With union backing, New Poor Peoples Campaign brings demands to Congress

WASHINGTONCulminating 40 days of marches and peaceful civil disobedience in Washington and state capitols, thousands of members and allies of the New Poor Peoples Campaign brought their demands for ending systemic racism, systemic poverty, ecological devastation and the war economy to Congress which may not be listening on June 23.

 

And if lawmakers dont listen, speakers said, the campaigns next moves are massive voter education, registration and voting out politicians, of both parties, who dont or wont act. The Republicans, one speaker said, wont build a soul or interrupt violence, while elected Democrats wont build a social safety net.

 

Gesturing to the U.S. Capitol behind her, Rev. Traci Blackmon of the United Church of Christ led the crowd in a chant of Whose house? Our house! before adding, Unless the folk who are occupying that house want to get in with us, then the folk who is occupying that house is going to move out.

 

Several unions, including the Service Employees, the Teachers, the United Food and

Commercial Workers, AFSCME and the Steelworkers, strongly back the NPPC. Four busloads

 

 

of UFCW members from New York and New Jersey made the trek from the Hudson Valley to the Nations Capital for the June 23 rally, for example.

 

The NPPC laid out a 6-point agenda and its co-chair, the Rev. William Barber, emphasized the issues are interrelated. People cannot stick to silos, he declared.

 

The NPPC wants the nation to commit to ending systemic racism, systemic poverty, ecological devastation, the war economy and militarism. Barber, and the campaigns website, also denounce the distorted moral narrative of religious nationalism.

 

The NPPC builds on what Barber calls the unfinished agenda of Dr. Martin Luther Kings civil rights crusade of the 1960s. As reminded crowds in past sermons, the 1963 March on Washington was a March for Jobs and Justice. And before his murder, King organized the first Poor Peoples encampment which politicians then largely dismissed or ignore.

 

But the NPPC has gone beyond Kings themes in its weekly rallies, peaceful nonviolent civil disobedience resulting in thousands of arrests teach-ins and education sessions. Each week since Mothers Day, campaigners have emphasized a different theme, including, in the week of June 16-22, workers rights. Barber and his co-chair, Rev. Liz Theoharis, have consistently tied all the themes together.

 

Whether lawmakers and other elected officials will change is another matter. The Republican-run House just passed legislation imposing work requirements on food stamp recipients. Meanwhile, GOP President Donald Trump rails against migrants to the U.S. legal or not GOP-run states enact voter-repression and anti-worker laws.

 

The organizer of the New York-New Jersey UFCW buses, a stocky white worker who lives near Paterson, talked informally about the ills that brought them to D.C.

 

The problems of the communities of northern New Jersey, he said, include drugs, notably the opioid epidemic, and shootings, though few are related to gang violence. Downtown Paterson, he said, is hazardous after dark.

 

The campaign will continue, Barber and Theoharis declared.

 

Theoharis made the crowd promise to continue, too. We must commit to going back to our states, back to our communities, back to our sovereign lands and organize, organize, organize! she said. That means massive power-building and voter registration among poor and low-income people. The nations ruling class exploits or ignores them, speakers said.

 

Well do this again and again and again until policies change, Barber said.

 

Source: PAI