the part of the authorities. In Turkey, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators in Istanbul, the country’s largest city, and arrested at least 200 people. Most were arrested during the protests, but some were detained in raids later that night. Political tensions have been rising in the wake of the April 16 referendum, narrowly won by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which gives Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan virtually dictatorial powers.

In Germany, some 10,000 people assembled for a May Day street festival in the Kreuzberg district of Berlin. They were met by what even bourgeois press reports described as an “astonishing 5,400 police officers,” deployed on the pretext of preventing violence.

In France, police used tear gas and truncheons, pushing demonstrators against a wall and clubbing them. Socialist Party Interior Minister Matthias Fekl denounced “intolerable violence,” condemning the victims of the police brutality, not the cops who inflicted it.

There were large demonstrations in a number of European cities: 10,000 in Athens, half that number in Thessaloniki, Greece’s second-largest city, as well as a 24-hour strike called by several unions. Other marches took place in Britain, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Poland and elsewhere across the continent.

In South Africa, President Jacob Zuma was forced to cancel his May Day speech after workers began jeering him and calling for his resignation.

Thousands of garment workers in Bangladesh gathered to demand wage increases as well as better housing and health benefits and provision for the education of their children. Workers in that country are paid wages far lower than in China or Southeast Asia, and many of the leading European and American clothing retailers now source their production through Bangladesh, whose garment workforce has swelled to four million.

In Cambodia, a thousand garment workers defied a government order and delivered a petition demanding a higher minimum wage and broader democratic rights. In Indonesia, some 10,000 workers marched on the presidential palace in Jakarta to demand a rise in the minimum wage, limits on outsourcing and improved health care and working conditions.

Thousands of Taiwanese workers marched in the capital, Taipei, against low wages, poor working conditions and the elimination of basic pension provisions. Korean workers marched in Seoul, focusing their demands on a reduction in the use of temporary workers and “independent contractors” to evade paying legally required wages and benefits.

In the Western Hemisphere, there were rival pro- and anti-government demonstrations in Venezuela, where right-wing US-backed parties are seeking to take control of popular opposition to the bourgeois government of President Nicholas Maduro, who succeeded the late Hugo Chavez.

Puerto Rico was virtually shut down by a May Day strike against austerity measures imposed by the government of Governor Ricardo Rosselló. Demonstrators blocked roads to enforce a general strike while denouncing the US financial control board overseeing the Rosselló administration. Police fired tear gas and smoke bombs and used pepper spray.

In the United States, May Day is not observed as a workers’ holiday. Instead, the first Monday in September was designated as “Labor Day” more than a century ago in order to separate American workers from socialistic movements overseas.

But there were widespread protests nonetheless, with thousands turning out in every major city in demonstrations to defend immigrant workers and oppose the Trump administration’s attacks on Hispanics, Muslims and other immigrants.

By far the largest demonstration took place in Los Angeles, where tens of thousands assembled outside of City Hall. In keeping with the completely conservative character of the official labor movement, the platform at the rally was handed over to capitalist politicians, headed by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, a Democrat who denounced the anti-immigrant policies of the Trump administration while saying nothing about the reactionary policies of the Obama administration, which deported more undocumented workers than any previous US government.

A handful of right-wing pro-Trump demonstrators faced off across a street corner, chanting “USA! USA!” while Los Angeles police established a line between them and the much larger crowd of pro-immigrant marchers.

Thousands took part in protests in other California cities, including San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland, where the docks were shut down by a longshoremen’s walkout in solidarity with the pro-immigrant demonstrations. There was a very large demonstration in Houston, and marches involving thousands in Chicago, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, New York City, Washington DC and Atlanta. Other cities reporting significant protests included Portland, Seattle, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, Miami, Boston and Providence, Rhode Island.

One thousand Philadelphia public school teachers did not report for work, many of them taking personal time to join the immigrant rights march and protest going without a raise or a new contract for nearly five years. Temple University students and professors walked out of many classes at 10 a.m. to demand that the college declare itself a sanctuary campus, barring collaboration with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

Most of the US rallies were addressed by Democratic Party politicians and union officials who sought to focus popular anger exclusively on President Donald Trump, while concealing the anti-immigrant record of Obama. One rally in Chicago was typical, with Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Democrat in the US Senate, hailing as a victory the bipartisan agreement on a bill to fund the federal government through September 30 that does not authorize spending sought by Trump to build a wall along the US-Mexico border.

“Today we are passing a budget bill which says there will be no wall, not one penny for a wall,” Durbin declared. “No expansion for an enforcement force for ICE and others, and no penalties for sanctuary cities. We were able to achieve that in the minority.”

The truth is that the budget bill authorizes $1.52 billion in beefed-up measures against immigrants, including more Border Patrol officers and the use of drone surveillance against refugees seeking to cross the border.

The author also recommends:

Democrats agree to increase military and border spending while cutting food stamps

[2 May 2017]

Copyright © 1998-2017 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved

jdneel
2nd May 2017, 15:44
Thank you for the informative article. Despite the reactionary
tactics used against our Comrades across the globe, I can't help but feel pride at the continued leftist resistance against our capitalist foe.
It brought me great joy to witness the numbers of young people who turned out in American cities. Though I couldn't help but notice that certain Democrat politicians and collaborationist so called Labor leaders tried to hijack the procedings, I still cannot help but feel optimistic about the political leanings of the youth.



Sent from my SM-S920L using Tapatalk

ckaihatsu
2nd May 2017, 15:51
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/05/02/saop-m02.html


Brazilian demonstrators speak out during first general strike in 21 years

By our reporters

2 May 2017

After two major demonstrations against Brazilian President Michel Temer’s (PMDB) labor and pension “reforms” in March, on April 28, an estimated 35 million workers went on strike called by the unions, social movements and pseudo-left parties Brasil Popular (Popular Brazil) and Povo sem Medo (People without Fear).

In São Paulo, with the walkout of bus drivers, metro and train workers, and street and road blockades since the early morning, the usual 100-kilometer morning traffic jam was reduced to only 3 kilometers. Many people were not able to get to work, and in the city center, few people were out on the streets, which led many stores to close their doors.

Also joining the general strike were public workers, bank and postal workers, metallurgical and chemical workers, electricians and teachers of public and 277 private schools of São Paulo. In the industrial suburbs of the ABCdistrict—Santo André, São Bernardo do Campo and São Caetano do Sul—one of the most industrialized region in Brazil, 60,000 auto workers went on strike.

http://www.wsws.org/asset/823fcc56-7e49-4311-b8ed-98576f55c18I/image.png?rendition=image480
Thousands of demonstrators in Largo da Batata, São Paulo, for the rally of the general strike

At the end of the afternoon, around 70,000 people attended the rally called in Largo da Batata, in the western part of São Paulo, where WSWS reporters talked to demonstrators.

Amid the worst economic crisis in a century, with a record 14.2 million unemployed, a figure that has doubled in two years, the general strike, the first since 1996, was hailed by demonstrators.

Daniela, a graphics worker, said, “I think Brazilians are just beginning to protest. Now, people are going into the streets and are learning that, indeed, they have to mobilize themselves, that they have rights, and that they have to fight for their rights. Brazilians are beginning to uncover social inequality, which is our history.”

The political character of the general strike, an expression of the increase of the class struggle since the impeachment of former Workers Party (PT) President Dilma Rousseff, was manifested by many people attending the demonstration, who were explicitly against Temer’s government.

http://www.wsws.org/asset/4b06bdc5-ceb8-4164-9a14-289a1345f28D/image.png?rendition=image240
Fábio

Fábio, a public school art teacher, said, “I’m here because we are facing huge changes in social rights by a government whose legitimacy is in doubt, The changes they are promoting are not government changes, but state changes.” However, he continued, “I’d be here even if these changes were being made by the former president [Dilma Rousseff].”

Uirã, an unemployed history teacher, said he joined the demonstration to “fight against the coup. We had the illegal deposing of a president and the substitution by a vice-president who made great changes in the policies that were being made, with the pension and labor ‘reforms’.”

About the demonstrations against Temer’s reforms, Uirã said he was “pessimistic in reason, optimistic in will.” “What makes me optimistic is seeing a lot of people mobilizing against the reforms, something that for a long time we didn’t see. … There are people against these neoliberal changes that had never mobilized before,” he said.

On the other hand, Uirã said he is pessimistic about “the political system, which is far from any popular initiative. The legislators don’t take into consideration what the rest of the Brazilian population wants.” He believes this happens due “to the Brazilian electoral system, which favors private funding of electoral campaigns.”

Mauro explained that “Brazil is a republic that began its history with a small group that didn’t take into consideration millions of Brazilians, that left aside the blacks, the Indians, the poor. This republic has never recognized Brazilian people as citizens. With Temer’s government, we have come back to a situation in which a small group is again taking all the gains.”

The Brazilian political system is immersed in corruption, with both legal and illegal multimillion-dollar schemes of private electoral campaign financing organized in exchange for the political and economic support of the state.

In the 2014 elections, 19 Brazilian corporations financed half of the 1 billion real (US$312.5 million) raised by all parties for the electoral campaign. The list of corporations includes all the “Brazilian champions,” such as the second largest food group in the world, JBS; one of the largest beverage companies in the world, Ambev; and the major construction companies—OAS, Odebrecht—that have been denounced in the Car Wash corruption probe. With 30 percent of all donations, the PT was the primary beneficiary of corporate donations, followed by Temer’s PMDB.

The discrediting of the entire political system was also stressed by Fábio, who said he doesn’t believe that the National Congress, where Temer’s government holds the majority, will bar the pension reform. “It is an act of faith that the Congress will change its position. We have to be skeptical; we have to be aware that the congressmen are not sensitive to the people’s need.”

The discrediting of the whole political system is opening the way for the Brazilian right, Uirã warned. He believes that “we may see in Brazil something similar to what happened in the US with the victory of Donald Trump, either with Bolsonaro or Dória, who projects himself as a political outsider, despite being an insider.”

In the most recent poll for the 2018 election released by Folha de São Paulo daily on April 30, the fascistic federal deputy Jair Bolsonaro (PSC, Social Christian Party) appears tied in second place with Marina Silva (Rede) after Lula (PT).

As for João Dória, the current São Paulo major for the right-wing PSDB, he was elected last year with a record of almost 40 percent of voters either abstaining or casting blank ballots. Dória is a millionaire businessman who has advocated a huge privatization program. He, like Trump, was also the host of the TV program The Apprentice.

Fábio believes the Brazilian left parties are responsible for the rise of the right. He said, “There is a critical problem of Brazilian left politics. It is against the reforms, but it does not propose anything. We have permitted the emergence of a right-wing politics that is purposeful, from which the change is coming.”

Uirã doesn’t see “any short-term solution against the reforms. The idea of waiting for the 2018 elections will not work,” he believes. “It is ‘institutionally’ a more viable way, but I don’t know if it will work because it goes back to the problem of the Brazilian history, that is political collusion. It is a way to pacify the class struggle, and it doesn’t solve anything. If we come back to the previous stage of Brazilian politics, it will explode once again,” he concluded.

Uirã also believes the Greek experience with Syriza “is an example to Brazil, it is very similar to what we have here. … In so far as the Greek government decided for the plebiscite, it ignored its decision, ignored the demonstrations, ignored the strikes.”

This return to the “previous stage of Brazilian politics” referred to by Uirã, is a possible comeback of former Workers Party President Lula, who delivered a 10-minute speech at the March 15 rally.

The art teacher Fábio said he was “afraid that the same thing would happen today, as when the March 15 rally was rigged by political opportunists.” He continued by saying, “In the March 15 demonstration, a lot of people left when they turned it into an electoral platform for former president Lula. Today, even with this risk, I’m here because people’s dissatisfaction is very great with all that.”

Between the March 15 demonstration, a partial one-day general strike spearheaded mainly by teachers, and the April 28 general strike, the lower house of the National Congress approved the labor reform, which now will be discussed in the Senate.

The musician Mauro thinks that more demonstrations are needed: “Despite thinking that this general strike is something incredible, it is only for today. These people (Temer and the legislators) are doing absurd and outrageous things, and they have all the corporate media on their side. I don’t think such a one-day demonstration will be strong enough to shake the National Congress.”

He concluded by saying, “Now, there should be a general strike for an indefinite period until the fall of this government, this congress, this judiciary. Everything must be changed.”

Copyright © 1998-2017 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved

ckaihatsu
2nd May 2017, 20:22
Minneapolis May 1 march for immigrant and workers’ rights (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=2e0a11d754&e=d323598fe4)

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/Document2.JPG

By Meredith Aby-Keirstead

Minneapolis, MN - On May 1, a broad coalition of unions, workers organizations, immigrant rights groups and other community organizations held a unified march in Minneapolis. The march marked 100 days of resistance to Trump’s racist, anti-immigrant, anti-worker and anti-Muslim agenda. Even though the weather was cold and rainy, 2000 protesters loudly chanted in the streets, stopping rush hour traffic all over the city.

The march took place on International Workers Day, which is celebrated around the world to commemorate the struggle for the eight-hour workday, and since 2006 in the U.S. is also a mass mobilization demanding immigrant rights.

The unified march began with a rally in East Phillips Park in Minneapolis and included speakers and live music. Protesters then left the park to march to downtown Minneapolis and were joined by feeder marches and actions organized by students at the University of Minnesota, the anti-war movement, and the Minneapolis and Saint Paul teachers unions. The march ended with a rally at the downtown Minneapolis federal building.

The speakers at the rallies and along the march route highlighted the struggles of multiple immigrant communities and from unions representing tens of thousands of workers.

The march was organized by the Resist from Day 1 Coalition, which includes 54 local organizations. The Resist from Day 1 Coalition also organized the Jan. 20 anti-Trump march in downtown Minneapolis which had over 6000 attendees.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
5th May 2017, 14:58
Salt Lake May Day rally at federal building (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=9426e8b8a9&e=d323598fe4)

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/slcmdedit.jpg

By Sean Taylor

Salt Lake City, UT - Over 150 people rallied in downtown Salt Lake to celebrate May 1, International Workers Day. Hosted by the Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO), the event assembled activists and organizers from a wide array of progressive groups in the valley, including Students for a Democratic Society, Utah Against Police Brutality, Workers World Party as well as many new people eager to get involved in local politics.

Speakers recounted the radical working-class history of May Day, denounced Trump’s anti-worker and anti-immigrant agenda, and called for community power and organization outside of Democrat and Republican establishment politics.

“We must understand the world not through the big billionaires and warmongers at the top, but through our own eyes, and understand that we don’t function in society as ‘temporarily embarrassed billionaires’ but that we are the makers and shakers of society,” said Gabriella Killpack, a member of Teamster Local 222.

She continued, “We created the buildings and streets around us, yet we get less than pennies on the dollar for the value we create. With that understanding, we can learn how to forge a better world from the ashes of the old.”

Theresa Nielson, a member of the FRSO, closed out the rally, “We are not just here to celebrate, we are here to unite as working-class and oppressed people, to build organization, and build working class power in opposition to the power of the ruling one percent. Take May Day as the day to organize your workplace and fight back!”

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
6th May 2017, 15:24
May 1st in Pakistan: 2,000 Workers in Lahore with the APTUF, Despite the Ban on Protests (and photos from May Day actions)


[please excuse duplicate postings]


May 1st in Pakistan: 2,000 Workers in Lahore
With the APTUF, Despite the Ban on Protests

(reprinted from the International Workers Committee newsletter No. 37 -- May 5, 2017)

Rubina Jamil, general secretary of the All Pakistan Trade Union Federation (APTUF), and Anwer Gujjar, head of the railway union affiliated to APTUF, inform us of the Pakistani authorities' attempt to prohibit their May Day gathering in front of the Lahore Press Club.

The government issued this ban in the name of the "struggle against terrorism," a decision that takes place in a context in which the government has just signed an agreement with the World Bank and IMF to privatize all state-owned enterprises.

At an Emergency Conference, the APTUF leadership decided to go ahead and hold the May Day rally, despite the government ban. On May 1, the police entered the factories organized by APTUF in an attempt to impose the ban. But after hours of negotiations, more than 2,000 workers, including a large number of women workers, were able to come together with the union to demand:

* An immediate 100% wage increase!
* No to the IMF and the World Bank!
* Peace and a halt to privatization!
- - - - -

PS Messages of solidarity with APTUF and their bold and courageous decision to hold their May Day Rally behind a banner that reads, "Salute to Chicago Martyrs" can be sent, care of Sister Rubina Jamil, to <[email protected]>. Many thanks -- Alan B.

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ckaihatsu
6th May 2017, 15:35
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ckaihatsu
10th May 2017, 18:50
Tallahassee students and workers hold International Workers Day rally (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=5186bc795f&e=d323598fe4)

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/May%20Day%20tally.jpg

By Katherine Draken

Tallahassee, FL - On May 1, around 30 workers, students and community members gathered in front of the Greater Tallahassee Chamber of Commerce to celebrate International Workers Day and to stand in solidarity with immigrants and refugees.

The rally began with an introduction by Regina Joseph, one of the leading organizers of the rally and a member of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO), "We're here today on International Workers Day to stand with oppressed people around the world against the rule of the 1%, and to look forward to overthrowing this wretched system and building a better tomorrow."

Afterwards Daniela D., a DACA-receiving FSU alumni, and member of Advocates for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (AIRR), shared her story of being an undocumented immigrant in the U.S. She followed by urging everyone present to get organized, fight for immigrant rights and stand against the xenophobia of the Trump administration.

"We might not run this country," said Daniela, "but this country doesn't run without us."

After several more speeches and chants, the crowd marched to the historic Florida capitol while chanting "Trump says go back, we say fight back!" and "No ban, no wall, legalization for all!" At the front of the march was a banner that said "Workers unite: Stop Trump's anti-immigrant attacks."

At the capitol, members of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and Students for Justice in Palestine gave speeches expressing solidarity with the working class as well as the immigrants and refugees currently under attack by the Trump administration.

The organizers stated their intent to continue organizing for worker and immigrant rights.

B. Beck, member of SDS, said, "We are going to continue to organize against Trump's racist agenda, to fight for the right of undocumented students at Florida State University, and defend workers' rights."

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
16th May 2017, 17:29
VIDEO - 2017 Chicago May Day Rally & March


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2017 Chicago May Day Rally & March

The 2017 May Day march in Chicago was a mixture of organizations and issues, mostly touching on the need to defend minority and immigrant communities. Overlapping those causes were global warming, union rights, and public sector education. Despite occasional rain and chilly weather, the turnout was into the thousands. One issue appropriate on this international workers’ day but noticeably missing as an official demand was any denunciation of US imperialism and militarism. This was however addressed by a few leftist organizations, with a range of analyses. Unfortunately, one officially invited speaker was Senator Dick Durbin (D-Illinois), champion of public schools militarization in Chicago and expansion of NATO in Europe. But also speaking at that same rally in Union Park was Palestinian activist Rasmea Odeh, hounded by the Israeli government and soon to be forced into exile from the U.S. Length - 26:23

Video url:
https://youtu.be/0jWsYONogxA

0jWsYONogxA

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Sentinel
17th May 2017, 17:37
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This year’s May Day - a major event for the international working class movement - took place in the context of growing class struggle everywhere, which is also seeing rising interest for Marxist ideas. This was reported by all the sections of the International Marxist Tendency (IMT), who participated in May Day events in dozens of countries. Here we provide reports and photos of the interventions of our comrades around the world.

https://www.marxist.com/the-imt-raising-the-banner-of-marxism-on-may-day-around-the-world.htm

The picture above is from New York City. I took part in the IMT bloc in the demonstration of the Left Party here in Stockholm, Sweden myself. Our intervention went fantastically well, with a record number of comrades taking part, and numerous new contacts getting interested in our organisation.

Also the demonstration itself had a record number of attendees at 12 500, dwarfing the one organised by the ruling Social Democratic Workers' Party. The same was the case in Swedens second largest city Gothenburg, where besides the Left Party, also the anarcho-syndicalist union SAC managed to gather a larger rally than the social democrats.