
Trump admin urged to support striking Iranian truckers: 'Potential to paralyze regime'
Iranian truck drivers have widened their labor stoppage to include more than 100 towns and cities across the country, while the clerical regime launched a violent crackdown on strikers in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj.
Iranian experts have long urged successive U.S. administrations to provide strike pay and other forms of aid to restive workers in the Islamic Republic, with a view to improving human rights and causing regime change from within.
Truckers are a key industrial force that helps keep the worsening Iranian economy above water.
Alireza Nader, a Washington, D.C., expert on Iran's regime who studies Iranian labor unrest, told Fox News Digital, "The Trump administration should offer loud support to the truckers-this would give Trump even more leverage in the nuclear negotiations. And organizations such as the AFL-CIO can play an important role in bringing the trucker strikes to international attention."
The U.S. is engaged in talks with Iran's regime to dismantle its illegal nuclear weapons program in exchange for sanctions relief.
Nader added, "The nationwide trucker strikes have the potential to paralyze the regime as it faces increasing vulnerability. The trucker strikes can be even more effective if other sectors of Iran's economy go on strike, especially the energy sector and other transportation sectors."
Many opponents of the clerical regime want the U.S. government to take a page from former President Ronald Reagan's playbook against the now-defunct communist Poland via organized support for workers and their unions.
U.S. administrations cooperated prior to the collapse of the communist Soviet Union with the free American labor movement to inject democracy into trade unions in the largely closed communist societies.
The core economic issues animating the work stoppage, which started on May 18 in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas, involve working conditions and reduced insurance costs. According to the independent diaspora news organization IranWire, the spike in insurance coincided with a downsized medical care.
The Union of Iranian Truckers and Heavy Vehicle Drivers is also demanding remedies for the lack of roadside aid for graft in the allocation of cargo.
The truckers are also seeking the amelioration of expensive spare parts, freight brokerage fees and diesel quotas. Greater security on the long stretches of Iranian highways is also demanded.
"A driver who protests for his bread and dignity is not a rioter," the truckers' union stated, adding, "Protest is not a crime, but our legal right," reported IranWire.
Lisa Daftari, an Iran expert and editor-in-chief of the Foreign Desk, told Fox News Digital, "The latest nationwide truckers' strike is not an isolated incident—it is only the latest manifestation of deep disenchantment among Iranians who are denied dignity and proper rights in every industry. Over the past 46 years, we have witnessed waves of protest across a patchwork of sectors and communities, each uprising pointing to a single, overarching truth: the Iranian people are not just sending a message to their government, but to the entire world, urging support in their quest for freedom and basic rights."
She added, "This is a fundamental demand, but as history has shown, it is not easily achieved under a government that has proven itself incapable of reform or of delivering the life Iranians deserve."
In 2019, the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) urged Tehran to release detained workers' rights activists. In 2018, the Teamsters Union, which represents most truckers in the U.S., issued solidarity support for truck drivers on strike in more than 290 Iranian cities.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump's Education Secretary Schooled in Reading and Math by Senators
Education Secretary Linda McMahon would have received a failing grade for her answers to questions posed on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. The cringeworthy moments came while she was being questioned by senators about the GOP spending bill. Close Trump ally Senator Markwayne Mullin asked McMahon about previous U.S. reading and math rankings. 'What was we ranked in reading and math in 1979?' the senator asked. 'I'm sorry what?' McMahon responded. 'What was we ranked national in math and reading in 1979?' he repeated. 'We were very very low on the totem pole,' the education secretary declared. 'We were number one in 1979,' Mullin corrected her. 'Oh, 1979, I'm sorry,' McMahon said, trying to recover, despite having had the question repeated twice. 'In 1979 we were ranked number one around the world. Today in reading, we're ranked 36 and mathematics we're ranked 28,' the senator told her. 'It's not working. What we're doing is not working.' The top Trump official was put on the spot while testifying about the president's budget request for the department. While Trump and his allies have called for closing the Education Department, his budget request for the fiscal year is just over $66 billion. It includes a 15 percent reduction in spending, or a $12 billion cut, from the previous year. While Mullin's question was a flunking moment for the education secretary, he was actually using the information to thank her for pushing changes. His argument was that the current situation was not working and throwing money at the problem hasn't fixed it. 'We deserve better. Our kids deserve better. Our taxpayers deserve better, and we have to make changes,' Mullin said. The exchange came as Democrats largely blasted McMahon for the Trump administration's education budget on Tuesday and raised concerns over cutting staff without analysis of the impact and other school resources, such as counselors in schools. Another awkward moment in the hearing came when Democratic Senator Jack Reed also schooled McMahon on some math when it came to education spending. The education secretary was discussing the TRIO grant program to help people with low income and underprivileged backgrounds, and other programs, when she made a substantial math error. 'We spend $1.58 billion a year on TRIO?' Senator John Kennedy asked. McMahon confirmed it. 'How long have we been spending one thousand five hundred and eighty million dollars a year on this program?' he followed up. McMahon said she was not sure of the length of the program but confirmed spending for more than ten years. 'So that's over $1 trillion we spent on this program,' Kennedy said. That number was repeated multiple times as they went back and forth over how the money was used to help poor kids go to college. However, when it then became Reed's turn to grill McMahon, he took issue with the math. 'I'm not a great mathematician, but I think you were talking about $1 trillion? I believe $1.5 billion times ten is $15 billion. That's a little bit off from $1 trillion.' 'I think the budget cut's $1.2 billion for TRIO,' the education secretary responded. 'Well, 1.2 that would be $12 billion, not $1 trillion,' Reed pointed out. 'Ok,' McMahon responded.


The Hill
24 minutes ago
- The Hill
Asian shares shoot higher as US stocks inch toward their records
Shares advanced Wednesday in Asia after U.S. stocks drifted closer to their records, while U.S. futures edged lower. South Korea's Kospi led gains in the region, jumping 2.4% to 2,763.32 after the liberal opposition candidate Lee Jae-myung was elected president. Lee's victory caps months of political turmoil triggered by the stunning but brief imposition of martial law by the now-ousted conservative leader Yoon Suk Yeol. Top priorities will include government spending and trade negotiations with the United States. 'Regardless of his political roots, boosting growth will be a key challenge. Even before President Trump's tariffs hit exports, the economy contracted by 0.2% quarter on quarter, seasonally adjusted, in the first three months of the year. The figures highlighted fragile business activity and private consumption,' Min Joo Kang of ING Economics said in a report. Tokyo's Nikkei 225 index surged 1% on gains for technology and pharmaceutical companies. Toyota Motor Corp.'s shares rose 2% after it announced it was buying Toyota Industries Corp., a maker of auto parts and lift trucks, for $33 billion and taking it private. Toyota Industries' shares tumbled 12.5%. Chinese shares were modestly higher. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong added 0.6% to 23,650.12, while the Shanghai Composite index gained 0.3% to 3,372.85. Taiwan's Taiex climbed 2.1%. Investors were watching for updates on President Donald Trump's tariffs, including the imposition of 50% tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum due to take effect Wednesday. With industries lobbying for him to expand that protection to products made from those materials, analysts say prices of many basic items will likely rise. On Tuesday, the S&P 500 rose 0.6% and was less than 3% away from its all-time high set earlier this year, at 5,970.37. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.5% to 42,519.64. The Nasdaq composite rose 0.8% to 19,398.96. Dollar General jumped 15.8% for one of the market's bigger gains after reporting stronger profit and revenue for the start of the year than analysts expected. Many companies have cut or withdrawn their financial forecasts for the upcoming year because of the uncertainty caused by Trump's on-again-off-again rollout of tariffs. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Tuesday that it's forecasting 1.6% growth for the U.S. economy this year, down from 2.8% last year. A report on Tuesday morning showed U.S. employers were advertising more job openings at the end of April than economists expected, the latest signal that the labor market remains resilient. It set the stage for a more important report coming on Friday, which will show how much hiring and firing U.S. employers did in May. On the trade front, hopes are still high on Wall Street that Trump will reach trade deals with other countries that will ultimately lower tariffs, particularly with the world's second-largest economy. The U.S. side said President Donald Trump was expecting to speak with Chinese leader Xi Jinping this week. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said Tuesday that they had no information on that. Tech stocks helped lead the way again as Nvidia rose 2.9%, and Broadcom climbed 3.3%. The chip companies have recovered their sharp losses from earlier this year borne amid worries their stock prices had shot too high. Treasury yields held relatively steady following the encouraging report on the U.S. job market. It's a cooldown from a sharp rise for yields over the last two months. Yields had been climbing in part on worries about how the U.S. government may be set to add trillions of dollars to its debt through tax cuts. Higher Treasury yields make it more expensive for U.S. households and businesses to borrow money and can discourage investors from paying high prices for stocks and other investments. In other dealings early Wednesday, U.S. benchmark crude oil lost 19 cents to $63.22 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, fell 16 cents to $65.47 per barrel. The U.S. dollar fell to 143.86 Japanese yen from 144.00 yen. The euro rose to $1.1383 from $1.1370. ___ AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Stan Choe contributed.
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Expat's supermarket find in China reveals quiet Aussie win: 'It's everywhere'
An expat living in China has revealed a major shift in supermarket stock after making an unexpected Aussie find. Canadian expat Emily recently discovered American beef has been replaced with Australian beef in Chinese grocery stores on the back of mammoth tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump earlier this year. It's the second time in recent weeks that residents in China have noticed American beef is no longer available, with the Australian product replacing it. Emily, who lives in Guangzhou, China, with her family, told Yahoo News Aussie beef is now "everywhere". Experts believe Australia now has a major "advantage" in the billion-dollar beef export industry, with Australia achieving a record-breaking $13.9 billion in sales in 2024–25, a 12 per cent increase from the previous record set the year prior. Emily explained she's noticed a "huge shrink" in American products in recent months after the Trump administration stunned the entire world by announcing reciprocal tariffs on just about every country on April 2, a day he called "Liberation Day". Among the hardest hit countries was China, which had a 145 per cent tariff imposed on its exports, which was countered with a 125 per cent tariff on US imports. It followed China not renewing the registration of hundreds of US beef facilities and America's $2.5 billion beef trade soon came to a grinding halt, with Australia seemingly stepping in to fill the void. While a temporary trade truce between the two economic powerhouses was struck in May at a meeting in Geneva, with the US lowering its tariff to 30 per cent and China dropping theirs to 10 per cent for three months, many consumers have seemingly continued to opt for Aussie beef. "Products like Australian beef are everywhere," Emily explained. When she filmed the supermarket video, which was viewed by millions across the world in May, she said she did a "thorough search" for US products. "I confirmed there is nothing from the US in my local supermarket," she said. 🚘 Photos shows major shift in EV race as BYD looks to topple Tesla 🥩 Expat's Aussie find in Chinese supermarket highlights major global shift ✈️ Young Aussie's 18-hour nightmare in Chinese airport after passport vanishes The fallout of the trade wars between the economic powerhouses has exposed an "advantage" for Australia in the beef market. Many viewers of Emily's video shared that they'd much rather eat Australian meat than any from the United States. Professor Vinh Thai, a leading analyst of global logistics and supply chain management, told Yahoo News that Australia has much to gain from the current tariff situation, despite an initial "setback" of a 10 per cent tariff on Australian beef exported to the US. He believes that the reduction in Australian beef exports to the US can be offset by finding alternative markets such as China and Europe. "Consumer belief is very important," he explained, adding that Australia will always be considered a high-quality product. "That is our advantage," he said. "Australian beef will still be considered as a top-quality and good reputation product compared to that from the US," he said. Emily echoed this opinion, explaining that in China, "Australian food is always associated with higher safety standards therefore Australian beef now has a better reputation than American beef as the "cleaner" meat," she said. "Now with President Trump's trade war and tariffs, Chinese people are more likely to choose Australian products over American products because of political reasons," she added. "I think this is also a situation in many countries, especially the ones that were targeted by Trump's tariff, such as Canada." She believes China hasn't been as impacted by the tariffs as the United States. "China's diversified economy and domestic market have provided significant buffers against the effects of these tariffs," she said. "I sincerely hope Australia and China can maintain and strengthen their mutually beneficial trade relationship. Both countries have so much to gain from continued economic cooperation." Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.