Thursday, April 17, 2025

THE RESISTANCE

'This Is Not Trump's Country': 255,000 Have Rallied With Sanders and AOC on Nationwide Tour

"This week, the American people turned out in enormous numbers," said Sen. Bernie Sanders. "And their message was clear. They do not want oligarchy. They do not want authoritarianism."


U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez rally in Nampa, Idaho on April 14, 2025.
(Photo: Natalie Behring/Getty Images)


Jake Johnson
Apr 17, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

Across the United States—from Nampa, Idaho to Salt Lake City, Utah to Los Angeles, California—nearly 255,000 people have turned out in recent weeks for "Fighting Oligarchy" rallies headlined by Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a progressive duo that has railed against President Donald Trump and the corporate-dominated systems that spawned him while outlining a vision of a more just future.

Over the past six weeks, according to Sanders' (I-Vt.) office, 254,931 have attended 17 rallies across 11 states and millions have viewed livestreams of the events online. The most recent swing—which included seven stops across four states in less than a week—drew 146,950 people, including in competitive districts with Republican representatives.

"This week, the American people turned out in enormous numbers," Sanders said in a statement late Wednesday. "And their message was clear. They do not want oligarchy. They do not want authoritarianism. They are tired of massive income and wealth inequality and the greed of the billionaire class. They are tired of a corrupt political system that allows billionaires to buy elections. And, most importantly, they are prepared to fight back."

The massive, enthusiastic rallies signal mounting nationwide anger over the Trump administration's large-scale firings of federal workers, assault on fundamental rights, climate destruction, lawless detention and deportation of immigrants, and push to gut Medicaid and other key programs.

"This is not Trump's country. This is our country," Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said Wednesday. "The working class is coming together to defend democracy, fight for one another, and build a better future for all of us."



The events also indicate a desire among Democratic voters for their leaders to respond more forcefully to the president and his billionaire cronies, including world's richest man Elon Musk. One recent survey found that 70% of Democratic voters give their party a C grade or below for their response to Trump thus far.

"We need to fight the oligarchy, like the message says. And that's real, even in a state like Montana, where we're very red," one rallygoer told the Montana Free Press at a Missoula event on Wednesday. In the 2024 election, Trump won Montana by just under 20 points and a Republican ousted three-term Democratic incumbent Jon Tester in the Senate.

Another sign of the U.S. public's readiness to organize and fight back against the Trump administration's abuses and far-right policy agenda was mass participation in a Wednesday call hosted by the Hands Off! coalition, which helped bring millions into the streets nationwide earlier this month.



According to organizers, tens of thousands of people joined the call, which comes ahead of another national day of action planned for May.

"What we have begun to build is powerful," Rahna Epting, executive director of MoveOn, said Wednesday. "As Trump continues to chaotically and carelessly implement his wildly unpopular agenda, he creates more distrust, more outrage, and more backlash against it."

During a stop in Salt Lake City on Sunday, Ocasio-Cortez told a crowd of 20,000 that "we can make a new world, a better country where we can fight for the dignity of all people."

"It looks like living wages, Utah," said the New York Democrat. "It looks like stable housing, Utah. It looks like guaranteed healthcare, Salt Lake City. And it looks like respect for all of our differences, no matter who we are or where we come from."

AOC, Bernie Sanders, Joan Baez and Neil Young Rock in Los Angeles


 April 15, 2025
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Photograph Source: Gage Skidmore – CC BY-SA 2.0

“Your presence here today is making Donald Trump and Elon Musk very nervous,” Sen. Bernie Sanders told Angelenos on April 12 as he took the stage to a thunderous ovation at Gloria Molina Grand Park in Downtown L.A. “There are some 36,000 of you – the biggest rally yet,” stated the Independent socialist from Vermont who, along with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is spearheading the “Fight The Oligarchy” national tour to mobilize the masses to resist the Trump-Musk regime.

The enormous event included union leaders, left-leaning politicians and musicians – “Why music?” Sanders asked. “Because we’re going to make our revolution with joy!” he said from the podium following a live rendition of his theme song, John Lennon’s “Power to the People,” performed by Raise Gospel Choir. The entire five-hour Bernie-palooza can be seen on YouTube, but here is a comprehensive list of most participants and highlights. (Noticeably missing in action: Members of the Hollywood Left. Jane Fonda and company, wherefore art thou?)

At about 9:30 a.m., Raise Gospel Choir kicked the rally off with, appropriately, Jackie Wilson’s “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher.” Newly-elected Council- member Ysabel Jurado was the first officeholder to speak. The Filipina, who identified herself as being “queer” and the daughter of undocumented immigrants, quoted Bernie’s insightful comment about the tragic result of the 2024 presidential race: “The Democratic Party that had abandoned the working class found that the working class abandoned the Democratic Party.” Jurado’s comments set the tone for a recurring theme of the anti-Oligarchy rally that critiqued the corporate, establishment wing that controlled the Democrats, as well as the MAGA Republicans.

Citing her race for City Hall that unseated an incumbent, Jurado urged office seekers and campaigners to “lean into grass roots organizing. We knocked on 120,000 doors,” mailed thousands of handwritten postcards, etc., to win her Council seat. The fiery Filipina lauded LAUSD staffers that recently refused to allow ICE agents entry to elementary schools, proclaiming: “When they come after one of us, they’re coming after all of us… Fuck that!” thundered the Councilmember adorned in a red T-shirt emblazoned with the word “SOLIDARITY.” Jurado urged listeners to join organizations such as DSA – Democratic Socialists of America, who had endorsed her candidacy, as did LA Progressive and the Bernie-affiliated Our Revolution LA County.

When I interviewed Jurado during her City Council race, she said: “I come from a rich socialist tradition… It’s hot pink socialism, baby! That’s the history I come from and learning about Third World socialism, conceived of in the developing countries around the world. That is really my point of departure.”

The rally’s first union speaker, Unite HERE Local 11 Co-President Ada Briceno, struck a note of defiance, lauding “the biggest hotel strike of 2024… which beat the hell out of the billionaires.” Briceno thanked Bernie for joining the strikers a year ago at Downtown L.A.’s Hotel Figueroa. The union leader led the audience in a call and response: “When we strike!” with the crowd shouting back: “We win!”

The Red Pears performed, followed by the Congress’ youngest Representative.

Maxwell Frost, who rose to office after a school shooting as part of what the 28-year-old Floridian called the largest youth movement (against gun violence) in American history. Exuding a fighting spirit, Frost told the throng packing the park, “I can see here you have lots of people power” which, he noted, “the billionaires don’t have… It’s not about Democrats or Republicans, it’s about the people… You have to take to the streets and be loud about it.” The first congressional Gen X-er elected to Congress described those resisting the Trump regime as “freedom fighters” and quoted former Communist Party member Angela Davis: “I’m not accepting what I can’t change, I’m changing what I can’t accept.” Frost ended with another call and response, shouting out “People” with the crowd roaring back: “POWER!”

Alex Aguilar, Business Manager of the Motion Picture & Television Fund, Local 724, and other production assistants spoke out about working conditions in the entertainment industry. One compared “organizing a union” to “making a film,” and another, urging show biz proletarians to sign up to join a union, repeated famed labor slogans: “An injury to one is an injury to all” and that other oldie but goodie: “Solidarity forever!”

Brandi Good, Longshoreman, Vice President of Local 13, International Longshore and Warehouse Union, repeated “an injury to one is an injury to all,” adding “That’s the power of the labor movement.” She spoke about the fabled history of the ILWU, including “Bloody Thursday, of 1934’s great strike,” when two longshoremen were killed in San Francisco. Good went on to say, “ILWU isn’t just a union, we’re a family,” denounced automation, advocating a “fight for future technology that serves us, not replaces us,” and praised the role AOC and Bernie play in the cause.

The musician Jeff Rosenstock played for the political Woodstock, then Aidan Cullen of Pair and Care and others spoke about providing relief to victims of L.A.’s wildfires. About an hour and 50 minutes into the rally, City Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez then delivered one of the happening’s best speeches, denouncing “our country descend[ing] into a fascist oligarchy [which is] a product of policies over years.” She said it was “bullshit!” that “Trump blames immigrants and trans people, not billionaires, corporations and special interests” for America’s problems. “They want us to fight each other so we don’t fight back” against an economic system where “three individuals own more wealth than half the country combined.” (Forget about ethics – from a purely mathematical perspective alone, late stage capitalism is completely impractical and unsustainable.)

Councilmember Hernandez decried the fact that “seven [unhoused] people die on the streets every day” in L.A. and called for “building collective power and a new system.” She condemned the current system’s priorities where there’s “always money to bomb kids in Gaza, not money for kids to have a safe place to sleep… The rent is too damn high… We deserve a city where nobody sleeps on the streets, while luxury towers lie empty.” Hernandez insisted, “There’s more of us than there is of them… Do not give up. Healthcare is a human right, not a business model,” and urged people to join organizations such as DSA (which endorsed Hernandez’s during her race for City Council). In another call and response Hernandez declared: “When we fight” with the multitude answering: “We win!”

U.S. Rep. Jimmy Gomez took the stage, railing against the “billionaire establishment taking root in Washington, D.C. Are we going to stay quiet? Hell motherfucking no! We are the ‘Fuck around and find out’” generation, which led to another saucy call and response.

Guitarist Indigo de Souza played, then Sandy Reding, President of the California Nurses Association spoke: “We’re in the fight of a lifetime against corporations taking over Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.” Reding made an “O” with her hands, symbolizing her support for no cuts to these vital programs, adding: “We know who’s hoarding the wealth, it’s the billionaires, corporations.” At a sign of distress from members of the audience, true to form, the nurses stopped their speech to render offstage help to someone needing aid. Winded, returning to the podium, Reding went on to say: “They want to take the virus of capitalism – yeah, it’s a virus! – and unleash it on us. The billionaires made their money on the backs of the [masses], never forget those billions don’t belong to them.”

Nick Nunez of the National Union of Health Workers spoke about “six fucking months on strike” against Kaiser, denouncing: “They put profits over people by delaying healthcare, give CEOs benefits and perks, instead of their employees and patients.” Licensed clinical social worker Cassandra Thompson called the industrial action “the longest mental health strike in U.S. history.”

Belize-born Georgia Flowers Lee, the United Teachers LA NEA’s Vice President spoke, as did Julie Van Winkle, a special ed teacher and AFT V.P. for UTLA, condemning “send[ing] Homeland Security to schools, parents disappear. They’re bullies: stand up, punch back. We HATE them!”

Mike Miller, UAW Region 6 Director, said “the best way to fight back against billionaires is to join unions,” advocated for a general strike on May 1, 2028 and chanted another oldie but goodie: “Si se puede!” The Dirty Projectors performed and Silicon Valley Democrat Rep. Ro Khanna appeared, criticizing the Democratic establishment which “rejected Bernie in 2016 and 2020. But now they’re listening to him!” (Can Chuck Schumer turn out 36,000 people?)

Representative Pramila Jayapal urged listeners to “fight against unelected billionaires and petty grifters who want to steal from you to buy another yacht. We’re not just fighting back, we’re fighting forward… Bernie and I are introducing a Medicare for all bill again. Take the hand of the people next to you and lift it into the air. Our love is greater than their greed and our power will eclipse their cruelty.” Then it was the first Indian-American’s “great honor to introduce the moral voice of nonviolent resistance, Joan Baez!”

Accompanied by an acoustic (but of course!) guitar player the legendary Baez sang “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around”; “There But for Fortune”; and Lennon’s “Imagine.” Joined by guitar-strumming Maggie Rogers, she and Joan performed a duet of “America the Beautiful.” Perhaps in reference to the recent Bob Dylan biopic wherein she’s depicted, Joan went on to sing Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright.” Baez commented that at this rally, a sort of political mini-Yasgur’s Farm, that “it’s a much more meaningful goal than we did at Woodstock.”

Baez introduced Lorena Gonzalez, President of the California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, as the first woman and person of color to hold that post. April Verrett, President of SEIU, spoke about her recent trip to Selma, Alabama to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday at Edmond Pettis Bridge: “It was really clear to me that we’re still fighting that fight. Different tactics, same old oppression. The shit show is still happening in our country. Divide us by race to control us by class… When three Americans have more wealth than more than half the country it’s time to change the rules… We can’t just protest, we gotta disrupt. We are stronger than their greed,” Verrett insisted, harkening back to the sit-down strikes at auto factories in Flint, Michigan during the Depression.

Blowing his harmonica and strumming his guitar like an avenging wraith, Neil Young rocked the free world and the City of the Angels, belting out “Take America Back” and “Rainbow of Colors,” with Baez and Rogers accompanying him. They were a tough act to follow, but if anybody could, it was that barista-turned-congresswoman, the Democratic Socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. After wishing everyone a “Happy Passover,” the impassioned AOC demanded the release of disappeared Columbia University pro-Palestinian protest leader Mahmoud Khalil and Tufts University’s Rumeysa Ozturk, whose “thought crime” was writing a Gaza-related op-ed in the campus newspaper. AOC noted there was no evidence that they broke any laws, and lauded “the everyday people who refused to let ICE enter two LAUSD schools. It can’t be officials alone who uphold democracy, it’s the people, the masses.”

The bold and beautiful AOC reminded everyone “Donald Trump is a criminal found guilty of 34 charges [of business fraud]. Of course he’s manipulating the stock market” to enrich his cohorts. The NYC Congressmember denounced “the every-day corruption and dark money,” and members of Congress who invest in and trade stocks, including in pharmaceutical and military-related industries, for having a clear conflict of interest and possible insider trading. “How can they make objective choices?” AOC asked, adding, “It must end… I don’t care what party you are… I don’t take a dime in corporate money and you have me to standup for you.”

Although elected as a Democrat, she criticized her own party, maintaining “We need a Democratic Party that fights harder for the working class.” She criticized Democrats who voted for the GOP’s recent budget and went on to say, “We can’t turn in our neighbors. Reject division – the only way we can win is with solidarity.

After “Power to the People” was performed, Sen. Sanders stormed the stage where he and AOC – the old and the new – clasped hands and raised them overhead like the progressive champions of the downtrodden. The spry 83-year-old looked and sounded like an Old Testament prophet in a blue Dodgers baseball cap. (Of course, when Bernie was born, they were still the Brooklyn Dodgers.) Bernie thanked the union and other speakers and performers and turning to the throng said, “Mostly thanks to all of you.” Amidst resounding chants of Bernie, the lifelong socialist replied: “No – it’s not ‘Bernie’ – it’s you,” meaning the vast sea of humanity, who had turned out to attend the Fight The Oligarchy rally.

As a chopper flew overhead and a drone hovered, the Tribune of the People attacked the “President who has no understanding or respect for the constitution. They’re moving us to an authoritarian society – we ain’t going there!” Sanders recalled the stage at Trump’s inaugural address, with “the three richest men in America behind Trump. Thirteen other billionaires were also there – that’s what oligarchy is all about,” he said, referring to the Greek word that is defined as “a form of government in which power rests with a small number of people,” a system which Sanders pointed out, is opposed to “the separation of powers” crafted by America’s founders. “They never wanted to see a country under one person with unlimited power.”

The Independent Senator from Vermont went on to cite Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, which he said was delivered to honor the thousands of Union soldiers “fight[ing] the evil of slavery,” quoting the Great Emancipator’s immortal words about: “‘Government of the people, by the people, and for the people… shall not perish from the Earth.’ Not to become a government of the billionaire class, by the billionaire class, and for the billionaire class,” as the Trump-Musk regime is trying to install.

Bernie also referred to a 1940s’ State of the Union address by Pres. Franklin Roosevelt called for expanding America’s notion of rights to include economic rights. Sanders lampooned the “corrupt campaign system” that allowed Musk to give “$270 million to elect Donald Trump” and called for “overturn[ing] Citizens United. They are very religious, but their religion is not based on love or justice, it’s based on greed, greed and more greed. Addiction is a big problem, and the addiction of the oligarchy is for greed.” The Independent lawmaker did not spare the party that he caucuses with from his withering comments.

Sanders condemned Trump policy at Ukraine, Gaza, the trillions spent on the military and repeated the recurring mantra about “the three wealthiest Americans own more wealth than half of America, 170 million people. CEOs earn 300 times what” average workers do, he added, excoriating “the concentration of ownership,” noting that ordinary people die seven years earlier than the rich. Why? Stress. Worry every day how to feed their kids… All people should live out their life expectancy… The homeless sleep out on the streets.”

For those following the longtime socialist, it was standard if updated classic Bernie. But that’s one of the best things about Sanders: His consistency, especially in contrast to a White House where the slogan could be “consistency causes cancer.” Wrapping up, Bernie quoted Frederick Douglass: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will…” Bernie concluded: “They’re the 1%, we’re the 99%… They own congress and the media but they don’t own us,” which sparked an eruption of applause.

The immense rally brought individuals together out of their isolation into a solid mass. The mood was high-spirited – there was no violence, although people were inspired to continue the struggle against an oligarchical takeover of the U.S. and for a more just world. I asked a young woman who identified herself as “Cat, a supporter born and raised in L.A., who’s tired of the way things are now and would like some change,” what she thought of the marathon of the masses, and she gushed: “It was beautiful! Bernie said all the right things.”

Her friend Shelby, an L.A., documentarian making a film about the Eaton fire, added: “It’s good to see some action. It’s about damn time, I want to see more of this from the Democrats. If we’re going to get together collectively as a party, we need leadership like this and we want to see real action in our democracy. It’s really great to see people showing up,” in huge numbers that demonstrate the deep discontent with the Trump-Musk regime.

I asked, “Can you rely on the Democrats or should we try to create independent force?” and Shelby replied: “With the Republicans as they are, we Democrats can’t split up. The Democratic Party needs to shift to what the people want.”

The Fight The Oligarchy tour – which after L.A. went on to the Coachella music festival, Salt Lake City, Idaho and beyond – raises profound questions. Especially considering the abundant criticism not only of the GOP, but of the Democratic Party as well. Should the masses mobilize to oust the control of corporate, establishment Democrats to lead the party with a more economic populist, working class politics? Or will the bourgeois wing of the party use Bernie and AOC to rouse the rabble, only to then cast their ballots for the same old, same old corporate hacks? Should Bernie, AOC and the other left-leaning leaders and speakers seize the momentum represented by 36,000 people at L.A. and at their other very well-attended rallies to spearhead a new pro-people front and force independent of both the Republicans and a “Democratic Party where progressive ideas go to die,” as former Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb once reportedly said?

The backdrop for the April 12 Fight The Oligarchy rally at Gloria Molina Grand Park was L.A. City Hall. During the 1950s, in the Adventures of Superman TV series, that City Hall doubled as the Daily Planet Building, where “mild mannered reporter” Clark Kent would secretly change into Superman and fly out of a window to fight for “truth, justice and the American way.” What the huge, enthusiastic turnout at the Fight The Oligarchy demo showed is that the real superhero is not a “strange visitor from another planet,” but rather the ordinary people, when they are organized, united and determined to fight for their rights against the privileges of the few. That’s our real superpower.

For info re: the “Fight The Oligarchy” tour, including schedule information, see: https://berniesanders.com/oligarchy/.

Ed Rampell was named after legendary CBS broadcaster Edward R. Murrow because of his TV exposes of Senator Joe McCarthy. Rampell majored in Cinema at Manhattan’s Hunter College and is an L.A.-based film historian/critic who co-organized the 2017 70th anniversary Blacklist remembrance at the Writers Guild theater in Beverly Hills and was a moderator at 2019’s “Blacklist Exiles in Mexico” filmfest and conference at the San Francisco Art Institute. Rampell co-presented “The Hollywood Ten at 75” film series at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and is the author of Progressive Hollywood, A People’s Film History of the United States and co-author of The Hawaii Movie and Television Book.    

WORKERS CAPITAL

Omers loaded up on stocks after Trump’s tariffs pummeled markets


By Bloomberg News
Published: April 17, 2025

The Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System bought up stocks last week after Donald Trump’s tariff program pummeled global markets.


“When the market dipped, we’ve loaded up on the greatest equities,” Chief Executive Officer Blake Hutcheson said at a Canadian Club event in Toronto on Tuesday. “We were really, really active last Monday at the bottom of the market,” he said.

Public equities made up 20 per cent of Omers’ total portfolio last year, the smallest it’s ever been, according to Hutcheson. He added that the Toronto-based pension fund decreased its equity book in anticipation of the “noise.”

Hutcheson also criticized Trump’s approach to Canada. “Tariffs are going to hit us — that’s all fair game,” he said. “I am mad at the insults. I am mad about the 51st state. I am mad about the indignities toward those that don’t deserve it in our nation.”

Governments in Canada are curbing their relationships with U.S. businesses in reaction to the trade war, and Canadian consumers have been boycotting American products and cutting back on trips down south.

Hutcheson said he was concerned about the impact of the trade war in terms of sustained periods of low growth and high inflation as businesses and consumers cut back on spending. “We see in our malls, we started to see in our hotels,” he said.

But Hutcheson isn’t “terribly worried” about the implications of tariffs on the Omers’s $138.2 billion (US$100 billion) portfolio. Out of the 30 large infrastructure companies the pension plan owns, only two are directly impacted by the cross-border levies, he said.

Layan Odeh, Bloomberg News

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
BHP warns of trade war fallout as it ramps up copper output


By Bloomberg News
Published: April 17, 2025 


BHP Group Ltd. is warning U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff spree could trigger a global economic slowdown and challenge trade flows, as the world’s biggest miner posted a solid quarterly production performance for key commodities including copper and iron ore.

“Despite the limited direct impact of tariffs on BHP, the implication of slower economic growth and a fragmented trading environment could be more significant,” Chief Executive Officer Mike Henry said in a statement Thursday. “China’s ability to shift toward a consumption-led economy and for trade flows to adapt to the new environment will be key to sustaining the global outlook.”

The global commodities market has been one of the sectors most exposed to the fallout from Trump’s burgeoning trade war. That could complicate Henry’s agenda to grow BHP’s holdings of what he calls “future facing commodities” — copper and potash. The drive has been backed by revenue derived from the miner’s long-standing iron ore business, which still accounts for more than half of its earnings.

BHP’s production of copper in 2025’s first three months climbed 10 per cent, boosted by a ramp of of its Escondida operations in Chile, it said. Meanwhile, output from its Australian iron ore projects was steady at 68.1 million tons, and it kept its full-year guidance for the steel-making material unchanged.

Prices of copper — seen as a global economic bellwether — tumbled from late March as Trump launched his tariff spree, before recovering some losses. Iron ore has been comparatively stable, despite dropping below US$100 a ton during April on concerns of oversupply as Beijing battles with a property crisis and slowing economy.


Henry backed his company to benefit from the turmoil, saying investors will be attracted to its large-scale, low-cost projects. BHP is one of the lowest cost iron ore miners in the world at around $18 a ton, while selling at an average of about $83 to the market during the quarter, according to the filings.

“In the face of global volatility and policy uncertainty, BHP is poised to benefit from a flight to quality with Tier-one assets, industry-leading margins and high-return organic growth opportunities that will underpin value and returns through the cycle,” Henry said.

That doesn’t mean BHP is immune to the challenges facing the mining sector. In February, it slashed its dividend by 31 per cent.

BHP was also impacted by seasonal weather interruptions across its iron ore and coal operations during the period, which is its third quarter. Like peer Rio Tinto Group, it posted lower production quarter-on-quarter in the iron-rich Pilbara region due to severe cyclone events.

Rio reported on Wednesday that iron ore shipments had fallen nine per cent due to cyclones. The impact on BHP’s iron ore operations was comparatively smaller, but it said its coal fields in Queensland were hit by heavy rainfall, with production of the steelmaking fuel down 12 per cent on the previous three months.
Copper and potash

The company has sold off many of its coal assets and exited oil and gas under Henry’s management, turning to copper — used in electrification and key to the energy transition — for its next leg of growth. BHP made a $49 billion bid for Anglo American Plc last year, which ultimately failed.

BHP has a controlling 57.5 per cent interest in the massive Escondida project, which was hit by power outages over the reporting period. Still, it delivered better yields over the three months, driven by higher quality ore.

While its Nickel West business remains in care and maintenance, due to a crash in prices driven by oversupply from Indonesia, it is developing a major potash mine — Jansen —- in Canada, which is set to become a big supplier to the fertilizer market. The project’s first stage is 66 per cent complete, with initial production is scheduled for next year, BHP said.

Paul-Alain Hunt, Bloomberg News

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

 

Alcoa reports $20 million tariff hit on imports from Canada

Credit: Alcoa

Alcoa Corp., the largest US aluminum producer, said President Donald Trump’s 25% tariff on metal imports has cost the company $20 million since the duties went into effect.

The Pittsburgh-based company incurred the costs on imports of aluminum from Canada, its largest metal-producing region. The disclosure is one of the first indications that US companies are being adversely affected by the Trump administration’s trade war.

Alcoa, in a statement, said it has “engaged with customers, suppliers and logistics companies to avoid supply disruption.”

The aluminum producer said throughout the beginning of the year it was actively communicating with administrations, governments and policy makers regarding the impact of tariffs on trade. Chief executive officer Bill Oplinger warned investors in February that Trump’s metal import duties would put about 100,000 US jobs at risk.

(By Joe Deaux)


Free Rümeysa Öztürk Protest in Vermont




 April 16, 2025
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Image by Ron Jacobs.

I got on the city bus relatively early on the morning of April, 14, 2025.  The sun was shining, but the temperature was only a couple degrees above freezing, normal for this time of year in Vermont.  Fifteen minutes later I got off, walked a couple blocks and joined a protest outside the building housing the federal courthouse in Burlington, VT.  Between three and four hundred people were gathered, some holding Palestinian flags, some with handmade signs supporting free speech, others carried signs opposing ICE with varying degrees of vehemence.  Still others carried US flags and signs decrying the trumpist attack on the Constitution.  The demographics of the crowd were quite diverse, especially by Vermont standards.  Young adults and old ones mixed together representing the growing diversity of humans calling Vermont home these days; refugees from various African nations, Latino and African-Americans, LBGTQ+, and so on.  Jewish, Muslim, Christian and the rest of us.  The only cops were several uniformed members of the federal protective services who operate under the direction of the department of homeland security.  Who knows how many undercover were present.

The reason for the gathering was a hearing to determine the immediate fate of Rümeysa Öztürk, the graduate student and union member kidnapped off the street by masked ICE agents in Somerville, MA. Her crime? Writing an op-ed decrying Tufts actions around anti- genocide and Palestinian solidarity protests in spring 2024.  Öztürk’s odyssey since then found her seeking her freedom in a Burlington VT courtroom.  Her team of lawyers included some from the ACLU.  The protest was organized by unions in Vermont and elsewhere in New England, and a number of Palestinian and anti- genocide groups organized as the Vermont coalition for Palestinian liberation. The protesters wanted her immediate release and an end to the harassment of immigrants and visa holders for their speech. The speeches from various members of the crowd reflected these concerns. As I wandered through the crowd, seeing friends and just talking with folks, I found the general sentiment to be that the federal government’s actions against immigrants—especially those against college students and staff—represented a serious escalation in the attacks on human and civil rights in the United States. Free speech advocates and Palestinian solidarity activists agreed with individuals allied with the local Migrant Justice group that these attacks needed to be nipped in the bud and that fascism seems an actuality in 2025.

I left the gathering a couple hours later while other awaited the decision of the judge inside. The decision awaits. Meanwhile, an Instagram post from the University of Vermont’s group Students for Justice in Palestine revealed that Columbia student and green card holder Mohsen Madawi was arrested at the immigration office in Colchester, VT. when he walked in for a scheduled appointment. At the same time, the national news let the world know that the man Kilmar Abrego Garcia who was mistakenly grabbed by ICE and sent to El Salvador’s heinous prisons will not be released.

This is what fascists do.

Ron Jacobs is the author of several books, including Daydream Sunset: Sixties Counterculture in the Seventies published by CounterPunch Books. His latest book, titled Nowhere Land: Journeys Through a Broken Nation, is now available. He lives in Vermont. He can be reached at: ronj1955@gmail.com

Trump’s Illegal Deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia



 April 15, 2025
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Just a few weeks ago, the Trump administration admitted that the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a father of three who has been in the country more than decade, was an “administrative error.

Then, the U.S. Supreme Court — in a 9-0 decision backed by every Trump-appointed justice — ruled that the administration must bring Abrego Garcia back to the United States.

Now, in open defiance of the Supreme Court and without any evidence, the White House claims that Abrego Garcia is a “terrorist,” who was “sent to the right place.”

This is a blatant LIE. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote, “To this day, the Government has cited no basis in law for Abrego Garcia’s warrantless arrest, his removal to El Salvador, or his confinement in a Salvadoran prison. Nor could it. The Government remains bound by an Immigration Judge’s 2019 order expressly prohibiting Abrego Garcia’s removal to El Salvador.”

Kilmar Abrego Garcia is an innocent man and the father of three. He must not be allowed to rot in an El Salvadorian jail based on lies and defiance of our Constitution. He must be brought home immediately.

This is just another step forward in Trump’s move toward authoritarianism.

Fight back!

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Kurdistan/Turkey: A Newroz of hope against a backdrop of coup d’état

Thursday 17 April 2025, by Mireille Court

This year’s Newroz festival in Diyarbakir drew huge crowds with one hope: to finally find a political solution to the decades-long conflict in the Kurdish region. A Newroz message from the imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ (PKK), Abdullah Öcalan, was broadcast over the loudspeakers, something that had not happened for several years, as Öcalan has been in total isolation. The portrait of the charismatic PKK president was everywhere, which was not previously allowed. So was the portrait of Selahettin Demirtas, former chair of the HDP party (now DEM). Negotiating a ceasefire is no simple matter.

Turkish government negotiations with the PKK

The Turkish government is demanding that the HKG, the PKK’s armed wing, surrender its weapons and that the PKK disband. Murat Karayilan and Duran Kalkan, the two historic leaders of the armed wing, while supporting Abdullah Öcalan’s appeal, are setting conditions. One is that Turkish attacks on Iraqi Kurdistan must cease, otherwise the HKG will continue to defend itself. The other is for the PKK to hold a representative congress to dissolve the party, with free and secure access for delegates.

The leader of the MHP party - a far-right party in alliance in government with ErdoÄŸan’s AKP - Bahçeli, has just proposed a venue: the town of Mazargit, in Turkey’s Kurdish region. The idea would be to bring together PKK cadres and leaders at a venue chosen by the Turkish state, which would be an act of faith rather than trust.
All the more so as, while Bahçeli is extremely voluble on the question of negotiations, Erdoğan and the AKP remain silent.

ErdoÄŸan has another project in mind: to be re-elected president at the next presidential elections, scheduled for 2028 but probably brought forward. He cannot stand for a third term, unless his second term is shortened for some reason. In that case, he would need the agreement of three-fifths of Parliament. Rumour has it that negotiations over the release of Öcalan and other political prisoners may have something to do with this crucial vote for ErdoÄŸan. But it is unlikely that the HDP/DEM elected representatives will roll out the red carpet for ErdoÄŸan’s third term in office.

To ensure his victory, ErdoÄŸan had Ekrem ImamoÄŸlu, the very popular mayor of Istanbul, jailed on March 24, having already prevented him from running in the last presidential elections by putting him on trial for “insulting a member of the electoral commission”. This time, he’s accusing him of not having obtained his university degree from 30 years ago, required to stand for election, and of having links with a terrorist organization (the PKK).

ImamoÄŸlu has been incarcerated in the notorious Silivri prison, a huge 20,000-place complex, with no possibility of contact with other inmates. This arrest has not gone down well with a large part of the Turkish population. ImamoÄŸlu is the president of the CHP, the Kemalist party that has been the mainstay of the Turkish state for decades. Since 22 March, huge demonstrations have been taking place in both large and small towns. Can this popular movement push back ErdoÄŸan, who holds all the powers - police, army and judiciary? Nothing is less certain.

L’Anticapitaliste 27 March 2025




Attached documentskurdistan-turkey-a-newroz-of-hope-against-a-backdrop-of_a8935.pdf (PDF - 900.2 KiB)
Extraction PDF [->article8935]

Turkey
Türkiye: Political Crisis and Democratic Movement
Turkey and the Neofascist Contagion
Turkey: a mass movement builds against Erdogan’s power grab
Turkish people will not accept the death sentence for their democracy
Kurdistan: ‘Turkey must choose between the status quo, endless war and peace with the Kurds’.
Kurdistan
The Turkish State and the Kurdish Question: Contradictions and fragilities of a new hope
Syria: "The West is sacrificing dozens of peoples and faiths"
Kurds under attack on all fronts
“This revolution we are leading is a women’s revolution”
Kurdish spring defies Erdogan

Mireille Court is a member of the NPA in France.



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