A group of workers, preachers and activists traveled from
Mississippi to Detroit recently to proclaim what should be a core issue of
2014. “Labor rights are civil rights,” Open Door Mennonite Church pastor Horace
McMillon of Jackson told folks at the North American International Auto Show.
McMillon and other members of the Mississippi Alliance for
Fairness at Nissan were at the auto show to make their case that the thousands
of workers at Nissan’s plant in Canton, Miss., deserve an opportunity to have
an intimidation-free election to determine whether to join the United Auto
Workers.
Meanwhile, more than 1,500 workers at the Volkswagen plant
in Chattanooga, Tenn., will vote in a secret-ballot election Feb. 12-14 to
determine whether they want to have UAW representation on wage and benefits
issues. A German-style works council may also be established at the plant. The company has promised to allow a fair
election.
At the Canton, Miss., plant, however, a major showdown may be
looming this year given that UAW president Bob King plans to step down in June.
The South has been a key focus of his administration. Nissan has strongly resisted unionization at its Southern plants.
The vision of “labor rights” as “civil rights” reaches far beyond
the UAW and auto plants in Mississippi and Tennessee, however.
For starters, look at the income gap between the rich and all
the rest of us. The richest 10 percent of Americans control 80 percent of stock
market wealth. Average income for the middle 20 percent of Americans is up less
than 5 percent over the past 20 years. For the richest 5 percent of Americans,
income has jumped 17 percent.
Mississippi and the nation are now struggling with rising
prison costs yet why are so few of the bankers, auditors and Wall Street
financiers who caused the 2008 Great Recession behind bars?
Meanwhile, Republicans in Congress play politics with the
unemployment benefits needed by 1.3 million jobless and fight a raise in the
minimum wage. The poor can’t even get in the door. Republicans led the way in
cutting food stamps for the poor by 7 percent. Mississippi and other Southern
states will lose billions of dollars because of their GOP leadership’s refusal
to expand Medicaid and accept the reality of Obamacare.
Yet expect Republicans to stand solemnly alongside Democrats
this year to commemorate Freedom Summer 1964--at the safe distance of 50
years-- when young activists Mickey Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and James Chaney
were murdered because they wanted civil rights and equality for all.
Another commemoration should be held this year. The first
major student protests of the 1960s began in 1964 with the Free Speech Movement
at the University of California at Berkeley, which was inspired by civil rights
activists in the South. The Berkeley event opened the door to student protests
across the country against racism, the Vietnam War and all the other betrayals
of the nation’s ideals.
A new generation of protesters is already in the streets
today, God bless them, and their voices are beginning to be heard.
The “Moral Monday” protests against the right-wing agenda of
GOP leaders in North Carolina have led to 900-plus arrests, but now they are
spreading across the South, the nation’s most repressive region. Legislators in
Georgia and South Carolina as well as North Carolina opened their sessions last
month month with protestors outside state Capitol walls demanding that the
needs of workers and the poor be addressed, not just those of the fat cats and
lobbyists who finance junkets and political campaigns.
Across the country Walmart and fast-food workers are taking
a stand to demand a living wage from employers who’ve grown rich off their
labors. The Walton family is worth an estimated $144 billion yet its workers
can’t even afford the company health plan.
Taxpayers fork up $7 billion a year to subsidize the low-pay,
low-benefits fast-food industry through food stamps, Medicaid and other
government programs.
Blame falls on Democrats as well as Republicans. President
Obama is leading the cause for the so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership, another
NAFTA-like agreement that will drain jobs and lower standards for U.S. workers
while further enriching that top 10 percent who own 80 percent of Wall Street
wealth. A recent New York Times
investigation revealed that the United States spends $1.5 billion a year to buy
uniforms and other clothing from factories in Asia, the same sweat-shops that
were built after the collapse of the textile industry in the U.S. South.
This is an election year so expect a lot of talk about the
“middle class”. That’s a term meant to delude, disarm and ultimately deceive.
Working-class Americans—and that’s most of us, whether our shirt collars are blue
or white--can truly commemorate the martyrs and protestors of 1964 by proclaiming
with those preachers, workers and activists in Detroit that “labor rights are
civil rights.” This is the year to demand that state and national leaders finally
begin representing working people and the ideals that founded this nation.
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