Unionists Mobilize for Work, Benefits
Thousands Drawn to Rally at Lincoln Memorial in Prelude to Nov. Vote

By Manny Fernandez and David Nakamura
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, October 18, 2004; Page B01
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40594-2004Oct17.html>

Union members from across the country gathered at the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial yesterday for a rally dubbed the Million Worker
March, assembling in smaller-than-expected numbers but making a
passionate plea for workers' rights.

Linking their struggle with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. by
standing on the same spot where the slain civil rights leader made
his famous "I Have a Dream" speech in August 1963, workers from a
variety of trades and causes said King's vision of social and
economic equality remains more dream than reality.

"The majority of working people in America are not doing well," said
Clarence Thomas, 57, a crane operator on the Oakland, Calif., docks
and a leader of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local
10 in San Francisco, a key organizer of yesterday's rally. "With jobs
being offshored, outsourced, privatized, our young people are looking
at a much more dismal future."

Thousands stood at the foot of the memorial and along the sides of
the Reflecting Pool on a chilly October afternoon, calling for more
jobs, universal health care and an end to the war in Iraq. But with
room to walk freely and stretches of grass visible, the crowd by
midafternoon appeared far smaller than the 100,000 that organizers
had estimated on their National Park Service permit application.

A law enforcement official estimated the crowd at less than 10,000.
Organizers said 10,000 to 15,000 attended.

The Million Worker March title was meant to evoke the imagery of the
1995 Million Man March and not to reflect a crowd count, the
organizers said. They said they were not disappointed by the turnout,
although they complained that authorities prevented about 30 buses
from dropping off passengers near the memorial and redirected them to
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, causing many to show up late or
not at all. U.S. Park Police and D.C. police officials said they were
not aware of any buses being diverted.

The protest and a few related small marches were largely peaceful.
Sgt. Scott Fear, a Park Police spokesman, said only one arrest was
made -- a woman charged with demonstrating in a restricted zone near
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, a misdemeanor.

In the crowd were postal workers and longshoremen, school bus drivers
and teachers, department store staff and railway repair crews. They
said they came to Washington by car, bus and airplane just days
before Election Day to highlight the social, economic and political
hardships facing working Americans at home and on the job.

"I think we need a change," said Ronnie White, 48, a production
worker at a food plant in Kansas City, Mo., who stood on the steps
above the Reflecting Pool proudly wearing his black Teamsters Local
838 jacket. "We need the jobs here, not overseas."

An end to the outsourcing of jobs abroad was just one of the rally's
many far-reaching goals. Workers called for health care coverage from
"cradle to grave" for all Americans, a national living wage, a repeal
of the USA Patriot Act, more funding for public schools and free mass
transit, to name a few of their 22 demands.

Antiwar sentiment was also strong. Workers criticized the Bush
administration for leading the country into what they called an
unjustified war with Iraq, saying that the billions of dollars paying
for the war are needed instead in struggling schools and communities.
"We need to employ, not deploy," said Mark Barbour, 51, of
Blacksburg, Va., a longtime railway worker and member of the
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees Local 551.

Steve Burns, 43, a teacher at a Madison, Wis., community college,
endured a 14-hour van ride to Washington to have his voice heard --
and his handmade sign seen. Burns's felt-pen message was "End
For-Profit Health Care." He said he does not receive health care
benefits as an adjunct math instructor and is still paying off a
recent $1,200 hospital bill for an infection. "Our health care system
is a disaster, and neither candidate wants real reform," Burns said.

Though organizers had planned their protest as nonpartisan, speakers
and rallygoers were not bashful in showing their disapproval of
President Bush.

From a podium on a wide granite landing on the memorial steps, former
U.S. attorney general Ramsey Clark called for the impeachment of Bush
for war crimes. Activists in the audience carried anti-Bush stickers
and signs, and one of the most prominent banners on display was one
declaring, "The Bush regime engineered 9-11."

The turnout fell far short of the 250,000 who filled the Mall for the
labor movement's last major Washington demonstration, an August 1991
"Solidarity Day" rally that blamed political leaders, including
Bush's father, then-President George H.W. Bush, for turning their
backs on U.S. workers. That rally was sponsored by the AFL-CIO, the
nation's largest labor federation. But AFL-CIO leaders refused to
officially endorse or help organize yesterday's gathering, saying
they were focused instead on mobilizing voters for the presidential
election, a decision echoed by several major unions.

Organizers, who said unions representing more than 3.5 million
workers backed the demonstration, said the AFL-CIO's decision hurt
the turnout, but they expressed pride that their low-budget rally was
largely a rank-and-file effort.

Not all were trade unionists. About 100 protesters took part in an 11
a.m. "anarchist march," where Daniel Hall, 20, a student at the
University of Maryland, marched with a group of students holding up a
large banner that read, "Students and workers unite!" Hall said he
hoped the march "gets people thinking about labor and how things are
not getting better. It's a system of inequality."

Later in the afternoon, following speeches by King's son, Martin
Luther King III, and other civil rights and union leaders, a few
hundred marched from the Lincoln Memorial to the Hotel Washington on
15th Street NW in support of District hotel workers.

Negotiators for several major Washington hotels and the union that
represents 3,800 hotel employees remain deadlocked on a new contract.
Protesters chanted outside the hotel's doors as police looked on.
Three hotel workers leaned out a third-floor window, looked down on
the crowd and waved in support.
--
Yoshie

* Critical Montages: <http://montages.blogspot.com/>
* Greens for Nader: <http://greensfornader.net/>
* Bring Them Home Now! <http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/>
* OSU-GESO: <http://www.osu-geso.org/>
* Calendars of Events in Columbus:
<http://sif.org.ohio-state.edu/calendar.html>,
<http://www.freepress.org/calendar.php>, & <http://www.cpanews.org/>
* Student International Forum: <http://sif.org.ohio-state.edu/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osudivest.org/>
* Al-Awda-Ohio: <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Al-Awda-Ohio>
* Solidarity: <http://www.solidarity-us.org/>

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