The RadioLabour episode that carried this report can be found at: https://rabble.ca/podcast/choose-more-nurses-per-patient-or-worse-health-care/
This week the top stories sections on our Canadian French- and English-language pages included a bunch of stories about the BCGEU strike, including interviews with workers on the lines, an interview with CUPW lead negotiator Jim Gallant in which he explains why the union opted for rotating strikes and, in French, a lovely piece from the CSN about a Canada-Mexico trade union collaboration in the Trump era and, oddly, one of the better backgrounders to the Alberta Teachers Association walkout.
Other stories included coverage of the recent CUPE convention’s International Solidarity Forum which featured a presentation from Carine Metz, coordinator with the Democracy and Workers’ Rights Centre in Palestine and Lana Nazzal, president of the Palestinian Governmental Health Service Employees’ Union and a piece from Newfoundland and Labrador’s Independent detailing the extent to which working class concerns were sidelined in the provincial election that saw the Tories return to power earlier this week.
But my favourite item, among our Canadian stories at least, was a simple announcement from the CLC that it has organized a NDP leadership forum for 22 October that will be accessible via Zoom.
As LabourStart is a global organization I like to highlight at least one non-Canadian story for you. This week’s is from Palestine where Israeli forces raided the PGFTU offices.
Luc Triangle, ITUC General-Secretary, released this statement after the raid, which destroyed much of the facility for no apparent reason: ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle denounced the Israeli operation: “This attack, taking place on Palestinian territory, constitutes a serious violation of international law and of the fundamental right to freedom of association.
“It is an assault on a legitimate, democratic, representative institution of working people. Trade unions are a force for peace, dialogue, and negotiation. They are not military targets.”
Among the Canadian items appearing on our health and safety page and newswire this week was a piece with a title that says it all: “Annual workplace deaths in Canada remains high”. According to the University of Regina’s 2025 Report on Work Fatality and Injury Rates in Canada, 1,056 workers died from work-related causes in 2023, and the number is not declining.
Another was from the UNA website, echoing the call from the CFNU urging health ministers to start seriously addressing violence directed at healthcare workers.
LabourStart’s Photo of the Week, which you can catch on our main page until Monday, is from the Central Obrera Boliviana (COB), which opened its 28th National Congress on 9 October with a march through the streets of Sucre.
The labour movement’s history is what our current struggles are built on and this week we marked the anniversaries of these events:
In 1906 at Buckingham, Québec, workers locked out for organizing a union at the MacLaren pulp mill were attacked by company police. Union officers Thomas Bélanger and François Thériault were shot dead.
In 1973 a strike by immigrant workers at the Artistic Woodwork factory in suburban Toronto attracted strong support from political activists and exposed the role of police in protecting strike-breakers.
And last but definitely not least, 1976 saw the first country-wide general strike when one million workers joined in a Day of Protest against the federal government’s wage controls policy.
There are lots more labour history items like this to be found at the bottom of our Canadian news pages. Look for them and be inspired.
Speaking of inspiration, we just launched an online campaign on behalf of garment workers in Lesotho who are facing down a vicious union-busting effort by a company that supplies clothing to, you guessed it, Walmart.
This is Derek Blackadder from LabourStart reporting for RadioLabour.
