This wasn't one union calling on members to turn out," said AFL-CIO
President Richard Trumka recently. "It wasn't the AFL-CIO making the
call. It wasn't the Democratic Party, or the Obama organization. This
was a bottom-up, grassroots movement, a true spontaneous outcry
against our disastrous winner-take-all political culture."





http://www.peoplesworld.org/this-is-what-a-workers-uprising-looks-like/


Labor > This is what a workers’ uprising looks like
This is what a workers’ uprising looks like



assets/Uploads/_resampled/CroppedImage6060-johnwojcikatwork2.jpg
by: John Wojcik
March 22 2011

tags: Wisconsin, worker rights, democracy
WisconsinProlaborProAmerica2

Anyone who thinks the upsurge by workers all across America is not of
historic proportions hasn't been paying attention.

Many in the labor movement believe that the thousands on the march in
Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey, Florida, New York and
elsewhere have ignited flames that, like scattered prairie fires, can
potentially come together into one big burn for justice.

The demonstrators who are shouting "This is what democracy looks like"
are showing, they say, what a workers' uprising looks like.

"This wasn't one union calling on members to turn out," said AFL-CIO
President Richard Trumka recently. "It wasn't the AFL-CIO making the
call. It wasn't the Democratic Party, or the Obama organization. This
was a bottom-up, grassroots movement, a true spontaneous outcry
against our disastrous winner-take-all political culture."

Although unions are often leading the demonstrations, the grassroots
groups with which the union members are marching are changing unions
themselves, perhaps forever.

It's noteworthy that "Rebel Girl" Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (1890-1964)
is soon to be inducted into the International Labor Hall of Fame in a
ceremony at Teamsters headquarters in Washington. Flynn was active in
the Industrial Workers of the World, an organizer for restaurant,
garment and mine workers, and a founding member of the American Civil
Liberties Union. Indicted under the notorious Smith Act, she served a
two-year prison term because of her membership and leadership role in
the Communist Party USA.

Only a short time ago such a commemoration by the mainstream labor
movement would have been considered as politically unthinkable.

Another sign of the times: In Madison, Wis., the scene one night
during the occupation of the Capitol was thus: Some 600 people were
spending the night there in sleeping bags, lying on their coats or
sleeping on the bare marble floors. The Capitol police were ordered to
disperse them. The chief of the Capitol police told the crowd about
his orders and then told them he and his officers were not going to
follow those orders but instead would sleep in with the demonstrators.

A Wisconsin AFSCME organizer invited pro-labor filmmaker Michael Moore
to speak at one of the big Madison rallies. Some state union leaders
were reportedly nervous about Moore being too radical and urged that
the organizer hold off on the invitation. He went ahead with the
invitation anyway, and Moore received a tumultuous welcome from the
tens of thousands who gathered to hear him. Almost immediately the
AFL-CIO websites were quoting the Moore speech extensively.

In all the events the breadth of the crowds and their enthusiasm was
more than evident as the huge non-union majority of the demonstrators
- Black, Brown, white, male, female, gay and straight, young and old -
marched together with the union members in a fight for collective
bargaining rights and democracy. Ironworkers and construction workers
marching and rallying in the hallways and rotunda of the Wisconsin
Capitol had no problem with and cheered along with the students and
"long hairs" who banged on drums after they spoke.

"Who would have predicted six weeks ago that every time you turned on
your computer or radio or television, or picked up a newspaper, the
news would be focused for weeks on end on a term that defies the
brevity of the sound bite - collective bargaining?" asked Trumka asked
in a speech at St. John's University in New York March 18.

"We have wanted this debate for years. Now it's here and guess what?
The American people have said Yes to collective bargaining!" declared
Trumka.

"Just why are firefighters, nurses, teachers, police officers,
construction workers and other regular folks willing to march and
rally for it, to pack Capitol buildings day and night for weeks on
end?," he asked. "It's because of the two things you've gathered here
to discuss: the basic legal rights of working people and the
fundamental dignity of work."

Union leaders see grabbing hold of the opportunities presented by the
upsurge as critical to the very survival of the labor movement.

Fire Fighters union President Harold Schaitberger said last week that
unions are fighting "a battle of proportions I haven't seen in 40
years" against "the most coordinated, comprehensive anti-worker
campaign in decades."

AFL-CIO staffer Naomi Walker, who tracks state and local developments
for the labor movement, said there are currently 500 distinct attacks
on workers' rights being mounted by right-wing politicians across the
country. "That anti-union drive, state by state, is fueled by millions
of dollars in right-wing money," she said. She included on her list
the Koch brothers - the wealthy far-right oil men from Kansas City,
the Koch front group called Americans for Prosperity, the Chamber of
Commerce, the American Legislative Exchange Council and the
fund0raising operations of Karl Rove, chief political operative for
former President George W. Bush.

To fight off this attack, the building of alliances is seen now by
labor as more critical than ever. "We're trying to change our
language, not talking just about unions and our members, but talking
about the threat to everyone's rights," Schaitberger said.

He compared the anti-union onslaught by the extreme right to President
Ronald Reagan's firing of 14,000 PATCO air traffic controllers in 1981
just as both Reagan and organized labor were strongly supporting
Solidarnosc, the union organizing in Poland.

"While we were celebrating trade unionism in Poland, they [the
controllers)] were fired and put in leg shackles and barred from ever
getting jobs again in their profession," said Schaitberger. "That was
a defining moment and the labor movement blinked. This is our defining
moment and we cannot afford to blink again."

Photo: Madison, Wis., March 12, 2011. People's World
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