http://www.peoplesworld.org/no-business-as-usual-day-will-press-workers-rights/


No Business as Usual Day” will press workers’ rights



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by: John Wojcik
March 17 2011

tags: labor, Communications Workers, workers rights, Republicans

Members of union locals all over the country are laying plans now to
make April 4th a day to remember at the nation's workplaces.

Many thousands will show up at work that day wearing red to show
solidarity with workers whose rights are under attack in Wisconsin and
other states where Republicans were recently elected to state
governorships.

When the clock strikes 12 noon in New Hampshire, Ohio, Colorado and
California, workers will stand up at their workplaces and shout,
"Workers' Rights are Human Rights."

In Maine, Indiana, Illinois, New Mexico and Oregon, workers will march
into their workplaces together, rather than arriving at the more
gradual, usual pace.

In many places they will head to their corporate headquarters and
rally; still others will hold teach-ins. Many places will see quite a
bit more than the usual amount of union literature plastered on their
bulletin boards.

And then, too, there are the city and state Capitols inhabited by
Republican lawmakers seeking to balance budgets on the backs of
working families. They are also expected to be swamped by
demonstrators eager to follow the lead of their co-workers in
Wisconsin, Indiana , Ohio and elsewhere.

Talking about the coming national labor mobilization, Communications
Workers of America President Larry Cohen said, "42 years after the
death of Dr. King, the struggle for economic justice continues. An
important part of the national mobilization we are planning will be to
have unions and civil rights groups and all of our allies take this
struggle for justice into the workplaces of America."

April 4 was chosen as the day for the mobilization, because, on that
day in 1968, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated in
Memphis, Tenn. while campaigning for the rights of 1,300 sanitation
workers, almost all of them African-American, to organize and bargain
as members of the American Federation of State County and Municipal
Employees.

The Communications Workers of America, with the backing of the
AFL-CIO, has called for a national "No Business As Usual Day of
Action" on April 4.

In Wisconsin, it is expected that demonstrations at the state Capitol
in Madison will rival, or even surpass those that have occurred
throughout the last month. Although there will be rallies and large
marches all over the country, the ones in states where Republican
governors and lawmakers have mounted attacks on collective bargaining
rights are expected to be huge.

Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, has said that the actions on
April 4 will be "another example" of how Republicans who attack
working families have helped mobilize a powerful response from the
labor movement.
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