http://www.peoplesworld.org/5-000-join-union-led-march-against-corporate-greed/


5,000 join union-led march against corporate greed


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by: John Wojcik
June 15 2011

tags: economy, budget crisis, Illinois
ChicagoJune14 2

CHICAGO - As the nation's top CEOs held a June 14 summit behind closed
doors at the Hyatt Regency here 5,000 angry demonstrators outside
chanted, "You got bailed out, we got sold out!"

Twenty-five members of the Chicago Teachers Union and the Service
Employees International Union were arrested for sitting down in the
street outside the hotel. As police led them away, people belonging to
15 unions and dozens of community organizations chanted, "Let them
go!" All those arrested were booked for blocking traffic and released.

The thousands converged outside the executives' summit after three
kickoff rallies at Daley Plaza, the State of Illinois building and
City Center. It was a noisy, spirited and peaceful demonstration
against corporate greed.

Protesters marched on the Hyatt, organizers said, both because the CEO
summit was taking place there and because the hotel is owned by the
billionaire Pritzker family, which the local labor movement says is
notorious for union-busting.

As the CEOs met in the Hyatt tower, thousands of demonstrators filled
the streets below. The business execs, according to the Chamber of
Commerce which sponsored the summit, were discussing "best practices"
and "leadership skill techniques."

The crowds jamming the streets below demanded that the CEOs talk,
instead, about creating jobs and reinvesting in the community,  in
small businesses and in Chicago's public schools.

"They are not doing anything good for Chicago," said Maria Ratanski, a
janitor who belongs to SEIU.

Ratanksi, 44, came from Poland as a young girl in 1974 and raised a
family here in Chicago. She said she marched because she  has an
18-year-old son and a 16-year-old son, both unable to find jobs.

"They are getting very very rich," she said, about the CEOs meeting in
the tower. "They say when they get rich, we get jobs, but they are not
making any jobs. They get richer and richer, we get poorer and
poorer."

Armando Robles, a UE member who led workers in the historic takeover
of a windows and doors factory to prevent its closing here in 2009,
marched with the thousands who made their way up Michigan Ave. from
Daley Plaza.

As people on the sidewalks cheered Robles and his union's contingent
he said, "Chicago families are struggling with high unemployment,
foreclosures and poverty. Our children are getting robbed of their
schools. Our city is getting robbed of decent jobs and for what? It's
all going into making big payments to CEOs, welfare for corporations
and big tax cuts for corporations. We've got to stop it."

Advocates for the homeless joined the union members and community
groups that marched. "Give us back our homes," read the signs carried
by people whose homes have been foreclosed.

Stand Up Chicago was the name under which the diverse groups joined
together for the protest.

Organizers said that just last year, the richest companies belonging
to the Chamber of Commerce reaped $200 billion in profits. But instead
of creating jobs with that money, they paid their CEOs huge bonuses.

"All that money should be given back to create jobs, to help our
communities and to save our public schools," said Karen Lewis,
addressing demonstrators through a microphone as she marched along
Michigan Ave.

Photo: In front of puppets representing the kings of "corporate
welfare," Chicago workers sit down in the street saying, "Give back
our jobs," June 14. PW/John Bachtell
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