Answering Trump’s war threats, Cuban workers plan mass May Day defense rallies

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Article by Cameron Harrison republished from People’s World under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/

Defense of the homeland will be the central theme of May Day rallies in Cuba this year, in accordance with a call by the country’s main labor federation. | AP

HAVANA—As the Trump administration tightens its energy blockade on Cuba and threatens war and regime change, the Cuban labor movement—along with all of Cuban society—is gearing up for a mass mobilization on May 1. The Workers’ Central Union of Cuba (CTC) and its affiliates have issued a call for this year’s May Day, International Workers’ Day, to “defend the homeland.”

Their labor movement’s call comes at a moment of maximum pressure. On Jan. 29, the White House imposed a total oil blockade on Cuba, cutting off nearly all fuel supplies to the island of 11 million people. Countries that dare to send oil face extreme sanctions. Combined with the intensified economic, commercial, and financial blockade that has suffocated Cuba for more than 65 years, the new measures aim to starve the Revolution into submission.

Now, the U.S.’ economic war is also poised to possibly become a fighting war. On April 15, USA Today reported that the Pentagon is speeding up plans for a potential U.S. military operation against Cuba, awaiting a directive from President Donald Trump as to when they might strike. The threat comes amid recent statements by Trump that “Cuba is next” after Iran and that he will “take” the island.

Cuban workers are not backing down

“Faced with the growing threats from the U.S. government, reinforced by the executive order of Jan. 29, which added an energy blockade to the already intensified embargo that has been imposed on us for more than 65 years simply for wanting to build a dignified, sovereign, and independent nation, there is nothing more important and decisive today than to work together and grow as a country,” the CTC declared in their May Day call.

The labor federation urged workers to celebrate May Day in militant parades and events in every workplace, town, municipality, and province.

“It is a call to defend the country, from the fields, the factories, the classrooms, the scientific centers, thermoelectric plants, hospitals, culture, sports; from every battle trench.”

‘We have not collapsed’

Cuba is facing its worst energy crisis in decades. Before the energy blockade, the country consumed about 110,000 barrels of oil per day, with 40,000 produced domestically and the rest imported from partners like Venezuela, Mexico, and Russia. Since January, that supply has virtually dried up. Only one Russian tanker has reached Cuban ports in three months, covering barely a third of monthly fuel demand.

The result is devastating, with major cities at a standstill, industry paralyzed, food becoming scarce, and hospitals struggling. Power blackouts have now become routine. Yet the Cuban people, their government, and the Communist Party refuse to break.

President Miguel Díaz-Canel and former President Raúl Castro lead a march in Havana on Dec. 20, 2025. | Marcelino Vázquez / Cubadebate

In an extensive interview with NBC’s Kristen Welker, President Miguel Díaz-Canel rejected the narrative of collapse.

“What country in the world would be capable, as Cuba has done, of enduring 67 years of sustained aggression from the most powerful nation in the world, with more than 60 years of blockade, with the last six or seven years of an intensified blockade, and now with an energy blockade, and not collapse? We have not collapsed.”

Díaz-Canel pointed to Cuba’s universal healthcare, free education from primary school to university, advances in biotechnology, and a safe society free of drug trafficking and organized crime.

“They are trying to impose a narrative of collapse on us when, through an aggressive, genocidal policy of blockade, they are leading us to live through a complex situation.”

Prepared to defend the revolution

When asked if Cuba is actively preparing for a possible U.S. attack, Díaz-Canel was direct: “Yes, we are preparing for defense.”

He recalled the words of 19th-century independence hero Antonio Maceo: “He will only gather the dust of his blood-soaked soil if he does not perish in the struggle.” Díaz-Canel added, “If you go out on the street now and say the first part of that phrase to a child, an elderly person, a young Cuban, they will immediately complete it. That is how we have been raised.”

Díaz-Canel also dismissed any notion that removing him, which the Trump administration and particularly Secretary of State Marco Rubio demand, would break the revolution.

“We have a collective leadership characterized by unity, cohesion, ideological unity, and revolutionary discipline. Removing one person solves nothing. There are hundreds of people capable of assuming that responsibility.

“The United States cannot impose change on us, nor can they demand it. The U.S. government has no moral authority to demand anything from Cuba.”

The Trump administration’s objectives remain murky. While Rubio — himself the son of Cuban migrants — has signaled a desire for regime change, the White House may be pursuing a more “pragmatic” goal: forced economic “liberalization” that benefits U.S. monopolies and billionaires.

According to reports, Washington seeks access to Cuba’s energy, ports, tourism, and telecom sectors, along with larger private enterprise, banking opening, and dismantling of state-owned enterprises.

‘Hands off Cuba!’

International solidarity with Cuba, a principle of working-class internationalism, continues to grow. The World Federation of Trade Unions’ (WFTU) week of action in solidarity with Cuba just concluded, and the international labor federation will continue to organize and mobilize its affiliates and members to stand in solidarity with Cuban workers.

Countries such as Mexico, Russia, China, Vietnam, and Spain have also expressed support for Cuba. More than 100 activists, trade unionists, and even European Parliament members recently arrived in Havana with half-a-million euros in humanitarian aid.

The Communist Party USA has also weighed in, demanding an immediate end to the criminal blockade and Cuba’s removal from the “State Sponsors of Terrorism” list. In the party’s May Day call, it declared: “Hands off Cuba! No war on Iran! Cut the military budget! End the forever wars! U.S. imperialism must be defeated!

“The same monopolies that drive down our wages and bust our unions operate internationally,” the party said. “They consciously pit workers of different countries against each other, including in wars, to maximize profits. Our resistance must reflect international solidarity.”

May Day as resistance

For this May Day, the CTC is invoking the legacy of independence hero José Martí, revolutionary leader Fidel Castro in his centennial year, and Army General Raúl Castro.

“We invite Cuba’s friends around the world to join us, as they do every year, in celebrating International Workers’ Day,” the CTC said.

“We thank them in advance for their solidarity and for having the courage to share our fate amidst a real military threat, which, far from intimidating us, makes us repeat, with optimism and confidence in victory, the glorious verse of our national anthem: ‘To die for the Fatherland is to live.’”

Díaz-Canel echoed that: “If the time comes, there will be a fight, there will be a battle. We will defend ourselves, and if we must die, we will die.”

But he also held out hope for dialogue. “What both the American and Cuban people deserve is peace—a peace that allows us to have an atmosphere of trust, cooperation, collaboration, solidarity, and understanding. Lift the embargo, and see what we can do.”

As May Day approaches, Cuban workers are preparing to march—not in desperation, but in determination. The homeland, they insist, will be defended.

People’s World is in the midst of its annual fund drive, trying to raise $140,000 by May Day. To support working-class journalism, please consider make a donation or become a monthly sustainer. Thank you.

Article by Cameron Harrison republished from People’s World under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/

Donald Fuhrump says that Amerikkka doesn't bother with crimes or charges anymore, not being 100% Amerikkkan and opposing his real estate intentions is enough.
Donald Fuhrump says that Amerikkka doesn’t bother with crimes or charges anymore, not being 100% Amerikkkan and opposing his real estate intentions is enough.
Donald Trump sings and dances, says that it's fun to kill everyone ...
Donald Trump sings and dances, says that it’s fun to kill everyone …
Continue ReadingAnswering Trump’s war threats, Cuban workers plan mass May Day defense rallies

This May Day, workers mobilized for Palestine

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Original article by Natalia Marques republished from peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

Student workers of Columbia organized in UAW 2710 participate in May Day rally. Photo: Wyatt Souers

On International Workers’ Day, workers around the world continued to join hands with the student movement to stand with Palestine

On May Day, workers around the world mobilized for the liberation of Palestine. “This May Day, workers of the world are called to declare their solidarity with Palestine, to denounce the Israeli Genocide, and to call for an end to all aggressions in the region and to all wars,” wrote the International People’s Assembly.

“Beyond the call for a ceasefire we must say no to the transportation of arms and arms caches to Israel. Workers in all industries – especially workers in the transport sector – that can withhold their labor in order to halt the continued slaughter of the people of Palestine are emphatically called to do so!”

The National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa released a statement calling on workers around the world to mobilize for Palestine. “The working class are the creators of wealth, and it is the united power of the working class that has the power to overthrow hateful, brutal regimes like Apartheid Israel,” wrote the union. “On this Workers Day, we call on workers of the world to unite in defense of Palestine so that its people can be free, from the river, to the sea!”

“The working class in South Africa must celebrate the defeat of Apartheid, because its destruction was due, largely to the unity of workers, who used their labor power to collapse the system through rolling mass action, strikes and protest,” the union added.

Several Palestinian union formations have called the people in the world to action against the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza. This includes the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions, which in March called on US unions in particular to “be our voice and advocate inside and outside America.”

“What our people are experiencing and what workers and unions in particular, are exposed to is the most horrific catastrophe known to humanity in recent decades,” the PGFTU wrote. “We ask that you convey our message and give voice to the suffering of hungry, starving workers and their families—not just to the American people, not just to your unions, but to the entire world.”

Palestinian trade unions have also responded in support of the student movement for Palestine that has taken the world by storm. “The Union of Agricultural Work Committees (UAWC) in Palestine extends our deepest solidarity to you, the revolutionary youth who are changing the world,” reads a statement of support from a prominent Palestine farmworkers’ union, addressed to the students movement around the world that is taking action in solidarity with Gaza. “We write to you from Palestine to tell you that your actions are resonating across oceans. In you, we see the echoes of our struggle, the echoes of our resistance, and the echoes of our hope.”

“Our people, along with all the workers and free people of the world, commemorate the first of May this year, at a time when they are subjected to the most brutal and fierce campaign of genocide and ethnic cleansing, surpassing in savagery and bloodiness the fascists and the Nazis, at the hands of a group of murderers calling themselves an army for an invasive replacement entity, under the leadership, partnership, support, cover, and complicity of the American administration and the colonial Western imperial powers, the enemies of humanity,” wrote the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in a pre-May Day statement. “We send a salute of respect and pride to the university students all over the world, especially to the students at American universities, who are protesting against the crimes of the occupation and the support of the American administration for it, and who demand a halt to the aggression against the Palestinian people.”

Within the student movement in the US, university workers are mobilizing their unions to stand with their students in solidarity with Gaza. On April 29, within the Gaza Solidarity Encampment at the City College of New York in New York City, university workers organized under the Professional Staff Congress (PSC-CUNY) held a town hall meeting to deliberate on how to use their labor power to support the five demands of the student encampment. The members attending the town hall organized a wildcat sick-out, in which union members will call in sick en masse to disrupt business as usual at the larger City University of New York (CUNY) system. Workers in the United States face a variety of strike prohibitions, including a nationwide ban on striking for political reasons rather than economic issues such as wages and benefits under the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947.

Nevertheless, the PSC faculty at the town hall voted overwhelmingly to stage a sick-out. “At UT Austin, faculty did a one day job action in support of their students. Palestinian trade unions, National SJP, and National Faculty for Justice in Palestine have called for a mass job action on May 1st,” faculty wrote in a statement. “Our students are taking incredible risks to support the Palestinian people. They have asked for our help. We must stand ready to struggle alongside them, and to take these risks.”

Workers organized with the United Auto Workers, which also represents many graduate student workers across the country, staged a rally in Washington Square Park on April 26 in support of their students staging Gaza Solidarity Encampments at NYU, Columbia, and the New School.

Workers engaged in mass mobilizations around the world on May 1.

Thousands took to the streets in major US cities including Washington, DC and Los Angeles. In DC, demonstrators marched to the Gaza Solidarity Encampments at George Washington University.

‼️🇵🇸A massive May Day march in Los Angeles takes the streets for Palestine! pic.twitter.com/YfDrwNiBis

— Party for Socialism and Liberation (@pslnational) May 1, 2024

✊🏽🇵🇸RIGHT NOW: A massive May Day march is en route to the Gaza Solidarity Encampment at George Washington University pic.twitter.com/esXOVUrhqv

— Party for Socialism and Liberation (@pslnational) May 2, 2024

In New York City, unions such as the United Auto Workers and the New York Taxi Workers Alliance expressed explicit support for the Palestinian cause in a march of 20,000, which ended at the New York University Gaza Solidarity Encampment.

Havana, like every year, was flooded with huge crowds on May Day as President Miguel Diaz-Canel sent an explicit message in support of Palestine and the pro-Palestine student movement. “All our solidarity with the students in the United States, who have taken the side of justice, have come out to support the cause of the Palestinian people, and are brutally repressed on their own university campuses. Today our [May Day] is also going through Palestine,” Diaz-Canel wrote.

In Bogota, President Gustavo Petro made a special announcement during the May Day celebration in front of thousands of Colombians: the nation would officially cut all diplomatic ties with Israel.

Original article by Natalia Marques republished from peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

Continue ReadingThis May Day, workers mobilized for Palestine

Trade unionists block 4 sites involved in arms supplies to Israel on International Workers’ Day

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https://leftfootforward.org/2024/05/trade-unionists-block-4-sites-involved-in-arms-supplies-to-israel-on-international-workers-day/. Many articles feeatured from LeftFootForward today.

‘If arms company bosses and Britain’s political elite won’t impose an arms embargo, we, the workers, will enforce it from below’

This May Day, over 1,000 workers across Britain have mobilised to blockade four sites involved in the supply of arms to Israel, in a response to calls from Palestinian trade unions.

In solidarity with Palestinian workers as the onslaught on Gaza reaches its 208th day, trade unionists in Britain have blocked entry to the UK Department of Business and Trade in London and three BAE Israeli arms factories in Scotland, Wales and Lancashire to protest the government’s refusal to suspend the sale of UK arms to Israel. 

BAE Systems has been targeted as the UK’s leading military goods manufacturer which profits from arming Israel, while workers have blocked the UK Trade Department in support of civil servants who have expressed fears that they could be complicit in war crimes in Gaza if Israel is found to have broken international law. 

Civil servants’ union PCS is considering bringing legal action to prevent their members being forced to carry out potentially unlawful acts, after staff requested to “cease work immediately” on arms export licences to Israel. 

Canada, the Netherlands, Japan, Spain and Belgium have suspended the sale of arms to Israel, while the British government continues to refuse. It comes as a legal challenge over the British government’s role in allowing weapons to be sent to Israel has been given the go-ahead to be heard in the High Court later this year.

https://leftfootforward.org/2024/05/trade-unionists-block-4-sites-involved-in-arms-supplies-to-israel-on-international-workers-day/. Many articles feeatured from LeftFootForward today.

Continue ReadingTrade unionists block 4 sites involved in arms supplies to Israel on International Workers’ Day