Posts Tagged ‘immigrant rights’

May Day: Political strikes, immigrant rights

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

MAY DAY RALLIES CELEBRATE UNITY; LABOR UNIONS AND IMMIGRANTS PLAN TO MARCH SIDE BY SIDE

http://www.democracynow.org/2011/4/29/may_day_rallies_celebrate_unity_labor

Excellent program on Democracy Now!, April 29, 2011.  Read (or listen to) the whole thing.  Juan Gonzalez and Amy Goodman interview Clarence Thomas, member of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 10 in San Francisco–”The local has a history of shutting down the ports of Oakland and San Francisco in protest, most recently on April 4th in solidarity with workers in Wisconsin;” and Christine Neumann-Ortiz, director of Voces de la Frontera, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin–”On May 1, 2006, she was key organizer behind the 70,000-strong march in Milwaukee.”

HERE ARE A FEW HIGHLIGHTS:

Juan Gonzalez:  “The immigrant rights movement has in essence resuscitated May Day and now is building closer ties with the organized labor movement. . . . immigrants have continually renewed the radicalism and the fighting capacity of the American labor movement.”

Clarence Thomas:  “So many of our younger members in the trade union movement have very little knowledge about May Day. They associate it with countries overseas celebrating International Workers’ Day, [but] it started here in the United States with the fight to establish the eight-hour workday and to eliminate child labor exploitation. . . . we believe that solidarity is not an empty slogan. Solidarity means making a sacrifice. And on April 4th [anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.] our members did not go to work. We did not get paid. And for 24 hours, international commerce was shut down. And we believe that more unions need to do the same. . . . [Immigrants] are the most exploited sector of the trade union movement. And as such, the issues that they face have to do with the fundamental rights of workers. . . . The labor movement is very small, when you talk about the percentage of workers that are represented by a union. The overwhelming majority of workers don’t belong to a union, so that the labor movement has the responsibility for charting a course for all workers. That’s why it’s so important that this year that we’re going to have a united May Day action.”

Christine Neumann-Ortiz:  “[The May Day mobilization] has always been supported by labor and has had a greater diversity each and every year. But this year, because of the attacks on public employees, like teachers, we know that, you know, there’s a level of support and mutual support. And that’s really what is historic about this march, is these movements coming together at a scale that hasn’t been seen before. . . . [Governor Walker's] budget is also an attack on immigrant rights and poor people.  In terms of immigrant rights, one of the biggest threats that’s pending, you know, in the budget is the repeal of in-state tuition rights for immigrant youth that was won in 2009, as well as the institutionalization of discrimination against legal immigrants, low-income families that would be denied access to food stamps or healthcare because they’re non-U.S. citizens, as part of this broader attack on poor people’s access and privatization of the public sector, like public education and so forth.  But one of the biggest things that’s motivating the Latino and immigrant community as part of this broader platform that we have is that there’s a pending Arizona copycat bill that’s being circulated in the state legislature . . . we’ve had a number of unions, maybe now close to 10, including the South Central Federation of Labor, that have passed resolutions rejecting this bill and also asking for—or building for May 1st.”

TxLAW note:  Sunday, May 1, San Antonio holds its Gran Marcha por los Derechos del Migrante on May Day–El Dia del Trabajo.  See http://txlaboragainstwar.org/2011/04/20/san-antonio-march-on-may-day/

And in Houston, also:  http://txlaboragainstwar.org/2011/04/30/houston-may-day-march-for-immigrants-and-working-families/

Austin: Hundreds at Million Musician March for Peace

Sunday, March 20th, 2011

http://weareaustin.com/fulltext/?nxd_id=130546 This link includes a VIDEO.

Story from weareaustin.com, March 19, 2011.  Photo by Laura Skelding, Austin American-Statesman, http://www.statesman.com/news/local/central-texas-digest-austin-baseball-field-structure-burns-1333624.html

The Million Musicians March for Peace (MMM), Austin’s annual musician-organized community event for peace, justice, and liberty through public awareness and involvement, met in Austin on Saturday.

Hundreds took part in a concert rally which was followed by musicians and speakers who will represent various issues of war, peace, liberty, justice, and promote our common ground by dispensing reliable sources of information that support all of our vital concerns.

Organizers say that the annual rally is held to raise the level of information and provide action in support of peace. In addition the rally is meant to raise awareness provide action in support of Peace.

Supporting organizations include: Under The Hood, Artists for Media Diversity, Vote Rescue, Texans For Peace, Waco Friends Of Peace, Iraq Veterans Against War, Code Pink Austin, Monkey Wrench Books. This year MMM also welcomes Instruments of Freedom for Justice, a group espousing immigrant rights, joining in a show of solidarity.

The rally is organized by the Instruments for Peace network of musicians and friends, the annual Million Musicians March for Peace is the result of the hard work of volunteer organizations and individuals helping in a multitude of ways.  Musicians use their music, email networks, event production and promotion skills, and public relations infrastructure to organize and promote the event.

For more information on the group, visit their website www.instrumentsforpeace.org.

Austin: May Day March for Immigrant Rights

Friday, April 23rd, 2010
May 1, 2010
4:00 pmto6:30 pm



Come celebrate with us on May Day, International Workers Day–Saturday, May 1.  Celebrated all over the world as labor day, May Day started in the U.S. in Chicago in 1886 during the fight for the 8-hour day.  Immigrant workers know about “los martires de Chicago”–the Chicago martyrs, unionists who were executed on trumped-up charges of fomenting the Haymarket “riot” in 1886.  We need to reclaim May Day as the real Labor Day, a day of struggle, and we thank immigrants for making this holiday big in the U.S. again.

Sponsored by the Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition.  Speakers, music, entertainment.  One of the scheduled speakers is Linda Chavez-Thompson, former vice president of the AFL-CIO and candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Texas.  Let’s have a union contingent in the march!

For more information, call 512-687-4035.  AIRC office 512-476-2472.  Email at [email protected]  Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=110615618971779&index=1

May Day March and Rally for Immigrant Rights, May 1 (Thursday)

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Meet at the Capitol (Austin, TX) at 4:30 pm May 1, 2008. March starts at 5:30 and ends at City Hall. There will be programs at both ends with international and local speakers, in Spanish and English (including an anti-war speaker), music, and theater.

Celebrate May Day, International Workers Day! This holiday started in the U.S. in 1886 and is celebrated all over the world except in the U.S. Thanks to immigrant workers for bringing it back to us!

MARCH AND RALLY FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS

Honor International Workers’ Day by demanding just immigration reform!!

May 1, 2008
Meet at the South Steps at Capitol- Austin TX Rally: 4:30 p.m. March: 5:30pm

We Demand:
•FULL Respect, Dignity, and Equality for all
Immigrants and their families!
•ICE out of Travis County Jail!
•STOP the construction of the border wall!
•END the detention & deportation of our families!

If you would like to participate, help, or for more information, contact the Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition: tel: 524-2012 email: [email protected]

Sponsored by: Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition, AFSC-Austin, Catholic Charities Office of Immigrant Concerns, Cristo Rey Church, Grassroots Leadership, Political Asylum Project of Austin, Workers Defense Project, ALLGO, Movimiento Estudiantil Chican@ de Aztlan, International Socialist Organization, People Organized in Defense of Earth and her Resources (PODER), Student Farmworker Alliance, LULAC Civil Rights Commission, Texans United For Families, Resistencia Book Store, Monkey Wrench Books, Alberto Garcia Law Office, Garcia and True LLP, Inmigrantes Latinos en Acción, Movement for a Democratic Society, Texas Jail Project, Texas Labor Against the War, Texas Civil Rights Project, Palestine Solidarity Committee, Austin Center for Peace and Justice, CodePink, Campaign to End the Death Penalty, Green Party, Ten Thousand Villages