Sunday, February 04, 2024

UK
Pro-Palestine demonstrators promise to march for 'as long as it takes'


As the eighth march calling for a ceasefire in Gaza takes place, support isn't waning on London's streets.


Ivor Bennett
News correspondent @IvorBennett
Saturday 3 February 2024 
The pro-Palestine march in central London on Saturday Pic: PA

Some might have thought that support for these marches would have waned by now.

They've been going for nearly four months and this is the eighth one.

But on today's evidence, those perceptions would be very wide of the mark.

For 25 minutes, we watched as a continuous crowd passed us on Regent Street.

We started our clock when the front of the line set off and they were going at quite a pace.

But even after that much time, we still couldn't see the finish - just a seemingly endless sea of Palestinian flags fluttering overhead.

This time, the demonstrators began outside BBC HQ before ending on Whitehall, where some were shouting "shame on you" outside the gates of Downing Street.

Protesters outside Downing Street

Among them was Kevin, from London, who told me he's been to every single one of these marches.

"I'm here to uphold international law," he said.

"Somebody has to stand up and say we've had enough. We need to stop this genocide now."



But are the marches having any impact? There's no sign of any policy change. Protesters' demands for a ceasefire still aren't being echoed.

"I think behind the scenes the government is already softening its stance. It has to because there's elections coming up," Kevin said.

Police said afterwards that they made a "small number of arrests" - two for public order, one for obstructing officers and another for setting off a smoke bomb/flare. The anger here wasn't only aimed at Rishi Sunak and his government.

I meet Lesley and Gill, who have travelled from Devon to attend. On Gill's forehead is a sticker with the words "Just Stop Starmer".

"He's the opposition but he just agrees with everything the government says and does," says Gill.

PA

In contrast with the constant flux of the situation in the Middle East - the US airstrikes on Iranian-linked targets the latest example - protesters' demands have remained the same, ever since the first of these marches in October.

Ending the war in Gaza, in their view, ends the wider regional conflict.

No surprise then how America's latest salvo is going down. "Unnecessary", "extraordinary" and "appalling" were just some of the words used to describe it.
0:30

According to Gill, the response was "disproportionate" because there's a "madman" in the White House.

"What is he doing?" she asks.

"There are Americans being killed in Gaza and they've done absolutely nothing about that so they're a bit selective about their retaliation."

Read more: What we know about the sites targeted in US strikes

Speaking of retaliation, there are plenty here who believe the issue will come back to bite when the US and UK go to the polls.

Five-time marcher Joseph is certain the war in Israel will be an "electoral issue" here in Britain.

"It's deeply embarrassing for the government and the opposition because their positions are pretty much untenable," he says.

And how much longer will the marches last? "As long as it takes."

 


In pictures: Thousands rally in London for immediate ceasefire in Gaza

In solidarity with Palestinians, thousands of people in London chanted slogans calling for an end to Israeli attacks on Gaza, while criticising the British government for its support of Israel.




In solidarity with Palestinians, thousands of people gathered in front of the BBC in Portland Place and later held a march toward the Prime Minister's Office in Whitehall. / Photo: AA

Protesters have staged a massive rally in London to call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza where more than 27,000 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since October 7.

In solidarity with Palestinians, thousands of people gathered in front of the BBC in Portland Place and later held a march toward the Prime Minister's Office in Whitehall on Saturday.



Carrying Palestinian flags, the crowd chanted slogans, calling for an end to Israeli attacks on Gaza, while criticising the British government for its support to Israel.

Some of the protesters were also seen carrying "Hands off Yemen" signs, in protest to recent strikes by the US and the UK against Houthi groups in Yemen.



They also carried various signs, including "Free Palestine," "Stop the genocide," and "I'm a critic not anti-Semitic."

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Hannah, a protester, said that as pro-Palestinians, they feel like it is their "duty" to gather at protests and to represent the Palestinian people and to show them that the world is with them "even though the governments are not."

"If you look around, there is people of all ages, there is people of all ethnicities, people from all walks of life came to stand together," she said.

"And it is our duty to support them and to show them that even though they might feel like they have been forgotten but they have not. We all with them and we have been for years," she added.



Hannah, a protester, said that as pro-Palestinians, they feel like it is their "duty" to gather at protests and to represent the Palestinian people and to show them that the world is with them "even though the governments are not."

The killings of innocent people did not begin on October 7, she said.

"It began way before that," she added.

Israel launched a deadly offensive on Gaza on October 7 that killed at least 27,238 Palestinians and injured 66,452 following a surprise attack by the Palestinian resistance group, Hamas.

Nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed in the Hamas attack.

The Israeli offensive has left 85 percent of Gaza’s population internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60 percent of the enclave’s infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.




"If you look around, there is people of all ages, there is people of all ethnicities, people from all walks of life came to stand together".

Hundreds of thousands protest in the streets of London for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza

Hundreds of thousands took to London streets in a massive show of solidarity as the war on Gaza enters its 120th day. The protesters demanded an immediate ceasefire in Gaza as the civilian victims toll surpassed 30,000. The protestors continued to chant for the freedom of the Palestinians and the global solidarity with the Palestinian people.
200,000 on London Palestine march against Israeli genocide

Everyone should build the workplace and student day of action on Wednesday, 7 February



Saturday 03 February 2024
By Socialist Worker journalists
Issue 2891


On the Palestine march in London (Picture: PSC)

At least 200,000 people marched for Palestine in London on Saturday, a sign of the continuing mass anger against Israel’s genocidal assault in Gaza. Some speakers at the march rally said it was 250,000.

At the same time around 10,000 people were on the streets in Edinburgh (see below). It was the biggest march in the city since the start of the Israeli assault on Gaza.

In London, Amara, a young Muslim woman from Tower Hamlets, told Socialist Worker, “Israel needs to give Palestine its land back. And those who were forced to leave Palestine have to be allowed back.

“Just like the British Empire was forced to give land back—the Israeli state has to do the same. It’s not theirs to keep.”

Marchers chanted, “Rishi Sunak you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide,” and, “Keir Starmer, you can’t hide, you support a genocide.”

Farah, who lives in London but is from Iraq, said, “I have no words for what Israel is doing except genocide. But I’m not shocked at the response from the West, or Arab leaders. They care about their own interests.”

Safa and Meenal from west London said, “Cutting Unrwa aid funding is unacceptable and the accusations against it are bullshit—respect to Spain for actually upping their funding. The labelling of Houthis as terrorists is ridiculous—the British and US armies are two of the world’s biggest terrorist organisations.

“Police trying to scare people into silence and off the streets won’t work. We know what we’re standing for, everyone protesting today is on the right side of history.”

Sophie from Northampton said, “In Yemen the Houthis are standing up for what’s right, Britain needs to stop bombing them.”

The police were noticeably more aggressive than previously on the demonstration. They had issued a ban on face coverings—a studied insult to Muslim women—in advance. They arrested a protester for this at one point.

And later they pushed into the Socialist Worker Student Society (SWSS) section of the march, seized the lead banner with its slogan, “Victory to the resistance”—but then returned it.


Full coverage of the struggle in Palestine


There were at least 31 trade union banners in the special section of the march, and many others sprinkled throughout the rest of the demonstration.

The workplace and student day of action on Wednesday, 7 February, is now a chance to deepen the movement among workers and students. Pete from King’s College London UCU union branch said, “We need more direct action targeted at the arms industry.”

On 7 February, he said, “We are doing a staff and student lunchtime walkout for Palestine.”

Jane, a teacher, told Socialist Worker that in Cambridge the NEU union “linked up with the Stop the War Coalition and is planning a series of protests. There will be five different protests at schools and a teach-in at the university.

“We have no choice. Our government is not speaking out so we must speak out. We can’t do nothing.”

Dr Ismail Patel is co-founder of Friends of Al Aqsa, one of the march organisers. “Israel is carrying out a genocide in plain sight,” he told the rally. “We will not stop until there’s a free Palestine.”

Leanne Mohammed is a Palestinian who is standing as an independent candidate for Ilford North against right wing Labour MP Wes Streeting. “As we approach the general election, we will not forget,” she said.

“We will remember the names of every MP who chose silence over humanity and failed to vote for a ceasefire. No ceasefire—no vote.”

Alex Gordon, RMT union president, said, “This is the eighth national march for Palestine and this movement is changing the politics of this country. On Tuesday we’re holding a mass rally with other unions.

“Stop The War, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign are calling for actions to be taken in workplaces on Wednesday this week.

“These actions can add to the pressure on the government to call for an immediate ceasefire now.”

Everyone can do something on Wednesday—and the actions need to be as militant and disruptive as possible.Tomorrow, Sun 4 Feb, day school Palestine, imperialism and the struggle for freedom, 11am-4pm, central London. For details and to book go to http://tinyurl.com/Palestine0402

Marches in Edinburgh and Cardiff

Up to 10,000 people joined a demonstration for Palestine in Edinburgh. Hector reports, “It’s the biggest demonstration in Edinburgh since the start of the movement—and the biggest demo in the city since the big Scottish independence marches. It saw the best trade union turnout so far, which we hope is a good sign for the day of action on Wednesday.

“There were contingents or banners from the PCS, Unison, Unite, Aslef, EIS, RMT and NASUWT unions. “There was also a sizeable Jewish bloc for the first time too.”

Around 400 people marched in Cardiff, reports Helen. “A loud and dynamic demo in a wet and windy city. Chants against Sunak and Starmer, calling Israel a terror state.”
Five damning factsEarlier this week World Health Organisation director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a briefing that “Over 100,000 Gazans are either dead, injured, or missing and presumed dead.”

In the week since the International Court of Justice ruled Israel could plausibly be carrying out genocide in Gaza, the Israeli military has killed at least 874 Palestinians.
Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant has officially declared, “Victory will not be complete until the military expands into Rafah.” Rafah is the enclave in south of Gaza where 1 million or more Palestinians are sheltering.

“Most of Gaza’s population is in Rafah,” Emad, a Palestinian, told Reuters News Agency. “If the tanks storm in, we will be left with two choices—stay and die or climb the walls into Egypt. It will be a massacre like never before during this war.” Jens Laerke of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs told a briefing in Geneva, “Rafah is a pressure cooker of despair, and we fear for what comes next.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development released a report this week on the social and economic destruction in Gaza since 7 October. It says that if the current military operation were to end immediately with reconstruction starting right away and the 2007-2022 growth trend persists, it would take Gaza until 2092 just to restore the economic production levels of 2022. 



THE REAL LEADER OF REAL LABOUR
Jeremy Corbyn leads protesters in London calling for a ceasefire in Gaza - with 20,000 joining march, despite organisers claiming 'hundreds of thousands' would be demonstrating


DAILY MAIL
3 February 2024

Jeremy Corbyn led protesters in London calling for a ceasefire in Gaza today - with 20,000 joining the march despite organisers claiming 'hundreds of thousands' would be demonstrating.

The former Labour Party leader was seen at the front of the protest surrounded by signs calling for peace before he made a speech imploring Rishi Sunak to call for a ceasefire.

Mr Corbyn said: 'We march because we believe; we march because the Palestinian people want and need our support.

'If we don't get a ceasefire here, the war goes on...we are the voice for peace.'

Meanwhile, protesters brought a large effigy of the current Labour Party leader, Sir Keir Starmer, with the words 'Starmer for genocide' written on its forehead.

Sir Keir was previously called a 'genocide enabler' and accused of having blood on his hands after he and other politicians refused to back calls for a ceasefire in Gaza.


Jeremy Corbyn (pictured) led protesters in London calling for a ceasefire in Gaza today

The former Labour Party leader was seen at the front of the march surrounded by signs calling for a ceasefire

Mr Corbyn marched through the crowds before giving a speech imploring Rishi Sunak to call for a ceasefire in Gaza

Protesters made their feelings known about Labour Party Leader Keir Starmer by creating an effigy of him

The effigy of Sir Keir had the words 'Starmer for genocide' written on its forehead

Mr Corbyn gave a speech to the crowds imploring Rishi Sunak to call for a ceasefire
Thousands march through London in support of Gaza ceasefire



TRENDING

Today's London march was the first since the International Court of Justice scolded Israel for its strikes on areas of Gaza heavily populated by civilians, following a claim by South Africa that Israel is perpetrating genocide - an accusation it denies.

Organisers from the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) had predicted 'hundreds of thousands' of people to attend the march, which set off at noon from Portland Place in Marylebone.

The Met says it made a number of arrests after one marcher was accused of setting off a suspected smoke bomb or flare, while another was handcuffed for allegedly chanting slogans that could incite racial hatred.

Scotland Yard has dispatched hundreds of additional officers to the streets for the protests, and said on Saturday: 'The vast majority of those joining protests have done so in a lawful and peaceful way but a minority have broken the law and arrests have been made.'

It says 'anyone crossing the line today should expect to be dealt with swiftly...(including) anyone who carries placards and banners, or makes statements, that may be a religious or racially aggravated offence'.

In a video message the senior officer running the operation vowed the force would not tolerate hate or inexcusable behaviour.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Matt Ward said in a clip posted on X, formerly Twitter: 'I know that these protests can be incredibly disruptive to businesses, to residents, to people trying to travel through central London.


Mr Corbyn said: 'We march because we believe; we march because the Palestinian people want and need our support'

Keir Starmer attends the Memorial Service for former Commons Speaker Betty Boothroyd at St Margaret's Church last month

Protesters have gathered in Whitehall outside Downing Street to hear speeches from the likes of Jeremy Corbyn on Gaza


The protesters gathered on Portland Place before marching down Regent Street towards Westminster


This is the eighth national 'day of action' calling for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas


Protesters with their faces painted in the colours of the Palestinian flag listen to speeches on Whitehall

A man wearing a Rishi Sunak mask and a prisoner's uniform during the march in London

Protesters are marching through London in the first major pro-Palestine action since the International Court of Justice called on Israel to minimise civilian casualties

Protesters march down Regent Street heading for Westminster as they call for a ceasefire in Gaza

A woman with a megaphone rallies pro-Palestine activists as they march through London

Pro-Palestine protesters continue to claim that Israel is perpetrating genocide - a claim the country has strongly rebuked


Pro-Palestine protesters gathered in London's Portland Place ahead of the march to Whitehall

The parade is winding its way through central London and will end on Whitehall, where speeches will be made

READ MORE: Hundreds of pro-Palestine campaigners target Barclays' 54 bank branches over allegations they are funding Israel's attacks

'But I want to reassure you that the majority of protesters will be peaceful and we've got an extensive operation with hundreds of officers working to make sure that anybody who tries to cause any difficulties is dealt with swiftly and effectively.'

While the PSC had said 'hundreds of thousands (were) expected in London', the Met estimated around 20,000 people were taking part, according to a post the force made on X.


READ MORE: Protesters target Science Museum in latest anti-Israel demo

Protesters carried banners reading 'Freedom for Palestine' and 'End the Occupation' as they marched down Regent Street, where police stood at the side of the roads outside shops.

Some carried signs in the shape of watermelons - in deference to the fruit's use as a symbol of Palestinian resistance to the early years of Israeli occupation, when the displaying of Palestinian flags was banned.

The procession took in Oxford Circus - which was closed to traffic for around 30 minutes as the march began - Piccadilly Circus, Haymarket, Cockspur Street and Trafalgar Square before advancing down Whitehall.

The road outside Downing Street was initially off-limits to protesters after the Met refused to allow the march to proceed down the road while negotiating with organisers - but the force later capitulated and allowed the full route to go ahead.

Officers were seen guarding the Cenotaph, which was surrounded by waist-high metal fences.

Speakers including former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and RMT general secretary Mick Lynch are making speeches to the crowd imploring Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to call for a ceasefire.


The Metropolitan Police has said the 'majority of protesters will be peaceful' - but vowed to crack down on any disruptive actors 'swiftly and effectively'

Protestors march down Regent Street during the 'Ceasefire Now Stop The Genocide In Gaza' national UK demonstration on Saturday

Around 10,000 people are belived to be taking part in today's march, according to the Met

A woman with a face mask holds a 'watermelon' sign calling for a ceasefire in Gaza - the fruit is sometimes used as a symbol of Palestinian resistance to Israel's occupation of the territories

Protestors hold signs reading 'rom the river to the sea, Palestine will be free' - a controversial slogan among some who feel it calls for the displacement of Israel

Pro-Palestinian protesters hold up banners, flags and placards during a demonstration in London on Saturday February 3

Piers Corbyn is pictured during a pro-Palestine march in central London today, organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign

Pro-Palestinian protesters hold up banners, flags and placards during a demonstration in London on Saturday

A man holds a sign reading 'Over 9000 children killed. Stop genocide. End apartheid' during a protest in London today

Union boss Mr Lynch told the crowds: 'You have come out time and again to put your arms around the Palestinian people, to show your love and solidarity.

'History will judge us. Where were you in this period? Who did you support?

'We will keep going until we have peace in Palestine, peace in the region.'

The Met has ordered speeches to end by 5pm and for the crowds to disperse within half an hour following that time.

It has been handing leaflets to protesters advising them to 'keep on the right side of the law', with guidance on how to 'avoid ending up in our cells' through the displaying of offensive signs or those that advocate for 'acts of terrorism'.

DAC Ward has also authorised a Section 60AA order that permits officers to ask for face coverings to be removed if they suspect they are being used in order to conceal an individual's identity.

But the force has rubbished a claim from the Stop the War Coalition that it serves as a 'ban' on face coverings; the use of such orders does not extend to religious face coverings such as burqas, or to those wearing masks for medical reasons.

It said on X: 'This legislation is not a ban. It only applies if officers believe a face covering is being worn to conceal identity. It does not apply to religious face coverings and we will always be conscious of the medically vulnerable.'

Stop the War had said: 'Apart from the fact that this has not been raised at any of our meetings (with police), this is a gross violation of civil liberties.'

As with previous marches, protesters are banned from entering the area of Kensington Palace Gardens and Kensington Road outside the Israeli Embassy.

Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, accused Israel of committing 'genocide' in Gaza with its near-ceaseless shelling of the occupied territory since Hamas terrorists brutally killed 1,200 Israelis on October 7.

He said of today's protest: 'We have been marching and protesting in our hundreds of thousands for more than three months warning ... (that) Israel's actions demonstrate a genocidal intent.

'Israel has so far killed more than 27,000 Palestinian men, women and children. How long will our political leaders continue to aid and provide cover for genocide?

'We will march to Whitehall to bring our message home to Downing Street – the UK must end its complicity in Israel's genocide and demand a ceasefire now.'

Protests also took place in Cardiff, Edinburgh and in Newcastle, where protesters gathered outside the factory of weapons firm Rafael, which is headquartered in Israel.

South Wales Police said of the Cardiff procession: 'We are aware of the protest in central Cardiff today.

'We have a visible police presence in the city as officers work to ensure that visitors can go about their business safely. We are engaging with those involved and assisting in facilitating lawful, peaceful protest.'


Protesters march towards the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh during a simultaneous march in the Scottish capital

Activists gathered outside Holyrood to echo calls for a ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas

Thousands attended the Edinburgh demo, which took in Princes Street and the Royal Mile before advancing onto parliament

Pro-Palestine protesters gathered outside the Rafael weapons factory in Newcastle on Saturday as part of the national 'day of action'

Activists held a banner with the faces of Sir Keir Starmer, Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak outside the arms manufacturer

Activists stand with Palestinian flags outside the Newcastle factory of Israeli weapons firm Rafael

This is the eighth Day of Action for Palestine since Hamas invaded Israel on October 7, organised by a coalition of organisations including Stop the War, Friends of Al-Aqsa, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to 'destroy' Hamas in response to the October 7 attacks. Israel has carried out strikes and deployed troops throughout the Gaza Strip almost endlessly since October, save for mediated breaks in the conflict to allow for the exchange of hostages.

Last week, the International Court of Justice demanded that Israel do all it can to reduce civilian casualties after South Africa lodged a case alleging genocide.

READ MORE: Hamas placed booby-trap bombs on the bodies of women killed in their October 7 attack on Israel, inquiry hears

It has also told the state to avoid taking any actions that could fall under the UN's definition of genocide, which defines the act as killing, seriously harming or deliberately seeking to bring about the end of a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, including by preventing births.

In a ruling that covered most of what the African country had asked for, the 17-judge panel also called for Israel to facilitate the ongoing delivery of aid to the 1.4million Gazans that had been displaced by the war.

But Mr Netanyahu fired back, calling the fact that the court was willing to discuss the genocide charges a 'mark of shame that will not be erased for generations' as he vowed to press ahead with the war.

He said: 'Like every country, Israel has the basic right to defend itself. The court in the Hague rightfully rejected the outrageous request to take that away from us.'

'We will continue to do what is necessary to defend our country and defend our people.'

Despite this, the Associated Press reports that Hamas-sanctioned police officers are started to appear on the rubble-strewn streets of Gaza City again, suggesting the terror enclave is far from defeated.

Civil servants are also believed to be resuming duties in makeshift offices, as the group's bureaucratic arm attempts to resume public services that it has been operating since taking power in 2007.

Hamas is also studying a proposed ceasefire deal that would see fighting halt in Gaza so further prisoner exchanges can be made with Israel.

But a call by the group's top political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, for the IDF's military operations to 'completely end' in Gaza and for troops to withdraw has already been rejected by Israel.

The UN estimates that more than 69,000 buildings in Gaza - nearly one third of all structures in the territory - had been destroyed or moderately damaged in the months since the war began.

Earlier this week, Britain said future funding for a UN relief agency that helps Palestinians hinges on the outcome of inquiries into allegations that staff took part in the October 7 attack.


Smoke rises from an explosion in northern Gaza after an Israeli missile strike on January 31

A Palestinian girl stands in a doorway in Rafah on February 3 after a building was hit by an Israeli shell

A woman cries as she sifts through rubble of a destroyed house in Rafah following Israeli bombardment

Hamas burst into Israel on October 7 and killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians


Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to 'destroy' Hamas, maintaining that Israel has a right to defend itself

The International Court of Justice has called on Israel to do all it can to minimise civilian casualties in Gaza (pictured making its ruling last week)


Foreign Office minister Andrew Mitchell said the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) is 'critical' to delivering humanitarian aid into Gaza and the region, but added the UK is 'appalled' by the allegations of agency staff being involved in the atrocities.

The UK joined the US, Australia, Italy and other countries in pausing funding for UNRWA after it sacked a number of staff accused of taking part in the October attack.

The funding pause has sparked concerns about the impact the decision will have on the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza as the Israeli bombardment continues.

The row over funding for UNRWA comes amid rising tension in the Middle East after a drone attack on Sunday killed three US troops and injured dozens more in north-eastern Jordan, near the Syrian border.

Several opposition MPs have pressed the UK Government to suspend arms sales to Israel following an interim ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

The ICJ stopped short of ordering a ceasefire in Gaza in a genocide case filed by South Africa, but it demanded that Israel tries to contain death and damage in its military offensive.





Union reaches deal with 4 hotel-casinos, 3 others still poised to strike at start of Super Bowl week

By The Associated Press
Saturday, February 3, 2024

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A union representing hospitality workers has reached a tentative agreement with four hotel-casinos in downtown Las Vegas as employees at three other properties remained poised to strike Monday when the city kicks off Super Bowl week.

By Saturday morning, the Culinary Workers Union had announced it had reached a tentative five-year contract with Binion’s, Four Queens, Fremont and Main Street that covers about 1,000 workers.

The Golden Nugget, Downtown Grand and Virgin Las Vegas near the Strip haven’t reached an agreement with the union.

The Las Vegas Strip’s three largest employers — MGM Resorts International, Caesar Entertainment and Wynn Resorts — reached deals late last year with union that covered 40,000 members, narrowly averting a historic strike.

The union then turned its attention to winning the same contract terms for works at other hotel-casinos in Las Vegas.

Since early January, the union had settled negotiations with most of those properties, including Circus Circus, Sahara Las Vegas, the Strat, Circa Resort and the El Cortez.

But after hitting a snag in negotiations with some of the remaining casinos, the union announced last week that it would go on strike if tentative contracts weren’t in place by 5 a.m. Monday for downtown casino workers at properties that hadn't reached agreements.

The NFL’s 58th championship game is expected to bring some 330,000 people to Las Vegas this week, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

The Culinary Union is the largest in Nevada with about 60,000 members statewide. It negotiates on behalf of its members for five-year contracts.

KULAKS

Tractors converge on Rome as farmers protest across Europe

By AFP
Published February 3, 2024

Around 150 tractors massed in Orte, around one hour north of Rome 

- Copyright AFP Thomas SAMSON

A convoy of tractors was poised to descend on Rome on Saturday as farmer protests caused disruptions across Europe but petered out in their French epicentre following government concessions.

Farmers have expressed anger at what they say are excessively restrictive regulations on agriculture and unfair competition, among other grievances.

The movement erupted in France last month and has spread to Germany, Belgium, Poland, Romania, Greece and the Netherlands in protests that have seen motorways blocked and cities swamped by tractor convoys.

Around 150 tractors massed in Orte, around one hour north of Rome, as protesters demanding better pay and conditions announced their imminent arrival in the Italian capital, an AFP reporter saw.

“Italian agriculture has woken up, it’s historic and the people here are proving it. For the first time in their history, farmers are united under the same flag, that of Italy,” said protester Felice Antonio Monfeli.

The demonstrators have demanded a hearing with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government, with protester Domenico Chiergi expecting “answers”.

“The situation is critical, we cannot be slaves in our own companies,” he said.

Around 2,000 Greek farmers protested in the country’s second-largest city of Thessaloniki on Saturday to demand aid increases, a day after Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced further support measures.

Some farmers from the mountain villages of Thessaly threw spoiled chestnuts and apples, a result of the natural disasters that hit these areas.

“We have no food, we cannot put our lives in discount. We want to stay on our land and not become migrants,” Kostas Tzelas, president of the Rural Associations of Karditsa, told AFP.

Mitsotakis extended the refund of a special consumption tax on oil and a discount on rural electricity from May to September among a package of measures whose cost Mitsotakis put at more than one billion euros ($1.1 billion).

But Tzelas said Mitsotakis’s announcements amounted to “peanuts”, and the president of a union of agricultural associations, Rizos Maroudas, told reporters a meeting was scheduled next week “to decide the escalation of blockades”.

– Airport access disrupted –

In Germany, hundreds of farmers on tractors disrupted access to Frankfurt airport, the country’s busiest, in opposition to a reform of diesel taxation, police said.

A Hesse farmers’ association estimated vehicle numbers at around 1,000, while police said 400 tractors took part before the protest ended in the early afternoon.

A protest on the Dutch-Belgian border that had shut down a main motorway was winding down on Saturday, with traffic expected to resume around 7:00 pm, according to the Belga news agency.

Farmer discontent has also affected non-EU Switzerland, where around 30 tractors paraded in Geneva on Saturday in the country’s first such protest since the movement started elsewhere in Europe.

“As a young person, it scares us a lot not knowing if there is a future in our profession,” Antonin Ramu, a 19-year-old apprentice winegrower, told AFP.

He welcomed the transition to a more environmentally friendly agriculture but asked for more help in the face of competition from countries without the same standards.

In France, security forces cleared the few remaining blockades of motorways on Saturday after the main agricultural union called for them to be lifted following government announcements.

At its peak, the movement rocked new Prime Minister Gabriel Attal’s government, forcing it to pause a plan to reduce pesticides and insecticides and offer an aid package of 400 million euros.

Romanian farmers and hauliers also announced the end of their road-blocking mobilisation on Saturday following an agreement with the government.

The EU is scrambling to address concerns ahead of European Parliament elections this year.

The European Commission on Thursday promised measures to defend the “legitimate interests” of EU farmers, notably the criticised administrative burdens of the bloc’s Common Agricultural Policy.


Greek Farmers Dump Produce in Thessaloniki to Protest Low Income 

Greek farmers from Thessaly dumped chestnuts and apples in Thessaloniki to protest low income and rising costs, demanding more support from the government. 

By Sathish Raman | Updated: Sunday, February 4, 2024,  

Representative image In a display of discontent, Greek farmers from the Thessaly region gathered in Thessaloniki on Saturday, dumping chestnuts and apples on the pavement outside an agricultural fair. This protest follows a similar demonstration by farmers from northern Greece, who arrived in Thessaloniki on tractors on Friday. 

The farmers are demanding more support from the government to address their concerns over rising inflation, foreign competition, and the financial burden of combating climate change. 

 Frustration with Government Support 

Kostas Tzelas, a farmers federation leader from Thessaly, criticized the government's proposed financial assistance, describing it as insufficient. He highlighted the farmers' concerns about losing income due to changes in the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy. 

Tzelas emphasized the need for concrete solutions to prevent farmers from emigrating and to ensure their livelihoods in Greece.

 Escalation of Protests 

The farmers from Thessaly departed after their protest, while those from northern Greece plan to remove their tractors on Sunday. 

However, they intend to meet with farmers from across Greece on Tuesday to discuss further actions, including the possibility of blocking highways to escalate their protests. 

Rejection of Meeting with Prime Minister 

The farmers have dismissed the government's proposal for a meeting with Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, labeling it as a mere photo opportunity. Tzelas expressed their lack of interest in such a meeting, emphasizing that their primary concern is addressing their pressing issues. 

The ongoing protests by Greek farmers reflect their dissatisfaction with the government's response to their challenges. As they prepare to meet on Tuesday, the farmers are determined to intensify their actions if their demands remain unmet. The situation underscores the urgency for the government to engage in meaningful dialogue and provide effective support to address the concerns of the agricultural community.

Greek farmers dump produce outside an agricultural fair and promise to escalate protest



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Protesting farmers with their tractors take part in a rally outside the annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


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Protesting farmers shout slogans as they take part in a rally outside the annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


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A farmer takes part in a rally outside the annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


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Protesting farmers with their tractors take part in a rally outside the annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


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Protesting farmers with their tractors take part in a rally outside annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


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Protesting farmers with their tractors take part in a rally outside the annual Agrotica trade fair in the port city of Thessaloniki, northern Greece, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024. Greek farmers – hit by rising costs and crop damage caused by recent floods and wildfires – gathered around the conference center hosting the event in the northern city of Thessaloniki to underline their determination to escalate protests over rising production costs by blocking highways. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos)


Saturday, February 03, 2024

Robert Reich: The Truth About The Economy – OpEd

By 

It’s the economy, stupid. Thus spoke my friend James Carville, one of Bill Clinton’s campaign managers, in 1992. He was correct then and he’s been right ever since. 

The Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. economy added 353,000 jobs in January, and the unemployment rate remains at 3.7 percent. The BLS also revised upward the two prior months, bringing the average monthly job gain in 2023 to 255,000. 

Even manufacturing, which has been in the doldrums, added 23,000 positions. 

Average hourly earnings grew 0.6 percent from December.

Few economists expected job gains to remain this strong when high interest rates were needed to bring down inflation.

But inflation is way down. Larry Summers (with whom I worked in the Clinton administration) predicted that the Fed would have to cause excessive joblessness to tame inflation (Summers also called the 2021 American Rescue Plan the “least responsible” fiscal policy in 40 years). 

He was wrong. Jobs growth continues to roar. Economic growth is good. Wages are moving in the right direction. 

Yet despite all the good news, 71 percent of Republicans say the economy is getting worse, and Donald Trump is once again claiming that the unemployment numbers are fake

Trump and Republicans are focusing on the only real remaining economic problem: Although inflation is down, prices haven’t come down. Why not? Because of corporate pricing power. 

Consider Pepsi. In 2021, PepsiCo, which makes all sorts of drinks and snacks, announced it was forced to raise prices due to “higher costs.”Forced? Really? The company reported $11 billion in profit that year

In 2023 PepsiCo’s chief financial officer said that even though inflation was dropping, its prices would not. Pepsi hiked its prices by double digits and announced plans to keep them high in 2024.

If Pepsi had lots of competitors, consumers would just buy something cheaper. But PepsiCo’s only major soda competitor is Coca-Cola, which – surprise, surprise – announced similar price hikes at about the same time as Pepsi, and also kept its prices high in 2023. 

With just one or a few competitors, it’s easy for giant corporations to coordinate price increases and prevent price cuts, to keep their profits up while shafting consumers. 

The CEO of Coca-Cola claimed that the company had “earned the right” to push price hikes because its sodas are popular. Popular? The only thing that’s popular these days seems to be corporate price gouging. 

Pepsi and Coca-Cola dominate the soft drink market. They own most of the brands that appear to be competitors. 

This corporate pricing power isn’t just happening with Coke and Pepsi. Take meat products. At the end of 2023, Americans were paying at least 30% more for beef, pork, and poultry products than they were in 2020. 

Why? Just four companies now control processing of 80 percent of beef, nearly 70 percent of pork, and almost 60 percent of poultry. So of course, it’s easy for them to coordinate price increases and prevent price cuts. 

In 75 percent of U.S. industries, fewer companies now control more of their markets than they did twenty years ago.

Which is why the Biden administration is taking on this monopolization with the most aggressive use of antitrust laws in half a century. 

It’s taken action against alleged price fixing in the meat industry

It’s also suing Amazon for using its dominance to artificially jack up prices — one of the biggest anti-monopoly lawsuits in a generation.

It successfully sued to block the merger of JetBlue and Spirit Airlines, which would have made consolidation in the airline industry even worse.

But given how concentrated American industry has become, there’s still a long way to go. 

Inflation is down. But many people don’t feel it because prices are still high, and in some cases are still rising because of continued price gouging. That’s given Trump and his Republican lapdogs an excuse to tell Americans that the economy remains bad. 

The truth is, the economy is remarkably good, but too many big corporations have too much power over prices. The answer is to break them up — but I don’t expect Trump and the Republicans to say this. Do you?



This article was published at Robert Reich’s Substack

Robert B. Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies, and writes at robertreich.substack.com. Reich served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fifteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and"Beyond Outrage," and, his most recent, "The Common Good," which is available in bookstores now. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary, "Inequality For All." He's co-creator of the Netflix original documentary "Saving Capitalism," which is streaming now.