-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the June 10, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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LABOR RALLY KICKS OFF ORGANIZING:
MILLION WORKER MARCH SET FOR OCTOBER

Special to Workers World
San Francisco

Can labor organize an independent mass mobilization to address the broad
range of problems facing the multinational working class here? Though
many hurdles need to be overcome, the answer being given is a resounding
"Yes!"

On Feb. 26, Local 10 of the Inter na tional Longshore and Warehouse
Union (ILWU) in San Francisco proposed a bold initiative: a Million
Worker March on Washington. This plucky union is well-known nationally
for its leading role in class warfare and in struggles against U.S.
imperialist wars. The leaders have educated, organized and defended
their rank and file in a period of unprecedented hostility from
Washington and Wall Street.

The local union passed a resolution that the call be forwarded to
"unions, labor councils and labor organizations, as well as other
organizations to which workers belong whether organized or not, so they
can take similar action to organize this march as soon as possible." At
a kickoff rally here on May 22, they set the date for the march: Oct.
16.

The May 22 rally sent a strong message that it was time to take the road
of independent class struggle and break labor's traditional ties to the
Democratic Party. Clarence Thomas, an executive board mem ber of ILWU
Local 10 and a nationally known African-American trade union leader,
issued an appeal to support the Million Worker March: "This is a Call to
working people to unite and mobilize around our own agenda. For the past
decade we have been subject to an unrestrained corporate assault. This
is the moment, this is the time for us to advance our own demands, our
own needs and to proclaim a political agenda in our own vital
interests." He and Trent Willis, another member of Local 10 ILWU,
chaired the rally.

Thomas recently returned from a fact-finding contact with Iraqi workers
and unions who are besieged under the brutal U.S. military occupation.
He attacked the occupation and appealed to the U.S. labor movement to
support these sisters and brothers.

The rally of around 250 participants represented a diverse group,
primarily trade union leaders from many parts of the country. From New
York, Brenda Stokely--a leader in AFSCME District 1707, a nationally
known African-American woman and a strong opponent of the Iraq war--gave
a passionate and uplifting talk.

Chris Silvera, secretary treasurer of Teamsters Local 808 in Long Island
City, N.Y., and chairperson of the Teamsters' National Black Caucus,
reflected the sentiment of the rally. "Now you can sit around and wait
for Kerry to do something. But we are going to Washington to shake the
house. We need to take back our country, take back our rights and rip up
the Patriot Act."

Among the many speakers was Walter Johnson, secretary treasurer of the
San Francisco Central Labor Council. The base of support for the project
so far is the West Coast labor movement, including undocumented
representatives such as the San Francisco Day Laborer Program, community
organizations and anti-war representatives.

Individual endorsers included long-time fighters for civil rights and in
the anti-war struggle like Dick Gregory, Danny Glover and Casey Kasem.
Orga nizers from Baltimore, St. Louis, Los Angeles, New York,
Charleston, S.C., Cleve land and seven other cities agreed to set up
centers to build the march.

The labor councils of Charleston, S.C., and five other cities around the
country endorsed the proposal.

A CALL TO THE RANK AND FILE

This call comes at a most opportune time. It is an appeal to the rank
and file, to the disfranchised, the oppressed who labor in the fields,
the factories, the mines and the offices. It is a reminder that they
have a collective power, a power in numbers that can resist the
relentless assault on their living conditions.

It is a call to action against the banks and bosses, led by President
George W. Bush, who has written off the workers, organized and
unorganized.

The Wall Street Journal had gloated on Jan. 23 that "Membership has been
in decline since the Reagan years, but the latest report shows a more
dramatic fall than usual ... Unions don't seem to have the allure that
they once did, especially for younger workers ... All of which must
depress John Sweeney who took over the AFL-CIO some years ago promising
organizing ... [The] shrinking labor movement has lost clout in the real
economy."

The gloating is generated by the overall growth of profits resulting
from layoffs, downsizing of wages and benefits, privatizing and
outsourcing, which continue unabated without significant resistance. For
1,488 companies tracked by Dow Jones & Co., net income in the first
quarter was $159.2 billion, up 23 percent from the first quarter of
2003. (Wall Street Journal, May 28)

These corporate profits are achieved on the backs of the workers,
especially through increased productivity, two-tier concessionary
contracts and reduced wages and benefits. In the race to the bottom that
generates these huge profits, the top leaders of the official labor
movement have so far shown neither an independent policy nor a strategy
of action to rescue the besieged sisters and brothers.

WORKERS RESTLESS OVER RELIANCE ON DEMOCRATS

The failure of AFL-CIO President John Sweeney and his executive board to
mobilize the rank and file to fight for a substantial piece of the
exorbitant profits has set a bad example for both the organized and
unorganized, who are searching for a way out of the many horrors
deluging them.

The Sweeney leadership is tied to the program of the Democratic Party
and Sen. John Kerry. However, there is growing concern among the rank
and file--who are still supporting the AFL-CIO's "anybody but Bush" pro-
Kerry campaign--that it ignores their issues and concerns. Swee ney has
shown no inclination to criticize Kerry or demand that he represent
labor's needs.

Recently, Kerry failed to show up for a critical Senate vote on the
extension of unemployment benefits, a life-and-death issue for the
millions who have exhausted them. It needed 60 votes to pass. The amend
ment failed by one vote. Kerry knew it would be close but decided it was
more important to continue on the campaign trail, posturing as the
champion of the people and lauding the virtues of his differences with
Bush.

The Democratic Party is nothing more than a "loyal opposition" to the
self-serving, openly pro-big-business Republican Party. The election
campaigns of the two capitalist parties show an interest only in getting
votes, spending hundreds of millions of dollars to outdo each other and
bedazzle the people with ads, television commercials and monopolized
media expo sure. Neither candidate can solve the crisis of imperialist
wars for markets and profits or the relentless drive to exploit the
workers and oppressed here.

Once again, the workers and the oppres sed face the choice of a lesser
of two evils.

In the United States today over 13 million workers, coming from many
different nationalities, are organized into 66 affiliated unions. They
are primarily low-paid and service-oriented. Many are women. There are
differences among the AFL-CIO officials on a number of issues. Can this
immense rank and file pressure the more progressive wing of the
leadership to support the Million Worker March on Washington?

The May 22 kickoff rally here ended with a Mission Statement: "Why will
we be marching on Washington? Only our own independent mobilization of
working people across America can open the way to addressing our needs
and our agenda."

History has confirmed over and over again that all profound social,
economic and political change starts from below. The Million Worker
March on Washing ton is a beginning--a significant step in building a
movement of multinational workers and oppressed nationalities in a
classwide, independent struggle that can generate a genuine, anti-
capitalist fightback.

- END -

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