Thursday, May 1, 2025

What are the conditions facing workers on May Day?

words by Charles Brooks 

The current moment is best described by the experiences of today’s working class. 

This year’s International Workers Day, commonly known as May Day, happens to fall on the day after the popular political benchmark of 100 days.  

The actions taken by Trump during his first 100 days in office have caused widespread chaos, disappointment, confusion, and even anger.  Deregulation, privatization along with budget cuts to Medicaid, and implementing tariffs that will raise prices on everyday goods as the cost of living continues to rise negatively impacting personal economies 

One hundred days of a litany of executive orders, actions, and decisions widely viewed as a war, an assault on the working- and middle-class folks. 

His actions to reduce the federal government by dismantling agency after agency as thousands of federal workers are now facing unemployment, as their collective bargaining and union rights are stripped.  The Institute of Policy Studies made this point, “Through a series of executive orders, Trump has also removed long-standing job protections for federal career employees, making it easier to fire these workers for no reason and taking away the rights of federal workers to collectively bargain.”

While Trump's recent and those pending makes him an easy target, the crisis to the personal economy did not suddenly emerge on January 20th, Trump’s inauguration day. 

May Day in 2025 is yet another reminder that today’s workers suffer from a crisis aggravated by the policies of the incoming president.  

Before January 20th, there was a crisis to the personal economy as the household debt suffers from credit card debt. Medical and health care debt. The rising costs of living as rent, and utilities continue to increase along with increases to the cost of public transportation and local fees and fines that typically rise on Jan 1, with more coming due on July 1. 

This is where the spotlight is cast on the political misleadership that remains unresponsive to the needs of working people. 

Today, there are twenty states that pay a minimum wage of no more than $7.25 an hour; The federal minimum hourly wage is just $7.25 and has not increased since 2009. 

Nearly 30 million are uninsured. 

The Economic Policy Institute estimates that 14 million workers earn less than $15 per hour, accounting for about 10% of all wage and salary workers. As 14% of Black workers compared to 8% of white workers.

Meanwhile, in the legislative graveyard are the Protecting the Right to Organize Act of 2025 — commonly known as the “PRO Act” and The Raise the Wage Act of 2025.  The PRO Act expands labor union protections while the Raise the Wage Act, would incrementally raise the federal minimum wage to $17 an hour by 2030. 

Meanwhile, in 2024, corporate profits reached $4 trillion dollars - a 54% increase over the last five years (2019 to 2024). 

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has posted solid gains in 2024, rising more than 12%. 

While nationwide protests are scheduled in the US, May Day (International Workers' Day) 

highlight and bring attention to these issues as well as the worker conditions and issues here and across the world.  May Day (International Workers' Day) amplifies the solidarity with workers in other nations of the global south for workers to protest a range of issues. with similar experiences, similar struggles, making similar decisions to their personal economy.

At this political moment, we’re reminded of its socialist beginnings - how International Day came to be, its roots in the struggle for what we know today as the eight-hour workday when the typical workday was from sunrise to sunset.  Socialist and radical beginnings grounded in labor activism, strikes, protest, bloody and violent. 

May 1st was the date set by the International Socialist Conference as a reminder of the events of May 1st, 1886, in what is known as the Haymarket Affair - a union demonstration that was part of the larger blood stained struggle over the 8-hour day.  

Today, two hundred and thirty-six years later, International Workers Day continues to resonate with working people, particularly at this moment as the contradictions on public display become clearer, and sharper.  As working people face increases to their cost of living, as their personal economies confront crisis, they also read the news reports and commentary about the rising corporate profits, along with staggering military and police budgets. At a moment when federal legislation, containing tax cuts, will ensure a massive transfer of wealth from the bottom to the top makes its way through the legislative process in Congress. 

International Workers Day reminds us of the material and political conditions that are shaped and influenced by imperialist forces.  On May Day in 2025, we’re able to witness in real time, not only demonstrations taking place across the world but workers striking in California as well as in Panama, and in Canada.  

On this day, we’re reminded that May Day/International Workers Day 2025 draws our attention to the alignment of capital on a global scale making up the forces of power driving inequality, exploitation, and low wages - here and across the world. 


Thursday, April 3, 2025

Mahmoud Khalil’s Attorney: “This Is the McCarthy Era All Over Again”

 By Majorie Cohn, TruthOut

A federal judge in New Jersey will soon issue a ruling on where the deportation case of Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian student who led the student encampment at Columbia University last year, can be litigated. On March 8, Khalil was abducted in New York by agents from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) who told him his lawful permanent residency status had been “revoked.” He is now languishing in a notorious Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) jail in Louisiana, more than 1,000 miles from his U.S. citizen wife who is over eight months pregnant, while U.S. District Judge Michael E. Farbiarz decides where his case will be heard. Khalil has been charged with no crime.

House rejects GOP amendments, gives final approval to bill creating Reparations Commission

 By William J. Ford 

Maryland would become fourth state with a commission; it would study ‘appropriate benefits’ for those affected by ‘historical inequality’

It’s done.

The House of Delegates gave final approval Wednesday evening to a bill that would create a Maryland Reparations Commission, sending the measure to the governor for his signature.

Friday, March 28, 2025

Measure that amends Florida’s compensation law for the wrongfully incarcerated passes Senate

 By Mitch Perry

A bill that would make it much easier for individuals wrongfully incarcerated to receive compensation has cleared the Florida Senate, and needs just one final vote in the House before going to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ desk.

Basic Reforms to New York’s Legal Code Are At Risk as Democrats Lurch Rightward

 By Schuyler Mitchell

A push to claw back a process-oriented change in New York’s criminal legal code shows just how readily Democrats will capitulate to carceral demands in 2025.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Here Are the Texted War Plans That Hegseth Said 'Nobody Was Texting' on Signal

 By Jon Queally

In response to U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth claiming on live television earlier this week that "nobody was texting war plans," The Atlantic magazine on Wednesday morning published the "war plans" that were, in fact, shared on the private sector messaging app Signal by top members of President Donald Trump's national security team, including Hegseth and national security advisor Mike Waltz.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

“I will wear my persona non grata as a badge of dignity”, said South African ambassador expelled by the US

 By Pavin Kulkarni

We must enter into trade negotiations with the USA because our economy and our people need them. But we must never trade our sovereignty, lest we be told that China and Cuba cannot be our friends,” said veteran diplomat Ebrahim Rasool on his return to South Africa.

Cheering crowds thronged outside the Cape Town International Airport on Sunday, March 23, to welcome the South African ambassador expelled from the US after being subjected to repeated attacks for his stance in solidarity with Palestine.  “Ebrahim Rasool is a race-baiting politician who hates America,” US State Secretary Marco Rubio accused in a X post on March 15.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Trump’s school choice push adds to momentum in statehouses

 By Robbie Sequeira

Federal moves might provide additional money for universal vouchers and scholarships.

More than a dozen states in the past two years have launched or expanded programs that allow families to use taxpayer dollars to send their students to private schools. Now, President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress want to supercharge those efforts.

Youngkin vetoes minimum wage hike, prescription affordability board bills

By Charlotte Rene Woods and Nathaniel Cline


Monday was Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s deadline to take action on the roughly 900 bills that Virginia’s legislature approved to send his way. Monday afternoon saw over 300 signatures and a handful of vetoes, while he had until 11:59 p.m. for his other signatures, amendments and vetoes to be posted on Virginia’s Legislative Information System.

Friday, March 21, 2025

Mahmoud Khalil still detained in notorious Louisiana detention center as case is moved to New Jersey

By Bobbi-Jean Misick 

After former Columbia University student and permanent U.S. resident Mahmoud Khalil was detained by federal immigration officials over his involvement in student-led protests last year — a move that shocked advocates for free speech and immigrants’ rights around the country — he was taken to Jena, a small town of 4,000 in north-central Louisiana and home to one of the country’s largest and most notorious immigration detention centers.