The RadioLabour episode that carried this report can be found at: https://rabble.ca/podcast/why-flower-moon-time-is-important-to-indigenous-cultures/
This week the top stories sections on our Canadian French- and English-language pages included the end, finally, of the Quebec port lockout which has seen CUPE members on the street for 32 months, a CUPE lockout record.
Also up there on the priority food chain this week were coverage of Steel’s joint workplace safety pairing with Los Mineros, a Mexican mine workers union and several statements marking the resignation of federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh.
We also carried news of the Posties gearing-up for a return to bargaining at Canada Post, an assortment of analyses of the movement’s role in the election, and some statements marking May Day. Mostly just statements but there were also some events and actions scattered across the country.
But my favourite item, among our Canadian stories at least, was from Unifor. Faced with an all-blue southern-western Ontario after the election, Unifor is moving quickly to educate a flock of new Tory MPs on the auto industry, how it works and how important it is to the regional and national economy. That should be fun.
As LabourStart is a global organization I should slip in at least one non-Canadian story worth being highlighted for you. This week that story is May Day. From a resurgent labour movement in the US coming together against the Trump regime through a joint statement from trade unionists forced into exile by authoritarian regimes around the world, to the hundreds of trade unionists arrested for violating a ban on public gatherings in Turkiye, this year’s May Day was an unusual one in good and bad ways.
Good ways for bad reasons?
An unalloyed up side to this year’s May Day was that after an anti-austerity protest in Fuseta, Portugal, I was able to add to my union May Day banners collection thanks to the good folks of the CGTP in Portugal. Obrigado camaradas!
On our Working Women News page you’ll find stories from Canada and from around the globe in 9 languages.
Stories like a piece from the HEU in BC that confirms that healthcare, where most workers are women, is the most dangerous industry in BC, CUPE’s statements at the UN’s Commission on the Status of Women, and an announcement of the winners of AUPE’s Day of Validation and Equity (DOVE) Award for 2025.
And among the Canadian items appearing on our health and safety page and newswire this week were more assaults on hospital workers in several provinces but getting the most attention was an attack on an emergency room nurse in Brandon.
LabourStart’s Photo of the Week was a shot a crowd of Argentinian actors, members of the Asociación Argentina de Actores y Actrices, at a national protest on 25 April. Like hundreds of thousands of other union members, they were demanding an end to the chainsaw policies of the Milei regime.
Labour’s history is what our current struggles are built on and this week we marked the anniversaries of these events:
This week in 1986 Shirley Carr became the first woman president of the Canadian Labour Congress. A coal miner’s daughter who became a member of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, she was also the first CLC president from a public sector union.
In 1906 socialists in Montreal organized Canada’s first May Day demonstration. The following year ten thousand people assembled in the Champs de Mars before the crowd was dispersed by police.
And finally, this week in 1952 more than 1,000 retail employees, most of them women, began a strike at Dupuis Frères, a major department store in Montréal. It took three months, but support for the new militancy among Catholic unions helped the workers win a collective agreement.
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.
LabourStart hosts online solidarity actions at the request of unions around the world. This week we’d like to highlight urgent appeals for online solidarity with trade union activists in Azerbaijan, Turkiye and Belarus.
If you can spare just a few seconds you can do your part in struggles like these by sending a solidarity or protest message.
Look for details on our site.
This is Derek Blackadder from LabourStart reporting for RadioLabour.
