Saturday, May 02, 2026

Varoufakis Decries Western Complicity as Gaza Flotilla Leaders Abducted by Israel

“This is a double violation of international law: First, Israel abducted them illegally at sea. Second, Israel is now transporting them, violently, illegally, to one of its notorious prisons.”


Demonstrators march with a banner reading, “We Block Everything,” during a May 1, 2026 Rome protest in solidarity with the Global Sumud Flotilla.
(Photo by Andrea Ronchini/NurPhoto via Getty Images)


Brett Wilkins
May 01, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

Former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis on Friday slammed European leaders—and the West at large—for what he said is their complicity in Israel’s abduction of two leaders of the Gaza-bound humanitarian aid flotilla seized off the coast of Greece.

In what numerous critics called an act of piracy, Israeli authorities intercepted the Global Sumud Flotilla on Thursday in international waters 45 nautical miles west of the Greek island Kythira and 600 nautical miles from Gaza, according to Greenpeace, whose MY Arctic Sunrise was the aid convoy’s most prominent vessel.



‘This Is Piracy’: Israel Condemned for Seizure of Gaza-Bound Flotilla Near Greece

Around 175 activists aboard 22 vessels were seized by Israeli forces. The BBC reported Friday that most of them have been released in Greece.

Some of the flotilla members said they were beaten and dragged while handcuffed. The Washington Post reported 34 people—including citizens of Australia, Colombia, Italy, Ukraine, and the United States—required medical attention for broken ribs, noses, and other injuries. Detained activists also said they were denied food and water and were forced to sleep on deliberately flooded floors.

Flotilla organizers said 31 of the remaining vessels will continue heading toward Palestine in a bid to “break the illegal siege of Gaza.”




Two members of the flotilla steering committee—Saif Abu Keshek and Thiago Ávila—were taken to Israel for interrogation.

Abu Keshek is a Spanish-Swedish citizen of Palestinian origin. Ávila is Brazilian. Israel’s Foreign Ministry claimed that Abu Keshek is “suspected of affiliation with a terrorist organization” and Ávila is “suspected of illegal activity.”

As is very often the case with Palestinians it has killed, Israel provided no evidence to support its claims against the accused.

Spain and Brazil have been outspoken critics of Israeli human rights crimes, and both countries have formally joined the South Africa-led genocide case against Israel currently before the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

Varoufakis noted on X that Ávila “has distinguished himself with repeated attempts to break the illegal, genocidal, Israeli blockage of Gaza.”

“Unlike the remaining abducted members of the Sumud Flotilla crew, which the Israeli navy disembarked in Crete, Saif and Thiago are detained and bound for an Israeli prison,” the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 co-founder continued. “This is a double violation of international law: First, Israel abducted them illegally at sea. Second, Israel is now transporting them, violently, illegally, to one of its notorious prisons.”

It is not known where Israel will send the two men. Ávila was previously held at Ayalon Prison in Ramla, along with other activists seized from the Madleen last summer. Ávila reportedly refused deportation papers and launched a hunger strike, prompting prison authorities to place him in solitary confinement.

While it is not as notorious as the Sde Teiman military prison—where former inmates and Israeli staff have described torture, rape, murder, and other abuse of Palestinians—Ayalon Prison’s alleged human rights violations include torture, medical neglect, and deliberately degrading conditions.

“Meanwhile,” Varoufakis said Friday, “the Greek government is cooperating fully in Israel’s criminal behavior, effectively surrendering its search and rescue obligations and conniving with Israel to victimize the brave crews of the Sumud Flotilla who are steadfastly, through their activism, defending international law as well as the verdict of the International Court of Justice, which has clearly and unequivocally declared Israel’s continued naval blockade of Gaza and its occupation of the Palestinian territories illegal.”

“Through their complicity and their silence, the Greek government, the European Union, the mainstream media, the West more generally, are flouting, indeed they are trashing, their supposed, much publicized, ‘Western values,’” he added.

Varoufakis is calling on the world to demand:The immediate release of Saif and Thiago;
An end to Israel’s criminal behavior in international waters;
The termination of Israel’s illegal Gaza blockade; and
That the Greek government and the European Union cease and desist from lending logistical and moral support to Israel’s genocide in Gaza and its ethnic cleansing campaigns in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Varoufakis’ call was echoed by the Global Sumud Flotilla, which demanded that “all governments do all they can to pressure the Israeli regime to release all the illegal abductees.”

Spanish officials including Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez also decried Thursday’s raid and demanded the release of the flotilla activists while calling for an end to EU-Israel Association Agreement, a bilateral trade and economic policy framework.

“Israel is once again violating international law by assaulting a civilian flotilla in waters that do not belong to it,” Sánchez said on X. “Our government is doing everything necessary to protect and assist the detained Spaniards. But that is not enough. The EU must suspend the association agreement NOW and demand that [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu comply with the law of our seas.”

On the other hand, US State Department spokesperson Tommy Piggott condemned the flotilla as a “pro-Hamas initiative” and called on allied countries “to take decisive action against this meaningless political stunt.”

The United States provides Israel with tens of billions of dollars in armed aid and diplomatic support including repeated vetoes of United Nations Security Council ceasefire resolutions for Gaza.

Israel maintains that its actions were legal. Its officials have repeatedly invoked the San Remo Manual on International Law Applicable to Armed Conflicts at Sea—often shortened to the San Remo Manual—to justify the interception and seizure of flotilla vessels attempting to reach Gaza on the high seas.

Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of cities including Athens, Barcelona, Gaza City, Istanbul, Madrid, Milan, Naples, Paris, and Rome on Thursday as protesters showed solidarity with the flotilla members and condemned Israel’s actions.

Meanwhile, Gazans continue to suffer from Israel’s bombing and blockade, which have killed or wounded more than 250,000 Palestinians and forcibly displaced, starved, or sickened around 2 million others.

Earlier this week, United Nations Assistant Secretary-General Khaled Khiari said that despite “some improvements in access and aid delivery... food security remains a challenge, while essential services, particularly water, sanitation, and health, are again on the brink of collapse.”

Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, his former defense minister, are wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes in Gaza, including murder and forced starvation.
Rights Group Petitions Israeli Supreme Court to Free Abu Safiya and 13 Other Gaza Doctors

By holding doctors from Gaza without charge, Physicians for Human Rights Israel said the military was “effectively paralyzing an entire healthcare system already made fragile by the ongoing destruction.”


Images of Palestinian doctors from Gaza detained by Israel, including Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya of Kamal Adwan Hospital, are displayed by pro-Palestinian activists protesting outside Woolwich Crown Court in London on October 14, 2025.
(Photo by Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images)

Stephen Prager
May 01, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

An Israeli human rights group is petitioning for the country’s Supreme Court to order the release of 14 doctors from Gaza who have been imprisoned for more than a year without charges.

Among them is Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital, who has been detained without charges since December 2024 and this week had his detention extended by a district court, which Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) described as “unlawful.”
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Rights Group Demands Release of Gaza’s Dr. Abu Safiya After Israeli Court Extends Detention

On Thursday, PHRI said that Israel’s Supreme Court must recognize “the special protections afforded to doctors and medical workers under international humanitarian law, as well as the urgent need for medical personnel from Gaza to carry out their duties and help rehabilitate the extensive damage inflicted on Gaza’s healthcare system.”

They called on the court to revoke the detentions of Safiya and 13 other doctors, who include pediatricians, orthopedic specialists, and surgeons.

Nearly all of the hospitals in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed during more than two years of genocidal war by Israel, and more than 1,500 healthcare workers have been killed in what UN experts have described as a “medicide.”



PHRI said that hundreds of medical workers have been targeted and arrested by the Israel Defense Forces without charge, “effectively paralyzing an entire healthcare system already made fragile by the ongoing destruction.”

“Over the past two years, testimonies from detained medical workers have described dire conditions of incarceration, including starvation and abuse amounting to torture across Israeli detention facilities,” the group said, noting that at least five of them had died in custody.

PHRI said it had submitted a request to Israel’s Supreme Court to reconsider the detention orders, but upon receiving no response, it filed a petition.

“Despite protections under international humanitarian law, and an ongoing ceasefire, doctors from Gaza are still being held without any due process, subjected to severe conditions amounting to torture,” the group said. “The continued detention of doctors who could provide urgently needed medical care—actively hinders the rehabilitation of the healthcare system and prevents any meaningful recovery.”
Far Right Israeli Settler Movement Enters Syria in a Push for “Greater Israel”

The settlers are increasingly crossing the border into Syria, with at least tacit support from the Israeli military.

April 28, 2026

Israeli army soldiers add zip ties to the mast of an Israeli flag flying at a special area for exercises during a military drill in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights on July 8, 2025.JALAA MAREY / AFP via Getty Images

Syrian journalist Oudai Efnikher is deeply familiar with life under Israeli occupation. He was born in Kafer Hareb, a village in Syria’s Golan Heights, from which he and his family were expelled after Israel seized the territory during the 1967 Six-Day War.

Now he is once again facing down Israeli forces, as they “take our land, kill our crops, and abduct our fathers.”

“This is a slow occupation, but soon, we will lose what they have not yet taken,” Efnikher told Truthout.

After Bashar al-Assad was ousted by Syrian rebels in December 2024, Israeli forces wasted no time before launching a massive aerial bombardment campaign on the country, destroying almost 80 percent of the military capacity left behind by the Assad regime.

Israeli forces also entered the demilitarized buffer zone established by a UN Security Council resolution in 1974 between the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and the rest of Syria. They seized the territory and then established a “security buffer” beyond the last demarcation line administered by UN observer forces.


“Price Tag” Attacks Part of Effort to Expand Israeli Settlements in West Bank
200 masked settlers descended on the West Bank on March 22, throwing Molotov cocktails and terrorizing Palestinians. By Theia Chatelle , Truthout March 28, 2026


The area now under Israeli military control is off-limits to Syrian civilians and government forces. Farmers have been unable to tend to their land, and landowners have little hope they will ever be able to access it again

In total, Israel now occupies an additional 177 square miles of Syrian territory than it did before the fall of Assad.

“Maybe Israel will take it all. They already have a safe zone in southern Syria, so that could ultimately be the best option for Israel,” Syrian political analyst Issam Khoury told Truthout.

But what is most concerning for Efnikher is not the Israeli military’s presence in Syria, but what has become regular incursions by Israeli settlers.

On April 22, a group of roughly 40 settlers affiliated with the far right Halutzei HaBashan movement, or the Pioneers of Bashan — a reference to the name in the Torah for the fertile territory located northeast of the Sea of Galilee, which the Torah says was once ruled by the tyrant King Og before Moses defeated him — entered Syrian territory and asked the Israeli government to legalize settlement activity there.

According to Efnikher, who has been working to monitor Israeli settlement activity in Syrian territory since Assad’s fall in December 2024, this was the fifth such incursion by Israeli settlers into Syria.


According to Etkes, this is how the Israeli settlement movement functions: by “changing the facts on the ground” until what was once unthinkable becomes reality.

The settlers see themselves as fulfilling a biblical mandate. They consider this Syrian territory part of the ancient land of Israel. Still, the Israeli military condemned the incursion, calling it “a criminal offence that endangers civilians and IDF troops.” Dror Etkes, a longtime Israeli settlement monitor who led the advocacy group Peace Now’s Settlement Watch project and later founded Kerem Navot, an organization that tracks Israeli land seizures in the West Bank, says none of this comes as a surprise.

“Nothing is surprising anymore, not after Gaza,” he said. “Many things I didn’t think would happen have happened, so I think I should be pretty cautious when it comes to predicting what will happen in this country.”

Etkes watched settlers build their first outposts in the West Bank in the 1960s, and then, after the Second Intifada, the construction of the separation barrier. “If you had asked me 10 years ago, five years ago, two years ago, not to mention 50 years ago, whether half a million Jews would be living in the West Bank, whether we would have 350, 360, 370 outposts in the West Bank, of course nobody would have said yes,” he added.

According to Etkes, this is how the Israeli settlement movement functions: by “changing the facts on the ground” until what was once unthinkable becomes reality. And this, he says, is the goal of the settlement movement — whether it’s in Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, or the West Bank.

The Pioneers of Bashan is not the only settler organization entering closed military zones to pressure the Israeli government to legalize settlements in foreign territory.

In southern Lebanon, a group called Uri Tzafon has worked to build a movement to establish outposts in territory currently occupied by the Israeli military. The group has flown drones into Lebanese territory, urging residents to leave, and planted trees to cement a claim to the land.

It was the same in Gaza with the far right Tzav 9 movement, which on more than one occasion since October 7, 2023, attempted to enter the enclave and establish outposts.


Slowly, the borders of the Israeli imagination — much like the state’s own physical borders — are being expanded by the settlement movement.

Slowly, the borders of the Israeli imagination — much like the state’s own physical borders — are being expanded by the settlement movement. In many cases, these incursions have taken place with the implicit endorsement of the Israeli military.

According to both Etkes and Efnikher, it would have been impossible for the settlers to enter Syrian territory without at least the tacit approval of Israeli forces. There are hundreds of miles of fencing dividing the Israeli-controlled Golan from Syrian territory, reinforced by hundreds of thousands of mines.

Efnikher added that there are a number of gates in the fencing that allow the Israeli military to cross into and beyond the demilitarized buffer zone, which is how the Pioneers of Bashan were able to enter Syrian territory.

The Israeli military said in a statement after detaining and escorting the settlers back to Israeli-controlled territory that “settlement in Bashan is essential to preserve the achievements of the war.”

The push for these settlements is part of the project of Greater Israel, which seeks to expand Israel’s borders to what some settlers and religious nationalists claim were the boundaries of the ancient Israelite kingdom — a biblical vision, contested by mainstream archaeology, that imagines a realm stretching from the Euphrates to the Nile, encompassing parts of modern-day Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iraq, and Egypt

But the expansionist drive is not only about land. It is also about water. Efnikher pointed to the Mantara Dam, the largest dam in Syria’s Quneitra Governorate. The dam controls water flow into the Yarmouk River, another critical water supply for southern Syria.

Before he was a journalist, Efnikher owned a restaurant overlooking the dam. It has been closed since Israeli forces expanded their occupation of the territory — a significant financial blow to him and his family, though he stressed that he is better off than most.

Israeli forces have destroyed thousands of dunams of farmland with pesticides in the process of building their outposts, and have established checkpoints — including aerial ones — to regulate the movement of Syrians near the buffer zone.

“There is a heavy psychological toll, falling heaviest on children and the elderly,” Efnikher said. “We’re talking about villages displaced since 1967 and families still affected across generations, now living through yet another occupation.”

He pointed to the West Bank as emblematic of what the Quneitra Governorate might soon become.

Israel has held control of the West Bank for so long that many Palestinians and Israelis in the territory, more than a third of whom are children, do not remember a time when it was free of Israeli outposts and settlements. Now, according to the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, there are more than 279 illegal settlements and 700,000 settlers living in the West Bank.


“This is a model [they’re] trying to copy-paste in Syria and in Lebanon. It’s the same people, coming from the same places, from the same ideological greenhouses.”

The commitments of the settlement movement vary, but at its forefront are those who see it as their personal mission to restore Jewish sovereignty over the land they claim as Greater Israel, even if it must be paid for in blood.

“It’s been almost 58 years since this project started. And all of it started actually illegal[ly] or half-legal, started without official authorization. This is a model [they’re] trying to copy-paste in Syria and in Lebanon. It’s the same people, coming from the same places, from the same ideological greenhouses,” Etkes said.

Efnikher warned that Israeli forces are intensifying their incursions in the Quneitra region: They enter the villages, make arrests — by his tally, more than 70 Syrians from the Quneitra Governorate are currently held in Israeli prisons — set up checkpoints, and then withdraw.

But Efnikher fears it is only a matter of time before they stay. The presence of the Pioneers of Bashan is one troubling sign. “They are winning,” Efnikher said of the Israeli forces. Even for Etkes, there is little hope.

“Look at what they achieved in the last 58 years in the West Bank,” he said. “They have very good reasons to be very optimistic.”


This article is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), and you are free to share and republish under the terms of the license.


Theia Chatelle

Theia Chatelle is a freelance journalist and photographer covering conflict, human rights, and displacement across the Middle East, Europe, and the United States. Based in Jerusalem, she reports on war and social movements, with a focus on human-interest storytelling and investigations into state power. Her work has appeared in The Forward, The Nation, Haaretz, and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, among other outlets. Her photography has been published by MS NOW and USA Today, among others. Chatelle holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in American Studies from Yale University. She was a 2025 fellow at the International Women’s Media Foundation and is an alumna of the Rory Peck Trust and the Type Media Center.
Hundreds of Incarcerated Migrants Go on Hunger Strike in Remote Michigan Prison


Migrants at the GEO Group-run facility demand their right to due process, edible food, and an end to sleep deprivation.
April 29, 2026

GEO Group’s North Lake Processing Center near Baldwin, Michigan
.@CWYONKERS via Instagram

Hundreds of immigrant men at North Lake Processing Center, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility, began a hunger strike on April 20 in an attempt to assert their rights to due process, edible food, and an end to sleep deprivation. Outside the prison, advocates from all over Michigan converged to offer solidarity to those inside and share the strikers’ demands with the wider public.

“There are people who want to speak and want their voices to be heard … but [ICE] is covering everything up,” says a man who was released from the prison on April 24 after winning a habeas corpus petition. The man, identified by the pseudonym Juan in a Spanish-language interview released to the press, says that “almost everyone” inside the prison is participating in the hunger strike.


The Prison Up North

Most visitors to Baldwin, Michigan, are there for outdoor recreation. Located a three-and-a-half-hour drive from Detroit, Baldwin has a small downtown with an ice cream shop, a pizza joint, and a boat store catering to summer tourists, just like most other small towns in the area. Tall pine trees sprout from both sides of the highway leading into the town and signs for campgrounds and boat launches abound. But a few blocks away is one of the largest immigrant prisons in the country, North Lake Processing Center, where around 1,400 immigrants are currently jailed.

The prison is almost hidden; it’s easy to drive past the unassuming street where it’s located. Unlike most state prisons, there are no road signs indicating its location and it cannot be seen from the highway. Instead, it’s tucked into the pine trees located a few blocks through a neighborhood off Route 10 where the paved road turns to dirt.



As Opposition Grows, Oklahoma Organizers Share How They Halted an ICE Warehouse
Organizers also channeled mass outrage into long-haul organizing for immigration justice in Oklahoma and beyond. By Lydia Pelot-Hobbs , Truthout April 25, 2026

At close range, though, the razor wire and the guard tower come into view.

North Lake Processing Center is a privately run ICE prison operated by the GEO Group. Originally opened in 1999, and closed by the Biden administration in 2022, it recently resumed jailing immigrants as part of Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign. Since its reopening in June 2025, it has quickly filled with people from Detroit, Chicago, and throughout Michigan and Ohio as part of the Trump administration’s ramped-up attacks on immigrants.

Conditions in the prison, by all reports, are abysmal. Attorney Diana Marin, who represents clients at North Lake in filing habeas corpus petitions, told Truthout the descriptions she hears are consistently the same. There is the sleep deprivation — the lights are only off from 12:00 am to 5:00 am, and even then, guards shine flashlights inside cells and keep their radios on full volume, making it impossible to find any rest. Then there is the food: Rations are inconsistent and of poor quality. “I have not had an individual that I represented or have talked to who has told me, no, there’s enough food here,” Marin says.

The medical care, or lack of it, is another major concern. In February, advocates organized a phone zap for someone who had an abscess in his mouth that began to limit his ability to speak after medical staff gave him ibuprofen and no antibiotics. According to Marin, this remedy is fairly typical at North Lake, regardless of symptoms.

Deaths in ICE facilities are at record highs and many seem to stem from inadequate medical care. At North Lake, Nenko Stanev Gantchev, a Bulgarian man who had lived in Chicago for 30 years, died in December. The cause of his death is unclear, although his family says he did not receive necessary medical attention while in the facility.

The uncertainty gives new weight to the poor conditions. People imprisoned at North Lake have been waiting for months, some as long as a year, and many say they have no idea what’s happening with their cases.

Isidro is a volunteer hotline operator with Asamblea Popular, a rapid response and ICE watch group in Detroit that receives dozens of calls each week from people imprisoned at North Lake. She says that immigrants held in the prison are given so little information that sometimes they call the hotline just to see if operators can Google information about their cases. (Isidro is using a pseudonym to protect her mutual aid work from state repression.)

Marin, who has represented and consulted with dozens of individuals at the facility, highlights that imprisonment itself is traumatic, especially for people who were picked up by ICE as they went about their daily errands, or as they fulfilled their legal obligations at immigration check-in appointments. Now, she says, “It’s incredulous to them that … their entire every single day is dictated by whatever it is the GEO Group decides is going to happen to them.”


Hunger Strike Builds Hope Out of Despair



For over a week, the hunger strike has rolled across North Lake, with some units dropping out while other men joined in. Reports indicate that the men were also withholding labor.

JR Martin, a member of No Detention Centers in Michigan, a group that has been fighting the North Lake prison since the first Trump administration, told Truthout that hunger strikes are “a common occurrence in ICE detention, but also part of the history of this particular facility. No Detention Centers in Michigan was supporting people who were incarcerated at North Lake between 2019 and 2022, who were organizing hunger strikes in response to conditions that are strikingly similar.”

The same week the strike began at North Lake, men at an immigrant detention facility in Pennsylvania also began a hunger strike. That prison, Moshannon Valley, is also run by GEO Group.

Details about the strike are difficult to confirm due to the monitoring of communications from imprisoned people and the fears of retaliation. One unit of men at North Lake reported to outside supporters that they stopped striking after guards came by and seemed to be taking down names of those refusing to eat, but other units continued on. Those imprisoned at the facility fear having their support networks broken up by being transferred within the prison, or worse, to one of the infamous immigration jails in the South as retaliation for fighting back.

The strikers have shared a list of demands orally with outside supporters. The top three are that ICE officials speak with them to explain why they are being held, that they be released on bond as happened in the past, and that decisions about their status need to come more quickly, since many have been waiting for more than 120 days for resolution to their cases. They also argue they should not be at the mercy of immigration judges, who are employed directly by the Trump administration. They call for more food, of increased quality, and improvements in the laundry since the clothes issued and laundered by GEO Group make them itchy. Finally, they ask for an end to arbitrary rules, such as a 6:00 am headcount, and for conditions that allow for regular sleep.


“They haven’t lost perspective that there’s value in doing something even if it’s just to keep the hope alive.”

Testimony from those in North Lake regularly echoes a call for human dignity and an end to the treatment that undermines it. Marin says that when she has spoken with strikers, although they were hungry and dizzy, “they haven’t lost perspective that there’s value in doing something even if it’s just to keep the hope alive.”

“I think the longer folks are in there, the more they’re going to figure out ways to build community and to come together to give each other hope that either there’s going to be outside knowledge about what’s happening or … their demands will be met,” Marin says.

ICE issued a statement to news outlets denying the strike, concluding with the claim that “being in detention is a choice” and that those detained could self-deport. One of the strikers, Ahmad Alnajdawi, says that he has requested a final removal order and even offered to pay for his own flight, but is still imprisoned in the facility. “I don’t know why I’m sitting here,” he told a public radio reporter. “I’m not fighting my case, I’m not applying for bond, I’m waiving my right for asylum, appeal, for everything,” Alnajdawi said, making a plea to those outside the prison’s walls to recognize that everyone in North Lake is a person with loved ones.


Women’s Collective Civil Action



While the hunger strike is in the men’s units, Isidro and Marin both highlighted the plight of the women at North Lake. “Women are probably bearing the brunt of this in ways that are unaccounted for and not spoken about enough,” Marin told Truthout.

“It’s not surprising that the inequities that exist on the outside are also being replicated on the inside. I think women find it harder to have supportive family or spouses on the outside that are really going to fight for them,” Marin said.

Some of the women, however, are fighting for themselves. Thirteen women at North Lake have filed a joint petition for habeas corpus, calling themselves the Women’s Collective Civil Action, or WCCA. The petition highlights the terror the women experienced as they were abducted by men in plainclothes, and their concerns for the children from whom they’ve been separated. Some women in the facility are victims of domestic violence, who might have been eligible for visas through the Violence Against Women Act in the past.

Isidro spoke to a woman who called the hotline for support because she believed she might be a few months pregnant. “She has no real way of knowing. I don’t know what medical attention they’re getting in there for things like that,” Isidro said.


Solidarity on the Outside



On April 21, the second day of the strike, supporters of the people held at North Lake protested outside of the prison. Despite less than 24 hours’ notice, approximately 40 people from across Michigan made the trek to protest outside the fence that Tuesday afternoon, including people from Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, and Ypsilanti. Later that week, on April 26, about 75 supporters gathered to show their continuing support.

Protesters stand outside North Lake’s main gate on April 21, 2026, in solidarity with prisoners on strike.@CWYONKERS via Instagram

Those inside “have been made to feel that they are alone or that they should be hopeless. And I think everyone wants to do as much as we can to let them know that we’re with them and that no one should be treated this way. No one should be held by ICE or confined for profit by the GEO group,” Martin, whose group coordinated the protest, told Truthout.

The presence reflects the large network of people around the state who are working overtime to support those imprisoned in North Lake, not just through demonstrations outside the gates but through hotlines, commissary funds, rent funds, bond funds, and more. These groups, like No Detention Centers in Michigan, build on earlier immigrant solidarity networks, but most of them have expanded dramatically and taken on new forms in the last year.

No Detention Centers in Michigan learned about the strike quickly and has been able to support it because, as Martin said, organizers “already had something in place that was intended to support people in detention and to resist the expansion of this system and also to recognize the connections between the immigration detention system and the carceral system more broadly.”

For her part, Isidro says that the work is personal. “It is my community,” she told Truthout. Marin, meanwhile, refers to her work at North Lake as her “pro bono docket,” which she does in addition to her full-time job in employment law.

A week into the strike, a group of clergy in Michigan announced a fast in solidarity with the hunger strikers, calling for anyone to join them. “I think people have come from all over the state because they know that this is the largest detention facility in the Midwest, and they’re horrified that this facility exists, that it has ever existed, and that it’s now serving the purpose that it does, which is to hold … people who’ve been kidnapped from the broader region and beyond,” Martin says.

At time of publication, the hunger strike and actions in support of it are ongoing.

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This article is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), and you are free to share and republish under the terms of the license.


October Krausch


October Krausch, Ph.D., is a public sociologist, activist and writer in the Detroit metro area. Their writing has been published in Truthout, In These Times, Inside Higher Ed and The Progressive, among others. They have been involved in a range of community movements including anti-eviction movements, free schools, independent media and Latin American solidarity work, and are currently facilitating the Abolitionist Book Club, an inside/outside reading group with members of the Black Prisoners Caucus. Always working to balance love and rage, October finds freedom in the struggle.




For Decades, Trans People Have Helped Lead the Fight Against Sexual Violence

Today, trans and gender-nonconforming survivors continue a legacy of resistance that goes back longer than we may know.

April 29, 2026

People attend the Trans Day of Visibility Rally hosted by the Christopher Street Project on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on March 31, 2025.Bryan Dozier / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images

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Over the past year, we have seen the Trump administration repeatedly use the specter of sexual violence to scapegoat immigrants and trans people — specifically women and transfeminine people. Both historically and currently, these groups are disproportionately likely to face sexual violence, but in the right-wing narrative, they have been reframed as its perpetrators. While breathtaking in its hypocritical victim-blaming, this story is actually an old one: Powerful men excuse or deny their own acts of sexual violence while demonizing marginalized communities as the “real” threat to justify their repression.

But for as long as that story has unfolded, people have resisted. Every April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, a time to recommit to supporting survivors and preventing sexual assault. This year, I want to focus on some of those stories of resistance. For decades, trans people, queens, butches, and other gender-nonconforming people in the U.S. have resisted sexual violence in countless ways — whether through seeking policy change, opening their homes to other survivors, telling their stories, escaping attackers, confronting harassment, or organizing others to support survivors. What follows are just a few examples.


Frances Thompson’s 1866 Testimony

Frances Thompson, a Black disabled woman, was one of the many Black people attacked by white people during the Memphis Massacre of 1866. In the aftermath, she testified before Congress about her experience of being raped. Her testimony was part of an effort to pass the Reconstruction Amendments, and she won. Partly because of her testimony, Congress passed the 14th Amendment, guaranteeing equal protection under the law to all people.

The promise of that amendment has yet to be realized. It did not even protect Thompson in her lifetime: Years after her testimony, authorities arrested and stripped her — another sexual assault at the hands of white men. Thompson was fined and jailed after these authorities learned that she was a transgender woman, and the white press speculated that, as a trans woman, she must have lied about getting attacked. She continued to speak out, telling a reporter about mistreatment from the chief of police — allegations the reporter declined to put in print. But Thompson’s legacy lives on, and still today, Black people, trans people, women, and disabled people targeted by the government use the 14th amendment as a legal tool to demand equal treatment.

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The vitriol of Trump’s anti-trans attacks has stoked anti-trans violence by prison staff and other incarcerated people. By Gabriel Arkles , Truthout/TheAppeal March 31, 2026



Ralph Kerwineo’s 1914 Article

Ralph Kerwineo, a multiracial clerk in Milwaukee, catapulted into the public spotlight when his first wife, Mamie White, went to the police to report that he was assigned female at birth. She did so after he had left her and married a younger woman, Dorothy Klenowski. When put on trial, Kerwineo managed to convince the judge that he lived and dressed as a man solely for economic and safety reasons, not for any “immoral” purpose. Kerwineo used the media spotlight to condemn male violence toward women, writing about the prevalence of sexual harassment particularly in the workplace. He explained, “Don’t misunderstand me; there are good men in the world, just as there are good women, but living, both as a man and a woman, I have found that most men do not consider sexual sins of any great consequences. Two-thirds of the physicians I met made a nurse’s virtue the price of influence in getting her steady work.” Klenowski shared the same message, telling a reporter that she “had to leave place after place of employment because of the overtures to me by either the proprietors or others in authority.”


Don Solovich’s 1923 Report

Don Solovich, a Serbian-speaking immigrant, performer, server, and butler, refused to be silent when they encountered violence. One day in 1923, Solovich met a man named Macon Irby on the street in California. Irby commented on Solovich’s visible femininity, and Solovich explained they were a female impersonator. The two decided to get a hotel room together. Irby tried to initiate sex, but Solovich said no, after which Irby beat and robbed them. Solovich went to the police, and Irby was charged with robbery. Irby’s defense was that it was Solovich who tried to initiate sex, which outraged Irby so much that he beat Solovich. Irby denied taking their money and, in explaining why he beat them, imitated the feminine way Solovich walked for the jury. The first jury could not reach a verdict, so Irby was tried again, and Solovich would have had to testify again. That jury convicted, but the conviction was then overturned on appeal — the prosecutor had elicited testimony implying that Irby had sex with men, which the appellate court ruled was irrelevant to the issue of robbery. Years later, Solovich was killed, and their killer offered a similar defense for his violence in court.


Mabel Hampton’s Escapes, Around 1910, 1921

Mabel Hampton, a Black stud, dancer, singer, and domestic worker, encountered sexual assault numerous times in her life — and she found ways to get away. Her uncle tried to rape her when she was just 8 years old. She screamed and kicked, and soon after, she ran away, using money she earned dancing for change on the street to leave town. When she was a teenager, strangers assaulted her, and she managed to dash onto a subway car to escape when they tried to move her, narrowly dodging a thrown knife. This time she told her friends, who drew their own knives and looked for her attackers. Hampton supported civil rights and lesbian movements over the course of decades, and she co-founded the Lesbian Herstory Archives in 1974.


Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray’s 1940 Letters

Pauli Murray, the Black transmasculine lawyer, writer, professor, reverend, and saint, is probably best known for their brilliant legal strategies opposing race and sex discrimination. But before they became a lawyer, they had their own encounters with the legal system. In 1940, when Murray was traveling with their girlfriend Adelene “Mac” McBean through Virginia, they were both arrested for objecting to the racist treatment they received on a segregated bus. After white officers jailed them, some of the men in an adjacent cell started verbally harassing Murray and Mac. These men also used an angled mirror under the cell door to look at them, depriving them of any privacy. In response, Murray applied principles of nonviolent struggle and wrote a letter to the men, explaining how they had come to be arrested and stressing how unjust racial segregation was. The harassment stopped. Four men pushed apology notes back to them. The women Murray and Mac were confined with also became less hostile. As Murray wrote in one of their memoirs, “eventually we were all agreeing on the need for solidarity in the struggle for racial emancipation.”


Stormé DeLarverie’s 1969 Bail Money

Stormé DeLarverie, a disabled Black performer, survived plenty of violence in her life. While sometimes called a butch lesbian, male impersonator, drag king, trans man, gender-bender, or nonbinary person, she refused labels and expressed no preference on the gendered language people use. Deeply committed to protecting her community from street-based harassment and other violence, she not only worked as a bouncer at a lesbian bar, she also regularly patrolled the streets in her off hours to see if anyone could use her help. That’s what DeLarverie was doing at Stonewall in 1969 — just seeing if anyone needed anything. When a cop called her a slur and punched her in the eye, though, she spun around and knocked him out with one punch. Then she went home to tend her eye and get money so she could bail out anyone who needed it. She was often armed and never shied away from confronting someone harassing LGBTQ+ people, all of whom she considered her babies. Later in her life, she told an interviewer: “I’m a human being that survived. I’ve helped other people survive.”


Sylvia Rivera’s 1973 Speech

Sylvia Rivera, a Puerto Rican street queen, revolutionary, and another Stonewall veteran, supported her community’s safety through many means, including direct action and mutual aid. Rivera’s 1973 speech — now famous thanks to Tourmaline’s archival work — is a powerful example of how she called on others to show up for gay people beaten and raped in jail. “I’ve been trying to get up here all day for your gay brothers and your gay sisters in jail that write me every motherfucking week and ask for your help, and you all don’t do a goddamn thing for them. Have you ever been beaten up and raped in jail?” she asked the crowd. “They’ve been beaten up and raped after they’ve had to spend much of their money in jail to get their self home and to try to get their sex changes.… I have been to jail. I have been raped, and beaten.”

Rivera took the audience to task for failing their siblings, but she didn’t stop there. She called on them to come to the headquarters of the organization she co-founded — Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) — to learn more. Among other things, the STAR Manifesto demanded “the right to self-determination over the use of our bodies” and “the immediate end of all police harassment.”


Dee Deirdre Farmer’s 1989 Lawsuit

Before Dee Deirdre Farmer brought her case to the Supreme Court and won, prison officials had nearly complete impunity when it came to allowing sexual violence in prisons. Farmer nonetheless pursued a case in 1989 demanding accountability after officials ignored the risk she faced as a young trans woman in a federal penitentiary for adult men, leading to her rape. She brought her case without a lawyer through the lower courts and all the way up to the Supreme Court, finally getting representation from the ACLU once she had convinced the Supreme Court to hear her case. Against the odds, she won, with the Supreme Court unanimously ruling in 1994 that violent assault was not “part of the penalty” for breaking the law. Her case has since been cited tens of thousands of times. In the decades since, Farmer has continued to advocate for trans, LGBTQ+, HIV-positive, and disabled people in prison, assisting over a thousand incarcerated people with their own cases.


Lorena Borjas’s Cart and Folding Bed, 1980s to 2020

Lorena Borjas, an immigrant from Mexico and survivor of trafficking, police violence, and domestic violence, helped countless other trans Latina New Yorkers survive pandemics, poverty, and violence. She worked relentlessly, usually without pay, to protect her community. She filled her cart with condoms and food and brought it to trans sex workers on the streets in Queens. Borjas welcomed trans people who didn’t have a safe place to stay into her own home, where she had a folding bed for them to sleep on. She connected trafficking survivors with immigration lawyers. She raised money to post bail. For countless survivors, she offered advice, connection, support, and love.


Juan Evans’s 2014 March

Juan Evans, a formerly incarcerated trans man and organizer with Racial Justice Action Center and Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative (SnapCo) in Atlanta, spent his life fighting for prison abolition and the freedom, health, and safety of trans sex workers and Black women, among others. In 2014, he was pulled over, and the police officer, surprised by his ID and gender presentation, demanded to know about his genitals. The officer arrested Evans for being trans, repeatedly threatening him with the assault of a strip search to inspect his genitals and calling him a “thing” and an “it.” His wife, his lawyer, and his boss came to the station and got him out. Afterward, Evans led a march and rally to demand change and spoke to the press. He received an official apology from the mayor and worked with others at SnapCo to push for better policies and training for police. Through SnapCo, he also used somatic healing to address the trauma of the experience, and continued organizing to close jails.


Alyssa Rodriguez’s 2022 Settlement

Alyssa Rodriguez, a Puerto Rican trans New Yorker, was criminalized and incarcerated several times, and advocated for herself and other LGBTQ+ people in carceral systems. She was confined in juvenile detention as a teen, where she was denied hormone treatment, forced to wear boys’ clothes and underwear, and punished for her femininity. She started legal action in 2006 that ultimately led to important changes in how transfeminine, gender-nonconforming, and LGBTQ+ young people were treated in juvenile detention in New York State. Years later, Rodriguez brought a lawsuit against the New York City Department of Correction when officials’ actions led to her rape on Rikers Island. While she passed away in 2020 before her lawsuit concluded, her estate settled the case for $1.4 million.

Fighting sexual assault has been a key part of many liberation movements, including movements for trans and queer liberation. Today, trans and gender-nonconforming survivors continue a legacy of resistance that goes back longer than we know. Trans and gender-nonconforming people — in the midst of the unrelenting and seemingly ever-escalating attacks on our communities — continue to organize to provide shelter, support each other, find safer havens, share our stories, defend ourselves, mobilize to protect rights, and demand accountability.


This article is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), and you are free to share and republish under the terms of the license.

Gabriel Arkles
Gabriel Arkles is an attorney and writer based in Brooklyn, New York. His work has also appeared in publications such as NBC News, CBS, the Advocate, Scholar and Feminist Online, NYU Law Review, Northeastern Law Journal, Southwestern Law Review, and Signs. He writes in his individual capacity, and his views do not necessarily reflect those of his employer.




New Poll Shows Americans Reject Trump’s Plans to Redesign Washington, DC

The poll also found that a plan to place Trump’s name on US currency is deeply unpopular.
April 30, 2026

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shows an artist's rendering of President Donald Trump's planned Triumphal Arch during a press briefing on April 15, 2026.Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images

New polling indicates that most Americans are opposed to President Donald Trump’s vanity projects, including his plans to reshape the look of Washington, D.C. and to put his name on U.S. currency.

Within a Washington Post/ABC News/Ipsos poll that was published on Thursday, respondents were asked their opinions on Trump tearing down portions of the East Wing of the White House, to be replaced with an extravagant, reportedly $400 million ballroom. Even with the caveat that the project would be financed by private donors, only 28 percent of respondents said they supported the project, while 56 percent were opposed.

Support for Trump’s vision for a 250-foot-tall triumphal arch near the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery was equally low. Only 21 percent of Americans said the project should move forward, while 52 percent were opposed.

And asked whether they approved of Trump’s signature replacing the Treasury Secretary’s name on U.S. dollar bills, only 12 percent of Americans said they liked the idea, while 68 percent were opposed, the poll found.

Trump is pushing for other projects featuring his likeness to move forward, too, including a redesign of art inside U.S. passports to include his portrait. The poll did not inquire about that proposal, as the administration released the idea to the public as the survey was being conducted. But given the low approval ratings of Trump’s other projects — and his current job approval numbers sinking to record lows — it’s highly unlikely that changes to the passport design would receive wide approval from the public.

Indeed, other surveys indicate a distaste for the proposed passport redesign. A recent YouGov poll asking Americans their opinions on passports including Trump’s likeness found that only 18 percent would prefer passports with that imagery, while 67 percent would pick a passport without Trump’s face, if given the option.

Many of Trump’s proposed changes have generated widespread controversy. The triumphal arch, for example, received just under 1,000 responses during a public comment period, 100 percent of which were deemed to be opposed to the project. Despite those comments — and a veterans group voicing its intent to sue over its construction — the Commission of Fine Arts (whose members were all selected by Trump) voted to advance the planned building of the monument.

The ballroom project is supposed to be financed by private donors, Trump said, a move that raises concerns about conflicts of interest, as many of the companies and billionaires that have pledged to contribute are poised to benefit from policies the administration may enact relating to their business ventures. Donors for the ballroom also include companies that have profited from Trump’s draconian anti-immigration policies, as well as Israel’s occupation of Palestine and its genocide in Gaza.

In recent days, some Republican senators have pushed for the U.S. government to fund the entirety of the ballroom project, citing the shooting at the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA) dinner last weekend.

“If you don’t think $400 million of taxpayer money is a good investment to create a secure facility at the White House, then I disagree,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina). “I bet you 90 percent of Americans would love to have a better facility.”
NOT NICE

More Details Emerge of Trump’s Secret Use of ICE to Spy on Critics

Privacy groups are pushing Big Tech to notify users about federal surveillance after anonymous ICE critics were exposed.
April 30, 2026
Immigrant rights protesters participate in a demonstration to draw attention to tech companies involvement in the immigration enforcement system on October 11, 2019, in New York City.Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Lawmakers and privacy advocates are demanding answers from the Trump administration about its weaponization of digital tools and popular web platforms to spy on critics and activists. Targets have included a student who attended a pro-Palestine protest and anonymous web users posting about President Donald Trump’s violent immigration crackdown, but the administration’s secret systems of surveillance likely cast a wide net.

Privacy groups are also making demands of Big Tech firms such as Meta and Google, which have come under pressure from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to hand over identifying information for anonymous users. Officials from the agency have wielded legally dubious administrative subpoenasmeant to be used to determine duties on imported products — in an attempt to compel the information.

The efforts to expose domestic spying under the Trump administration offer a preview of how Democrats could yield subpoena power next year if voters hand them the House majority in November. Rep. Delia Ramirez, a Democrat from Illinois who was appointed ranking member of the cybersecurity subcommittee of the House Committee on Homeland Security this week, said emerging technologies are being used to violate civil rights and target Trump’s critics.

“The Trump-Miller regime is weaponizing the government and abusing every authority to persecute anyone whom they perceive as an enemy,” Ramirez told Truthout in a text on April 29, referencing Stephen Miller, the anti-immigrant extremist serving as a top adviser to Trump. “And fascism always requires a public enemy.”


ICE Targets Personal Information of Trump Critics

On April 17, attorneys with the Civil Liberties Defense Center filed a motion in federal court to throw out a grand jury subpoena that Reddit received from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) demanding “extensive private information” about an anonymous user. The user had posted statements critical of ICE and other political content on Reddit, a popular online discussion forum.

Reddit originally received an administrative subpoena from an ICE official in Virginia demanding the user’s personal information, The Intercept first reported earlier this month. The Civil Liberties Defense Center, representing the Reddit user, immediately filed a motion against the summons. Rather than defend the original administrative subpoena in court, ICE switched tactics in early April and demanded that Reddit attorneys appear before a secret grand jury, according to organization’s executive director Lauren Regan.


Trump’s ICE Has Started Targeting Activists, Not Just Immigrants
ICE demanded Meta hand over personal information attached to Instagram accounts that track immigration raids. By Mike Ludwig , Truthout October 1, 2025


“First the government is filing these administrative summonses in hopes that the users won’t know what do to or how to challenge them in court, and as soon as lawyers step in litigating the lawfulness of these subpoenas and summonses, the administration is withdrawing them so there isn’t a court ruling against them in regard to these shenanigans,” Regan said in a recent interview with Truthout.

On April 22, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) sued DHS for the release of public records detailing the use of administrative subpoenas by ICE to try and unmask the administration’s online critics. So far, what little is publicly known about the practice comes from Regan and other civil liberties attorneys who have defended web users against ICE’s subpoenas.

In at least six cases reported in 2025, ICE claimed users were “doxxing” immigration agents by documenting their activity online, part of a broader crowd-sourcing movement that works to publicly identify masked agents who make violent arrests and alert communities about their presence. Attorneys for the users argue that social media posts and websites such as StopICE.net are protected by the First Amendment.

According to the EFF complaint, the administrative subpoenas are issued under an obscure 1930 tariff law that empowers customs officials to file summonses for “determining liability for customs duties, taxes, fees, and other monetary obligations arising from the importation of merchandise into the United States.”

However, since early 2025, DHS and ICE have issued subpoenas under the 1930 law to web platforms including Google, Meta, Reddit, and Discord demanding names, email addresses, and IP addresses linked to anonymous accounts, the complaint alleges. The lawsuit was filed under the Freedom of Information Act.

EFF Deputy Legal Director Aaron Mackey said DHS should not claim legal authority to unmask online critics and then run away from court when attorneys for the same users challenge the administrative subpoenas.

“We want to know if there has been any internal audit, and if the office of legal counsel has actually looked at any of this and said, ‘yes this is legal,’ and what are the legal reasons,” Mackey said in an interview on April 29.

Targeted via Google After 5 Minutes at a Protest

As a Ph.D. candidate with a British passport studying at Cornell University in upstate New York, Amandla Thomas-Johnson thought he would be “the last person to be hunted down by the immigration authorities.” However, Thomas-Johnson is Black and attended a pro-Palestine protest on campus in October 2024 as pro-Israel groups used a mix of doxxing, public threats, and financial pressure to push university leaders to punish anti-genocide activists as campus protests spread nationwide.

Thomas-Johnson said he spent only five minutes at the protest but was banned from campus shortly after. When Trump returned to office in January 2025, Thomas-Johnson went into hiding at a professor’s rural home. Three months later, after a friend was detained at an airport in Florida and questioned about his whereabouts, Thomas-Johnson self-deported to Canada before fleeing to Switzerland.

“I did not return to the UK as reports that pro-Palestine journalists had been arrested there made me fearful,” Thomas-Johnson wrote in October 2025. “I hoped my arrival in Switzerland would mark the end of my ordeal.”

After a few weeks in Switzerland, Thomas-Johnson received an email from Google informing him that the company had revealed his personal information to DHS. At first, he was not alarmed because an associate, Momodou Taal, had received similar emails from Google and Facebook notifying him that the U.S. government had requested personal information. After Taal challenged the requests — administrative subpoenas likely filed under the 1930 tariff law — law enforcement eventually withdrew them and Taal’s data reportedly remained private.

“This is the standard playbook for authoritarianism I think — intimidation of the people, and making the people live in fear,” Regan said. “Making them think that if they critique the government or have beliefs contrary to the current regime in power, then somewhere they will be threatened and targeted.”

During Trump’s first administration, tech companies routinely fought federal subpoenas on behalf of their users who were targeted for protected speech, according to The Intercept. However, in Thomas-Johnson’s case, Google released personal information to DHS before notifying him and providing time to challenge the request in court.

“My data was handed over without warning — at the request of an administration targeting students engaged in protected political speech,” Thomas-Johnson wrote for EFF on April 14.

For nearly a decade, Google has promised billions of users that it will notify them before disclosing their personal data to law enforcement — and the company has done so many times, according to EFF. On Google’s Privacy & Terms page, the company pledges that, “When we receive a request from a government agency, we send an email to the user account before disclosing information.” However, the group says that promise was broken in Thomas-Johnson’s case.

On April 14, EFF sent complaints on behalf of Thomas-Johnson to the attorneys general of California and New York requesting they investigate Google for deceptive trade practices.

“Google should answer the question: How many other times has it broken its promise to users?” EFF Senior Staff Attorney F. Mario Trujillo said in a statement on April 14. “Advance notice is especially important now, when agencies like ICE are unconstitutionally targeting users for First Amendment-protected activity.”

In an email, a Google spokesperson said all subpoenas undergo a review process designed to protect user privacy while also meeting legal obligations.

“We inform users when their accounts have been subpoenaed, unless under legal order not to or in an exceptional circumstance,” the spokesperson said. “We push back against those that are overbroad, including objecting to some entirely.”

Mackey said EFF is also suing DHS for more information on the practice, but Congress must also provide oversight and accountability. Lawmakers must use their own subpoena power to determine the extent of surveillance under Trump.

Democrats Demand Answers About Israeli Spyware

The lawsuit came as Democrats in Congress continue to press DHS for details about domestic surveillance. ICE’s acting director, Todd Lyons, acknowledged earlier this month that the agency is deploying Israeli spyware that can intercept encrypted messages, as well as advanced data tools that monitor smartphones and social media to enforce Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

The admission came several months after House Democrats Summer Lee (Pennsylvania), Shontel Brown (Ohio), and Yassamin Ansari (Arizona) sent a letter to DHS demanding information on the department’s use of foreign spyware.

The lawmakers had requested information about Graphite, a spyware program produced by the Israeli firm Paragon Solutions that can covertly access encrypted messages, photos, and location data on smart devices. In an April 3 joint statement, the lawmakers said Lyons acknowledged that ICE is using a “specific tool” but did not name Graphite and “failed to provide the documentation and evidence requested by Congress to verify what safeguards, standards, and oversight mechanisms are actually in place.”

“They are moving forward with invasive spyware technology inside the United States, and instead of answering the serious constitutional and civil rights concerns that we raised, DHS is asking the public to accept vague assurances and fear-based justifications,” Representative Lee said.


“We must be clear that giving our rights away won’t ensure our security,” Ramirez said. “That’s why we must — through oversight, policy, and regulation — take away every weapon fascists would wield against us.”

Lee added that the people most at risk — including immigrants, Black and Brown people, journalists, and anyone speaking against the government — deserve more from ICE, an agency with “a long record of overreach and abuse.”

“Constitutional rights do not disappear because this administration wants more surveillance power, and fear tactics cannot be used as a way to sidestep accountability, privacy, and due process,” Lee said, adding that she will continue to fight for transparency.

Transparency may be difficult to achieve while the GOP controls Congress, but Representative Ramirez said more oversight could come if the balance of power changes after the midterms. Ramirez said she is also looking at oversight of consumer technology, such as Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses, which have been used to identify and record unsuspecting people in public.

“We must be clear that giving our rights away won’t ensure our security,” Ramirez said. “That’s why we must — through oversight, policy, and regulation — take away every weapon fascists would wield against us.”

Interview

The Unions We Need Will Be Built by Workers, Not Labor Officials


Organizer Daniel Gross explains how to make sure that union building actually works and is sustained over time.
PublishedMay 1, 2026

Striking Starbucks workers walk the picket line in New York on December 1, 2025.ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images

Despite a hostile labor environment, the number of workers under a union contract in the U.S. reached a 16-year high in 2025, and public support for unions hit as high as 71 percent. The labor movement secured a number of impressive victories, including a new contract for dockworkers that raised wages by 60 percent following a brief strike, and unionized journalists at Politico and E&E News (PEN Guild) won an arbitration case against the company’s management over its adoption of artificial intelligence tools. Yet, the far greater union growth and coordinated working-class power that can systemically challenge the agenda of the ruling class remains elusive. In his “State of the U.S. Unions 2026” report, labor movement researcher Eric Dirnbach noted half of all union members live in just seven states, which he referred to as alarming numbers that represent a long-term existential crisis for the labor movement. “The decline of the labor movement,” he writes, “is no doubt one of the factors that have enabled Trumpism to capture the nation.”

In Unions of Our Own, longtime labor organizer Daniel Gross suggests the type of power that can challenge the ruling class may emerge when workers themselves — not union officials — design and refine unions that meet their needs. The new book introduces an accessible step-by-step union model framework to help workers take on the task of building unions that actually work for them, informed by decades of Gross’s own organizing experience — including as a founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World Starbucks Workers Union in 2004 — and countless conversations with other worker-organizers. Bringing together insights that have achieved victories going back over a century, the union model framework is being used by a growing community of workers in diverse industries.

In the conversation that follows, Gross discusses the eight building blocks of unions outlined in Unions of Our Own, the difference between union organizing and union building, solidarity unionism versus traditional unionism, and lessons learned from the era when capitalists and the state repressed solidarity unionism.

This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

Ella Fassler: So, to start, why did you decide to write Unions of Our Own? Was there a gap in the literature about unions you were trying to fill?


The State Is Escalating Charges Against Protesters. Labor Must Defend Them.
John Caravello is facing decades in prison for an anti-ICE protest. He needs labor to build a national defense campaign. By Blanca Missé , Truthout March 11, 2026


Daniel Gross: Yeah, I think two things came together. One, I am just really blessed from the work I’ve gotten to do in my life to connect with a lot of visionary workers that want to do unionism where they work and in their industries. They want to do unionism grounded in racial and gender justice. They’re concerned, in many cases, about capitalism, and they, of course, want to win. And the thing that just comes up again and again are the questions: Can unionism be done in a different way? Can we have our own union? Can our values be deeply embedded in the union, with respect to how we want to be at work, but also regarding how our companies show up in the world?

I’ve been doing this work for a minute and I have learned a bunch. First of all, by failures. My first foray into the labor movement was definitely a swing and a miss at Borders bookstore around 2000. That experience started a journey where I became obsessed with questions like, “What does it take to maximize the chance of victory?” Through my own experience accompanying others, and then really nerding out on a large number of historic and contemporary campaigns, I found that there are these eight building blocks to building and sustaining unions that really deliver needs to workers.

You joke that the book isn’t a beach read meant for entertainment — it’s clearly one that’s geared toward taking action, and the book’s structure, along the lines of those eight building blocks, makes that clear. Can you talk a little bit more about what they are?

Yeah, absolutely. It gets to the second part in the prior question, you know, what’s out there? Of course, you don’t want to duplicate good work already being done. I had many questions during many conversations with workers: “Hey, what resources are you finding out there? What are you not finding out there?” And then, of course, my own observation of what’s going on. There are many really good resource books out there. What I found, though, is that these books are largely about union organizing. They answer the questions: How do we get a structure of co-workers together, carry out a plan, and win our demands?

To kind of put it in simple terms, organizing is the heart of those books.

But really to safeguard and make sure that organizing actually works and is sustained over time — that requires something bigger. In the book, I call that bigger piece union building. That piece is not out there. Union building, for example, involves assessing various mechanisms for holding worker gains. Traditional collective bargaining agreements are considered one mechanism, but there are many others. I think the implicit idea with the union organizing framework has been that considering these types of things are above the pay grade of co-workers on the job. The assumption has been that there are professionals who will worry about that and who make those decisions for them. Unions of Our Own is trying to wrest open those fundamental questions and decision-making spaces for workers.

The other piece: A lot of what’s out there, as good as it is, has the implication that there is one method of organizing, it’s tried and true, and the problem is that we’re just not doing it well enough. We have to train more. We have to be more disciplined. We have to run the recipe all the way. There are good people that promote this. It’s not bad or shady, but I just fundamentally have not seen it to be true that there is a certain method and you can just carry it out like a checklist and then you’ll have your needs met, your vision is going to be expressed in the world, and you’re going to have a sustainable union.

Even with all the great training, initiatives, and ideas and strategies and money being expended, there’s been a 70- to 80-year decline in labor unionism in the United States. Once a certain traditional model of unionism consolidated — we’re talking around 1950 — as the hegemon, to use that big word, unionism has been on decline. If there’s one really, really central belief in the book, it’s actually that co-workers are best positioned to figure out their own successful union models, and they actually have a really unique power to be able to do that well by virtue of being workers.

On the other hand, we’ve seen that starting with a blank slate is not a good idea. It doesn’t work. It doesn’t work because it’s really hard, and if we do it that way, we’re cut off from working-class wisdom that exists today that has come before.


Co-workers are best positioned to figure out their own successful union models, and they actually have a really unique power to be able to do that well by virtue of being workers.

So what the book offers up is neither the cookie-cutter nor the blank-slate approach. It’s saying here’s a framework. The eight blocks of the framework are: constituency, problem, solution, strategy, mechanism, structure, funding, and metrics. The framework is about having the context to know where there’s big decisions you have to make, and helps you test those decisions out.

Yeah, it seems to offer a Middle Way approach, to use a Buddhist analogy, which I think you referenced in the book.

At least I know one reader will appreciate that!

So, as long as I’ve known you, you’ve been an advocate of rank-and-file unionism as opposed to traditional unionism. How do you relate to, or introduce, these different union models in your book? Do you encourage rank-and-file unionism?

Yes, absolutely. So yes, I’m definitely a rank-and-file unionist. That’s been the through line. I got lucky in a way. That’s the tradition I connected in right away from the beginning. The book doesn’t hide the type of unionism I believe in, but I don’t dismiss any union form in the book. Really, what it does is tee up for workers to be able to have that debate, to be able to have that discussion and test out a particular model. What I’m really against is this idea that there are forces not on the shop floor who have taken away that decision-making space.

I say this explicitly in the book: Whatever vision a group of co-workers wants to pursue, they’re going to have my full support and my full respect, but at least they’ll have the ability to weigh their options.

There are many types of unionisms out there. Social movement unionism, community unionism, open-source unionism, class struggle unionism. Every day someone invents a new unionism. What the book is saying is that, yes, there are all those types, but the first decision tree is really between two types: traditional unionism and solidarity unionism.

Traditional unionism will have the hard structural elements of representational type of unionism. It’s the kind of unionism where the goal is around an exclusive collective bargaining agreement with a certain type of provisions that have to do with how the union is funded.

And then solidarity unionism is directly led and operated by workers. It’s not a representational model, and that has really major ramifications. It has a preference for direct action. They both have pros and cons. I get into both in the book.

I think this is going to be one of the more (hopefully) important parts of the book — to really open up that question to workers. Because typically you connect with some resource, or some union connects with you, and all of that decision-making, all that thinking, it’s already been done for them. No one’s like, “Hey, what type of union do you want to form?” They mostly say, “We’re going to organize you into our union.”

Imagine solidarity unionism really does expand in the U.S. What do you think are the most important lessons we could take from the era when it was more prominent in the early 1900s, but was ultimately repressed and co-opted, to ensure we don’t make the same mistakes today?

Solidarity unions need to make these types of unions more sustainable. That’s been the knot on solidarity unionism. The critique is often overplayed, or overstated, and there is a lot of straw-manning of solidarity unionism, but it is also the most important critique of solidarity unionism.

The book is obsessed with sustainability. My argument is that it really takes these eight building blocks working together and working in their own right so we have a union that renews itself. That’s really what sustainability is. It has to renew itself over time. We need unions where we’re creating value by solving yesterday’s injustices, but also where we can expect value for each other in the future. How we hold our gains, and how we tie those things to membership experience is a key part.

The other part, which I get into the book as well, is the question of repression. The reality is that solidarity unionism was taken down partially from outright murder, kidnapping, imprisonment, deportation, and destruction of materials, records, and literature. I try to use the most concrete language possible to just wake us up. It is very, very, very devastating. What I found, sadly, while looking at labor trends in many countries around the world, is that there’s still assassination, kidnapping, and violence and threats against families today. Colombia is a standout.

So I think we need to try to preempt these forms of repression. One of the ways to preempt it is really to think about the first element of the model I get into called constituency. How do we think about the different segments of society, the different groups, different individuals that we bring together into our models, our unions? That connectedness to other groups can make a union harder to repress. It is important to have explicit preemptive strategies against repression.

And then, of course, you need strategies for active defense and responsiveness to repression because you’re not going to be able to preempt it all.

It can be hard to feel hopeful about labor organizing with that horrifying history, and grim ongoing reality for many workers, in mind. I saw you were described as a very “optimistic” organizer in a blurb about Unions of Our Own. So, I’m wondering, what are the most hopeful labor movement trends that you’re seeing right now?

Yeah, I laugh at that “optimistic” part because a lot of people say that to me. I am a pretty optimistic person. I guess that’s a compliment. I don’t know about that. I think what I’m endlessly hopeful about is the quest for freedom and the desire for freedom and dignity.

But to get to your question more specifically, I am optimistic about the labor movement. Definitely in recent years, the turn to unionism, as I mentioned in the book, has been absolutely undeniable. There is motion in the working class in the U.S. Every month there’s a new group of workers that have always been exploited getting organized. Just in my personal trajectory, I can tell you, it’s like living on a different planet. I’m from the generation when there was one labor reporter at a large national publication. There was one dude! Now, thankfully, I can’t get through the amount of excellent labor reporting that takes place in any given week.


Every month there’s a new group of workers that have always been exploited getting organized.

Then there’s the big but, right? The big but is that the vast, vast majority of us are still screwed at work and are mostly unorganized as a working class. And that means we are screwed in society. We have the oligarch theft of a pretty unfathomable proportion of resources and power and water and land. So, with all this motion, this commendable, undeniable motion, we still have not seen that growth in unionism and working-class power that one would want to see.

It is a great honor to try to bring something into the mix that actually says the wisdom, the answers and the journey to test and refine those answers, comes from folks employed together on the shop floor. The more we can be clear about that, the more we could take down the myth that a lawyer or professionals are going to be the ones that can get you out of the predicament. The more we can challenge that notion, the better.

Beautifully said. Thank you so much for your time, and for your commitment to struggle. As we wrap up, where can people find you and Unions of Our Own?

From the book’s website, folks can purchase the book, access ready-to-use tools for free, register for companion trainings, and even get confidential one-on-one support to deal with problems at work. They can also follow me on Bluesky.


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Ella Fassler

Ella Fassler is an independent journalist based in Providence, Rhode Island. Their work on social movements, labor, technology and the carceral system has been featured in Teen Vogue, The Boston Globe, The Nation, Vice, The Appeal, Slate, Mic, In These Times, and elsewhere. Follow them on Twitter or Bluesky.