Desperate for a Better Life, Uttar Pradesh Workers Queue Up for Jobs in Israel

For many of these workers, who come from economically weaker sections, the potential to improve their families’ living standards outweighs the risks of working in a conflict zone.

Lucknow: Amit Singh Chauhan, a commerce postgraduate from Lucknow, has been unable to find a job matching his qualification. Married and burdened with the responsibility of supporting his wife and parents, Chauhan sees Israel as his only hope.

“I know there is an ongoing war, but there are no opportunities here. A job in Israel can change my family’s future,” he said.

Hundreds of workers from Uttar Pradesh are queuing up at the Industrial Training Institute (ITI) in Lucknow, driven by the promise of lucrative blue-collar jobs in conflict-ridden Israel. The ongoing conflict with Hamas has not deterred them, as they weigh the prospects of earning a monthly salary between Rs 1.37 and Rs 1.92 lakh – significantly higher than what they earn in India.

For many of these workers, who come from economically weaker sections, the potential to improve their families’ living standards outweighs the risks of working in a conflict zone. Many of them are the sole breadwinners in their families, struggling to make ends meet despite working overtime.

For instance, Manoj Kumar Ram, a carpenter from Varanasi, underlined how unemployment is “killing” them.

“Unemployment is killing us here. I earn only Rs 500 a day, and with prices of essential commodities skyrocketing, it’s impossible to survive. Even with the risk, I’d rather go to Israel, where I can earn Rs 1.37 lakh a month, than stay here and face daily uncertainty,” Ram explained.

Also read: The Modi Government’s Narrative Building on Jobs Is Just Not Succeeding

For Suraj Kumar, a father of three from Basti, the decision to work in Israel was influenced by a relative who is already employed there. “If my relative can work safely despite the war, so can I. With a salary of Rs 1.65 lakh, I can ensure my children get a good education and better healthcare,” he said, reflecting the aspirations of many.

Gajendra Verma, an electrician from Sitapur, previously worked in Dubai for a meagre Rs 45,000 per month, which barely covered his expenses. “In India, skilled workers live hand-to-mouth and have no savings for their family’s future. After returning from Dubai, I decided not to stay here anymore. A job in Israel is my only chance to secure my family’s future,” Verma said, urging the government to guarantee their safety.

For Ashwani Yadav, a welder from Sant Kabir Nagar, repaying debts is the primary motivator for applying to work in Israel. “It’s humiliating to live with unpaid loans. I’ve applied through the UP government’s Sangam Rozgar portal, hoping to earn enough to pay off my debts. But both the Indian and Israeli governments must ensure our security in such a sensitive and risky environment,” he said.

Similarly, Vijay Kumar Goswami, a furniture maker earning Rs 24,000 a month, wants to work in Israel to fund his sister’s marriage and pay for his family’s medical needs. “I am afraid of going to a war-torn country, but I have no other option to improve my family’s situation,” he admitted.

While some of the workers are encouraged by relatives working in Israel, others face resistance from their families. Neeraj Kumar Kushwaha from Deoria shared how his parents are against his decision to work in Israel due to safety concerns. “They fear for my life, but with my current salary of Rs 25,000, economic hardships will never end. The opportunity to earn Rs 1.37 lakh a month is too significant to pass up,” Kushwaha explained.

The recruitment drive, organised by Israel’s Population, Immigration, and Border Authority (PIBA) in collaboration with India’s National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), began on November 26 and will conclude on December 3. The Uttar Pradesh government promoted the drive through its Rozgar Sangam portal, allowing 650 candidates to participate daily.

As of November 28, 2,437 workers from across Uttar Pradesh had taken part in the recruitment process, with 1,069 successfully selected for jobs in Israel. Kapil Dev Agarwal, the state’s minister of vocational education, skill development, and entrepreneurship, visited the ITI campus and praised the initiative. “This drive will boost the careers of Indian laborers and expand global job opportunities for them,” he said.

Raj Kumar Yadav, principal of ITI Lucknow, said that Israel is recruiting labourers in various roles, including framework carpenters, iron benders, ceramic tilers, and plasterers. “The collaboration between PIBA and NSDC is aimed at ensuring a streamlined process for Indian workers to secure jobs in Israel,” Yadav noted.

Despite the enthusiasm among these workers, concerns about safety remain unresolved. When The Wire reached out to the Israeli delegation conducting the recruitment drive, they declined to comment. “We are not allowed to speak with the media,” said one delegation member.

Individuals seeking employment like Verma and Ashwani Yadav have called on both the governments to prioritise their security. “If the government is sending us there, they must take responsibility for our safety and bring us back if the conflict escalates,” Verma stated.

Also read: Why Women’s Employment Is a Conundrum in India

The recruitment drive unfolds against the backdrop of the ongoing Israel-Palestine conflict, which escalated in October 2023 following a surprise attack by resistance group of Palestine Hamas. The conflict has led to widespread destruction in Gaza and southern Israel, claiming thousands of lives and displacing countless civilians.

Israel’s military operations in Gaza aim to dismantle Hamas, but the war has triggered a severe humanitarian crisis, with shortages of food, water, and medical supplies in Gaza. Despite international calls for a ceasefire, both sides remain locked in intense hostilities.

While the Indian government has advised its citizens in Israel to exercise caution, individuals from Uttar Pradesh continue to line up for jobs, placing their faith in the promise of better wages and a brighter future. For these workers, economic desperation leaves them with few choices, even if it means stepping into a war zone.

Democracy’s Odyssey in Pakistan: A Tale of Triumph, Tragedy and Turmoil

Pakistan needs dynamic young leaders who can bring renewed energy, innovation, and a contemporary perspective to address the evolving challenges.

Imran Khan had come roaring to Pakistan’s national politics: an outsider, a crusader, a beloved cricketer, and a national icon who brought pride to his country. However, as the political winds shifted, the darling of the Army and the once-blue-eyed boy was ousted from the government. A coalition of opposition leaders assumed control. The Army’s allegiance moved away from Khan, and the old political class of the Sharif and Bhutto family was reinstated.

Khan was suddenly out of favour. But he went to the people in his signature style – holding massive rallies, mobilising people, calling for fresh elections. Pakistan was in a storm – bearing the enduring scars of constant political trauma – since its independence and partition from India.

Angst against the army

While Khan continued pursuing his outsider politics and maintained a crusader’s image, in an unprecedented turn, his impassioned rallies morphed into a wave of public anger beyond his control. The Army’s posts were attacked by protesters and Barracks and Officers’ homes were burnt. This was an unparalleled challenge to the Army that no other political party had posed.

The stage seemed set for the demise of a politician who had successfully mobilised the masses. Following the familiar path of many politicians, Khan found himself on the opposite end of the Army. From being the darling of the Army, the former cricketer and the military became adversaries.

Orchestrated obstacles

All odds were stacked against Khan. He faces hundreds of legal cases. He was jailed. His marriage was annulled. His lieutenants were coerced. Most of his aides quit the party and condemned him. His foreign minister was humiliated. His party members are being prosecuted by military courts. The Election Commission stripped his party of its symbol and disqualified it from contesting elections. The courts conducted an unusually swift trial, convicting him within a month. This occurred in a country where a case can take years to find a hearing date in courts.

The entire leadership of Khan’s party is in jail. Independent candidates lacked the extensive organisational structure to hold rallies or organise campaign. The Internet and phone lines were shut down on the election day, and the election itself was deemed rigged by many observers. Like many past staged elections, the 2024 election was hoped to yield a result that favoured the Army. Despite these insurmountable odds, independent candidates backed by him won—97 seats out of 266 in the National Assembly—a victory no one in the establishment had anticipated.

Watch: Have the Pakistan Elections Made the Country’s Crisis Worse?

The return of Nawaz Sharif

As Khan’s predecessor, Nawaz Sharif, returned to Pakistan, all the cases initiated by Khan that had once led to Sharif’s condemnation were discarded. The path was strategically paved for the three-time Prime Minister to rein in Islamabad, with election arrangements predominantly favouring his candidacy. In spite of these manoeuvres, Sharif’s party secured only 75 seats. But Pakistan’s politics is full of surprises. As Pakistani journalist and author, Mohammad Hanif writes, “In Pakistan, the Prime Minister becomes a criminal, and a criminal becomes the Prime Minister.”

Result analysis

There are various perspectives to consider regarding this election result. One glaring aspect­, however, confronts the army and that is the resolute will of the people Independent candidates have secured more seats than organised and well-supported institutional political parties. This outcome reflects and reinforces that revolutions happen in the most adverse circumstances. This may not just be a political resentment against the establishment but a broader social movement that says, ‘We will not sit back and watch. We will use all that we have to fight back.’ There is little doubt that these election results could have been even more favourable to Khan if the polls had been conducted with neutrality and impartiality.

Intertwined relationship between politics and military

Pakistan’s influential military establishment must now be on the backfoot. It has historically governed the country through either military dictatorships or its favoured “blue-eyed politicians”. The military has wielded these political figures when convenient, only to later persecute and exile them when they ceased to serve their purpose. Yet the political class, including the Sharifs, the Bhuttos, and Khan, has allowed themselves to be manipulated as pawns of the Army. An obvious curiosity that frustrates young people with these politics is: Why do these politicians not unite against the Army? Why don’t they collaborate to build a Pakistan aligned with the ideals for which it was partitioned from India? If all of them genuinely believe in the cause of a democratic Pakistan, what has impeded their unity? The poignant words of the esteemed Urdu poet Faiz eloquently capture this shared anguish:

“This light, smeared and spotted, this night-bitten dawn
This isn’t surely the dawn we waited for so eagerly
This isn’t surely the dawn with whose desire cradled in our hearts”

The Dawn of Freedom, August 1947

Also read: Upcoming Elections in Pakistan Put Spotlight on the Youth

Pakistan’s many problems

Pakistan continues to grapple with the aftermath of the devastating flood that struck in September 2022, impacting 33 million people—approximately one-third of its population. The flood wreaked havoc, causing extensive damage to essential infrastructure, including road and railway networks, and vast swaths of rich agricultural land and crops. It displaced 8 million people and claimed numerous lives. The World Bank’s post-disaster assessment estimates damages surpassing USD 14.9 billion, with total economic losses reaching approximately USD 15.2 billion. The projected costs for rehabilitation and reconstruction stand at a minimum of USD 16.3 billion. But it is not just the extreme weather events tormenting the South Asian country; the staggering 37% poverty rate and low literacy level contribute significantly to its woes.

What the future holds

Pakistan’s 64% population is young (under 30 years old), filled with aspirations. They require education and 21st-century employable skills to navigate an ever-changing world. The problems of the past persist, and new problems are becoming more complex and challenging. Young people need a break. The people of Pakistan yearn for a reprieve. They need their politicians to not fail them. They need them to fix the curse of political dysfunction. That is why this election brings both the fear and the hope for the young people.

Although Pakistan’s journey towards political and economic stability may be narrow, it is not entirely closed; there is still a path forward. As surprising and ironic as it sounds, politicians should listen to the Army Chief’s message, “Elections are not a zero-sum competition of winning and losing but an exercise to determine the mandate of the people.” Khan, Sharif, and Bilawal Bhutto need to agree on a guiding democratic framework for the country, if not form a unity government.

To breathe life into Pakistan’s democracy and make it “functional and purposeful,” the people must be given their way. Khan and all the political prisoners should be freed and allowed to participate in the democratic processes and institutions. This will not only foster political trust but also cultivate goodwill among political actors.

Pakistan needs dynamic young leaders who can bring renewed energy, innovation, and a contemporary perspective to address the evolving challenges. The old political group has long held sway over the nation’s destiny, yet their tenure has yielded limited progress. It’s time for them to gracefully step aside and make room for fresh perspectives in Pakistan’s politics. Simultaneously, the military must revert to its intended role, embracing civilian control for harmonious democratic coexistence. Faiz’s “dawn of freedom” should be allowed a chance to shine from the clouds. That’s the only path to a prosperous and vibrant Pakistan.

Pius Fozan is a public policy student at Central European University and the Brandt School.

US Defended Amazon After Article Showed the Company Bypassed Indian law

A ‘Reuters’ report in February revealed that the US firm has been giving preferential treatment to a small group of sellers on Amazon India for years.

New Delhi: US officials rushed to defend Amazon‘s business practices in India, after Reuters reported in February that the company had favoured certain sellers on its website. Documents obtained by the news agency showed they had bypassed local law that requires foreign e-commerce companies to treat all vendors equally.

Emails were obtained through the US Freedom of Information Act from the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). They showed that US officials prepared a note for John Kerry, a top envoy of President Joe Biden, about the February 17 Reuters report. The note, contained in an email dated February 18, said that India’s antitrust watchdog had reviewed many such allegations against US e-commerce companies and found nothing wrong.

Biden’s envoy, former US Secretary of State Kerry, is in charge of climate change policy. He was scheduled to speak with India’s Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal that day. The US government was concerned that Goyal would bring up the Reuters story, so it hastily drafted a note about the article in case he did, the emails show.

“This could come up in the call since as you know Minister Goyal is prone to bring up tangential topics,” Thomas Carnegie, a US embassy official in New Delhi, emailed an official at the USTR.

Philip M. Ingeneri, another US embassy official, also told the USTR official in an email on the 18th that he had “verified” the contents of the note prepared for Kerry with Amazon India’s government affairs chief as “true and accurate.” The emails do not describe what ultimately happened during the Kerry-Goyal call.

The US embassy in New Delhi referred questions to the U.S. Department of State in Washington. It said it expected that any issues regarding US e-commerce companies’ practices in India would be reviewed by the Competition Commission of India (CCI) “with the same level of independence, transparency, and professionalism it has demonstrated in the past.”

Spokespeople for Kerry, the USTR and Goyal did not respond to Reuters queries.

The Reuters report in February, based on internal Amazon documents, revealed that the US firm has given preferential treatment to a small group of sellers on its India platform for years. They were shown to circumvent the country’s tough foreign investment rules that are aimed at protecting small Indian brick-and-mortar retailers.

The article stirred up weeks of controversy in India, sparking calls from traders to ban Amazon. The CCI said in March that the story corroborated evidence it had received against Amazon, while the Enforcement Directorate, India’s financial-crime fighting agency, asked Amazon for information and documents related to the company‘s Indian operations, Reuters has reported. The CCI enforces India’s antitrust laws.

Sensationalist language

In a March 16 email to US officials, including at the USTR’s office, Ingeneri wrote in an apparent reference to the February article, that a Reuters reporter had used “sensationalist language” and relied on Amazon‘s “activity before 2018 that was aggressive but not illegal at the time”. The next sentence in the email was redacted.

In response to questions from Reuters, a spokeswoman for Amazon India said the company had no comment.

Amazon has previously told Reuters it “does not give preferential treatment to any seller on its marketplace”, and that it “treats all sellers in a fair, transparent, and non-discriminatory manner”. But internal Amazon documents show that the e-commerce giant discounted its fees to certain sellers on its platform, and that a few dozen of Amazon‘s more than 400,000 sellers, in early 2019, accounted for about two-thirds of the e-commerce site’s online sales.

The note prepared for Kerry summarized the Reuters story’s findings. Among them: Amazon senior executive Jay Carney had been advised by colleagues in 2019 to not disclose to India’s ambassador in Washington, that two sellers on Amazon‘s Indian website accounted for a large chunk of its sales. Amazon holds indirect equity stakes in those sellers.

From 2009 to 2011, Carney served as President Biden’s communications director when Biden was vice president, before going on to serve as press secretary to President Barack Obama. The note for Kerry identified Carney as “Amazon Senior Vice President and former Obama Administration spokesman”. Carney had no comment for this article, the Amazon spokeswoman said.

Under the headline “If Asked: Allegations of Amazon E-Commerce Violations”, the note stated: “We have seen a February 17 Reuters report raising concerns about US e-commerce companies’ practices in India and note many of the allegations have been previously reviewed by the Competition Commission of India without any negative findings.” The email with the note was marked “SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED”.

“The Reuters article repeated prior allegations made by small traders,” the note stated. The partially redacted note also stated, “Since 2013, Amazon has invested over $5.5 billion in India, employs 100,000 Indians, and supports 400,000 vendors on its market.”

India’s strict foreign investment rules for e-commerce have caused friction between Washington and New Delhi, and frustrated U.S. firms with online businesses in India, such as Amazon and Walmart Inc.

The CCI in January 2020, launched a probe into Amazon on allegations that it was favouring certain sellers, but the investigation has been on hold as the company mounted a court challenge. A separate antitrust complaint against Amazon, by a group of online sellers is currently pending review by the CCI.

(Reuters)

India’s Manufacturing PMI Surges to a Decade High in October as Demand Bounces Back

The IHS Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 58.9 in October from September’s 56.8 – the highest since May 2010.

Bengaluru: India‘s factory activity expanded at its fastest pace in over a decade in October as demand and output continued to recover strongly from coronavirus-related disruptions, but firms cut more jobs, a private survey showed.

Asia’s third-largest economy is healing after shrinking a record 23.9% in the April-June quarter. The Indian government has removed most restrictions imposed to control the spread of the virus, though infections continue to climb and now number over eight million people.

The Nikkei Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by IHS Markit, rose to 58.9 in October from September’s 56.8. The reading was the highest since May 2010 and above the 50-level separating growth from contraction for the third straight month.

“Levels of new orders and output at Indian manufacturers continued to recover from the COVID-19 induced contractions seen earlier in the year,” said Pollyanna De Lima, economics associate director at IHS Markit.

“Companies were convinced that the resurgence in sales will be sustained in coming months, as indicated by a strong upturn in input buying amid restocking efforts.”

Both output and new orders, which tracks overall demand, grew at their sharpest rates in more than 12 years and foreign demand expanded at its quickest pace since December 2014.

But firms cut staff for the seventh month in a row, a streak not witnessed since the survey began in 2005, signaling a quick recovery in the consumer-driven economy may be a distant possibility.

Input and output prices increased at a faster pace last month, although most of the burden of rising price pressures was carried by firms.

That could lead overall retail inflation, which rose to an eight-month high of 7.34% in September, to remain above the Reserve Bank of India‘s medium-term target of 2-6% in coming months, reducing the chances of further easing by the central bank.

However, business optimism about the coming 12 months increased to its highest level since August 2016.

“Confidence towards the year-ahead outlook for production improved as firms hoped that fewer COVID-19 cases and the reopening of other businesses could boost output growth,” added De Lima.

In Photos: Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara’s 2020 Pritzker-Prize Winning Buildings

Farrell and McNamara have become the fourth and fifth women to receive the prize. 

New Delhi: Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara have been jointly named as the recipients of this year’s Pritzker-Prize, the highest honour in the field of architecture. Partners and co-founders of Dublin-based Grafton Architects, they are the fourth and fifth women to receive the prize.

Many believe that with more than 40 years of professional experience, their achievement not only paves the way for more female representation in the field but also correctly acknowledges architecture practice as a collective effort.

The most widely-recognised effort of Grafton, which was started by Farrell and McNamara in 1978, is a building for the Universidad de Ingeniería y Tecnología (UTEC) in Lima, Peru, which was awarded the inaugural RIBA International Prize by the Royal Institute of British Architects. In 2012, they were awarded the Silver Lion for the exhibition they presented at the Venice Architecture Biennale, the world’s most influential architectural event, after which they went on to co-curate the 2018 edition of La Biennale. Their theme for the Biennale, titled Freespace, emphasised the ability of architecture to provide “additional and unexpected generosity”

With designs for universities in Kingston, Dublin, Milan, and Toulouse already executed, higher educational institutes have become their expertise in the recent past. Among their upcoming projects, the most highly-anticipated one is a building for the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

As academics, they have held teaching positions in various institutions across the world including EPFL Lausanne and the Accademia d’Archittettura in Mendrisio, both in Switzerland. They have also held the Kenzo Tange Chair at GSD Harvard and the Louis Kahn Chair at Yale University.

In an interview, both Farrell and McNamara refer to their buildings as ‘scaffoldings’ on which lives and events play out and their outlook to architecture leans towards ‘the spaces in-between’.

Here’s a look at some of their iconic designs.

Urban Institute of Ireland, photo courtesy of Ros Kavanagh

Urban Institute of Ireland, photo courtesy of Ros Kavanagh

University Campus UTEC Lima, photo courtesy of Iwan Baan

Loreto Community School, photo courtesy of Ros Kavanagh

Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, School of Economics, photo courtesy of Dennis Gilbert

Town House Building, Kingston University, photo courtesy of Ed Reeves

Universita Luigi Bocconi, photo courtesy of Federico Brunetti

Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, School of Economics, photo courtesy of Dennis Gilbert

University Campus UTEC Lima, photo courtesy of Iwan Baan

 

Universita Luigi Bocconi, photo courtesy of Federico Brunetti

 

A Major Ideological Power-Shift in American Politics

The United States should prepare for the possibility of a socialist in the White House.

Senator Bernie Sanders’s victory in the New Hampshire Democratic party primary election, strong showing in Iowa, and lead in national polls, indicates a major ideological-power-shift in American politics is underway. The United States should prepare for the possibility of a socialist in the White House – an unprecedented prospect in a nation born capitalist, dominated by a business culture, the American Dream of the “self-made man”, and beyond the spectre of class conflict.

The American Dream, however, is increasingly out of reach and seen as such. This is by now so obvious that even the corporate-friendly Forbes magazine, in a recent article entitled ‘Why Young Voters are Embracing Bernie Sanders and Democratic Socialism‘, argued:

“A combination of crushing student loan debt, low-wage jobs and escalating home and rental costs has a huge impact on Millennials… In light of their situation, it’s not surprising that Bernie Sanders is surging in the polls and the idea of socialism is gaining traction among young people”.

Forbes might well also have added glaring income and wealth inequality at levels matching those experienced in 1916 – which had also led to the formation of socialist and labour parties across the US, and election to office of hundreds of socialists.

Today, and in the recent past, support for socialism, and even communism, has reached record levels, especially among millennials. In a 2018 Gallup survey, 57% of Democratic-leaners viewed socialism positively, while their perception of capitalism declined to just 47%.

More remarkably, and indicating the de-legitimisation of mainstream party politics, 16% of Republican-leaning voters reportedly held a positive view of socialism in the 2018 poll.

Voter turnout in the New Hampshire Democratic primary election – at over 300,000 – surpassed the level in 2016 (250,000) and the record level in 2008 (265,000).

Sanders won the largest slice of college student voters (around 50%) despite GOP-instituted legal changes that have reduced student turnout by making it more difficult (expensive) for out-of-state students to register. As a result, the under-30 voting bloc’s turnout fell significantly, a matter that may well play a decisive role in the presidential election.

Also read: The Spectre of Bernie Sanders Is Haunting the American Establishment

Joe Biden’s successive defeats suggest that his moderate, “return to normalcy” and the pre-Trump status quo message, and its messenger, is unconvincing (at the moment), although he may fare better in Nevada and South Carolina. But with former Republican Michael Bloomberg in the wings with a billion-dollar election war chest, Biden’s days may be numbered as his third attempt at the Democratic nomination receives another major setback.

The Democratic primaries appear to be clarifying the contest – with Pete Buttigieg as the centrist-traditional vs Sanders on Progressive Left. Senator Amy Klobuchar, however, made it into third place in New Hampshire and may now challenge both Biden and Buttigieg for ‘moderate’ Democrats’ votes. Senator Elizabeth Warren seems to have lost significant momentum and ground to Sanders: her “I am a [progressive] capitalist” declarations suggest her strategy of staking a claim to the centre-left progressive position is winning few friends with either centrists or progressives.

Democratic candidate Elizabeth Warren. Photo: Reuters/Stephan Lam

2020 appears to be a continuation and intensification of the presidential election campaign of 2016.

Will it also reflect the politics of the Democratic primaries in 2016? There is certainly a massive conflict between the politics and economics of Wall Street, with its progressive (but non-distributive) cover of identity politics, and the clarion call from Sanders to take on Big Money and the billionaire class, put the American worker’s interests in good, secure well-paying jobs, young people’s future prospects, and an end to reflex militarism, at the front and centre of his campaign.

The Democratic National Committee, the core of the party’s establishment, is in a state of panic at Sanders’s success, despite significant campaigns against him (on the basis of his alleged sexism) by the New York Times and CNN, Hillary Clinton, and others who claim Sanders is more divisive than President Trump.

While Sanders declared in his victory speech in New Hampshire that he will back any Democrat against Trump in November, his campaign team would be well advised to keep an eye on the DNC – and remember 2016 – when its then-chair, Debbie Wasserman Schultz admitted that Hillary Clinton had effectively bought the DNC to secure advantage over Sanders. This included, among other things, Clinton sharing a percentage of her election war chest with the DNC, and receiving election debate questions in advance.

Also read: The Meme Endorsement of Bernie Sanders You Might Have Missed – and Why It Matters

It is clear that media networks covering the New Hampshire results treated Klobuchar, in third place, as if she were the winner, rather than Sanders. Nate Silver of election website 538.com was moved to tweet: “So apparently the candidate in 3rd place is a bigger story than the candidate in 2nd place, who in turn is a bigger story than the candidate in 1st place? OK.”

According to the Nevada Independent newspaper, the Culinary Workers Union, which has 60,000 members, has already launched attacks on Sanders’s ‘Medicare for All’, single-payer government-run healthcare plan. The newspaper’s editor, John Ralston, suggested that this could well be part of a new “stop Bernie” initiative. The Union provides healthcare insurance and facilities to over 130,000 people, a position that justifies members’ dues, at least to a degree, yet appears content to divide workers with and without employers’ healthcare coverage. Nevertheless, the Union praised the healthcare plans advanced by Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, and Amy Klobuchar, while providing milder backing for Elizabeth Warren’s platform promise.

The Washington Post carried an article purporting to “like” Bernie Sanders’s “sincerity”, despite his “rigidly abstract ideology”, socialist “snake oil”, and likelihood of inaugurating a “fiscal crisis”. With all the subtlety of an iron fist in an iron glove, the opinion piece ends up critiquing his sincerity too.

Also read: The Corporate Media’s War Against Bernie Sanders Is Very Real

There should be no illusions about what Sanders is up against: the Democratic party machine and its political allies who have repeatedly attacked the ‘far left’, including the ‘Squad’, the entire GOP under Trump’s mafia-like grip, the military and intelligence establishment, corporate lobbies from big pharma to arms manufacturers, the ‘markets’, and the mainstream mass media.

The 2020 presidential election offers both poison and hope, full-scale clash of past and future – another fascinating, fearful but also hopeful year in the travails of American power.

The political firestorms that are being planned for Bernie Sanders will require continued courage and resilience on his part backed by full-throated support of the young and working people of America, for whose interests he stands, and who are sending individual $18 donations aplenty to propel the socialist campaign.

But however the primary and presidential elections turnout, there is no mistaking two things: that the mainstream political parties are intellectually bankrupt and fast-losing whatever legitimacy they once enjoyed. And the US political system is scrambling towards a major ideological power-shift to the Left.

In the words of the socialist Eugene Debs in 1912:

“Deep-seated discontent has seized upon the masses. They must indeed be deaf who do not hear the mutterings of the approaching storm”.

Inderjeet Parmar is professor of international politics at City, University of London, a visiting professor at LSE IDEAS (the LSE’s foreign policy think tank), and visiting fellow at the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford. He is a columnist at The Wire.

Collecting Data on SC/ST Backwardness Not Necessary for Quota in Promotions: Supreme Court

The bench said that the 2016 verdict in the M. Nagaraj case does not need to be referred to a larger bench.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday said its 2006 verdict in M. Nagaraj & Others vs Union Of India & Others on quotas in job promotions for SC/ST employees need not be referred to seven-judge bench.

The apex court also turned down the Centre’s plea that the overall population of SC/ST be considered for granting quota for them.

The unanimous judgement was pronounced by a five-judge constitution bench.

In the 2006 judgment, the apex court had held that it is not mandatory for the state to make reservations for SC/ST in the matter of promotions, LiveLaw reported. “However, if the State did wish to exercise its discretion, it is supposed to gather quantifiable data showing backwardness of the class and inadequacy of representation of that class in public employment, in addition to compliance with the requirement of that class in public employment, in addition to compliance with the requirement of maintaining administrative efficiency as per Article 335,” the website says.

This part of the judgment was referred to the Supreme Court for reconsideration in November 2017.

Clarifying the 2016 decision, the bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra and comprising Justices Kurian Joseph, R.F. Nariman, S.K. Kaul and Indu Malhotra on Wednesday said states need not collect quantifiable data on backwardness of SC/ST for giving quota in job promotion to SC/ST employees.

The top court did not comment on two other conditions given in the 2006 verdict which dealt with adequacy of representation of SC/ST in promotion and not to disturb administrative efficiency.

The court’s verdict came on petitions seeking that a seven-judge bench reconsiders the court’s 2006 judgement which had put conditions for granting quota benefits in job promotions for SC/ST employees.

(With PTI inputs)

Colorado Wildfire Grows by a Fifth Due to Strong Winds

More evacuations have been ordered as the wildfire continues to grow. The wildfire has also prompted an air quality alert in the area.

Reuters: A stubborn Colorado wildfire grew by around a fifth on June 9 and was expected to continue to grow June 10, consuming sparsely populated land as low humidity and high winds left firefighters bracing for it to spread, officials said.

An additional 220 homes were evacuated June 9, said Megan Graham, a spokeswoman for La Plata County, Colorado.

The total number of homes evacuated during the fires burning in southwest Colorado has reached more than 1,300 residential structures, Graham said, and the fire had burnt more than 8,691 acres, according to the last aerial survey, on early June 9, she said.

“It’s expected to keep growing, unfortunately,” she said.

Fire officials said in a release that the weather will likely make things worse on June 10, as more severe winds are expected.

“Southwest to west winds will be strengthening across south-west Colorado this weekend ahead of a Pacific storm that will be tracking across the Northwest Rockies,” officials said in a release.

The Haines Index, used by firefighters to assess the stability and dryness of air over fires, is at its maximum level of six, officials said.

“This indicates that there is a high potential for extreme fire behavior, intensity, and growth,” they added.

As of June 9 morning, the Colorado fire remained at 10% contained, but it had grown by about 1,500 acres (607 hectares) since June 8, mostly in less inhabited areas to the west that officials said they were monitoring while they concentrate on protecting structures to the east, north and south.

In 2017, a near-record 10 million acres (4 million hectares) were burned in US wildfires, the National Interagency Coordination Center said. The same agency issued a June forecast for “above-normal significant large fire potential” this month in Southern California and the Four Corners region of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah, because of a deepening drought and ample fuel for wildfires.

Firefighters have kept the Colorado fire to the west of Highway 550 and away from structures, county commissioners in La Plata County, Colorado, said in a June 9 Facebook post. Fire officials said in the June 9 update that Highway 550 was closed from mile marker 32 to 47 and pilot cars were escorting traffic through there.

A new blaze about 13 miles to the west, known as the Burro fire, prompted US Forest Service officials on June 9 to close part of the Colorado trail in the San Juan National Forest.