Organizing the unemployed
The federal jobs numbers released earlier this month showed that a whopping 14 million Americans are unemployed, with 6.8 million out of work now for more than 27 weeks.
The unemployment crisis has led to growing calls for the labor movement to take action to help the jobless -- by organizing them.
"We need the AFL-CIO, we need central labor councils that bring together different members to pool their resources and start organizing the unemployed," Bill Fletcher Jr. of the Center for Labor Renewal recently said in an interview with GRITtv.
The idea of organizing the jobless is not new: In 1894, populist politician Jacob Coxey of Ohio led unemployed workers in a protest march on Washington that came to be known as "Coxey's Army." The first significant protest march ever held in the nation's capital, it took place during the second year of a four-year economic depression that at the time was the worst the country had ever experienced. The marchers called on the government to create jobs through public works.
Later, during the Great Depression, militant left-wing labor organizations like the Workers Alliance, the Unemployed Workers' Councils and the Unemployed Citizens' League mobilized out-of-work Americans to pressure state and local governments for jobs and benefits. According to one historical account:
In cities like New York, Chicago, and Detroit, the Unemployed Councils made an immediate impact, staging large attention-getting demonstrations in the winter and spring of 1930 and in subsequent years building neighborhood based Councils that fought for public assistance and rallied neighbors to conduct rent strikes and resist evictions.
And in 1932, a Roman Catholic priest from Pittsburgh named James Renshaw Cox led a march of 25,000 unemployed Pennsylvanians on Washington, calling on Congress to launch a public works program and increase the inheritance tax to 70%. The unprecedented mass demonstration -- dubbed "Cox's Army" (in photo above) -- spurred the founding of the Jobless Party and Cox's run for the presidency, though he eventually dropped out and gave his support to Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Those grassroots organizing efforts helped build political support for helping the unemployed, eventually culminating in President Roosevelt's New Deal.
Today, with the Great Recession dragging on, there are efforts underway once again to organize the jobless.
Earlier this year, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers launched the Ur Union of the Unemployed, or UCubed. Unemployed and underemployed workers can sign up at UCubed's website -- www.unionofunemployed.com -- and are then organized by ZIP code to advocate for legislation to help the jobless.
"We're trying to connect unemployed people with one another to eliminate the sense of isolation that comes with being unemployed," an IAM spokesman told In These Times, "and to give people the means to be activists."
In Indiana, the Unemployed and Anxiously Employed Workers Initiative (UAEWI) was formed in response to the 2008 financial crisis. It's been involved in efforts to give unemployed workers a greater voice in shaping job retraining programs and was part of a successful effort to prevent cuts in unemployment insurance benefits.
Meanwhile, organizing is underway for an Oct. 2 mass demonstration in Washington calling for more government job creation. Among the groups involved in the One Nation Working Together march are the AFL-CIO, SEIU and NAACP.
Fletcher says marching on Washington is the right thing to do -- but he questions whether it's enough.
"What happens on Aug. 2? What happens on Sept. 2?" he asked. "Why aren't we talking about more localized actions where people are raising hell?"
(Photo of Cox's Army from from ExplorePAhistory.com.)
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re: Organizing the unemployed
'Fletcher says marching on Washington is the right thing to do -- but he questions whether it's enough.'
No Fletcher, it's not enough. When you march on Washington you also have to do one more thing, and that is to just sit down... and stay sitting down.
That is your right under the First Amendment of the Constitution.
re: Organizing the unemployed
It seems to me that some kind of passive civic disobedience while in Washington could be appropriate. 50,000 people sitting on Constitution and Independence Aves as rush hour begins would draw attention.
re: Organizing the unemployed
One tactic that has been historically effective is a combined theatrical/practical mass action approach.
In Japan in late 2008 an encampment of unemployed/underemployed workers was established offering food, shelter, and medical care in the center of downtown Tokyo. http://www.japanfocus.org/articles/print_article/3113
In 1923 a man calling himself "Mr. Zero" captured media attention by holding "auctions" of the unemployed in the central parks of many major cities. Although only a few found work, the practical message that "these people are ready and willing" short-circuited the right-wing "layabout" notion. (from Foner's History if the Labor Movement in the U.S. vol 9)
followingsylvis.blogspot.com
re: Organizing the unemployed
How can you vote if you are unemployed & homeless? You need an address to get your voting forms for your local voting office. They do not want you to vote they don’t want you to do anything but die… It is selective elimination of the educated poor & middle class they fell threatened by and cannot control at the moment… Wake up U.S citizens we are getting sold out!!! We the people need to stand up together organize and take additional actions and follow trough to chance how our government is run. It’s very possible!
Support our cause to save our country & people who need it sign this "Petition to Reduce the Wages of Congress Men and Women from $174,000 per year to $50,000 per year. " Copy & Paste below link into address bar:
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