Freedom Socialist â Vol. 25, No. 5 â December 2004-January 2005  
Million Worker March in Washington  defies AFL-CIO and calls for a fighting 
labor movement 
by Jonathon Hurd

   
October 17, 2004 was a milestone for U.S. labor: thousands of unionists,  
antiwar activists, and students, representing millions more like them,  
gathered 
in Washington, D.C., to call for politically independent activism by  and for 
working people. The forward thrust of the event stood in stark  contrast to 
the AFL-CIOâs failed strategy of support for John Kerry. 
Defying top national labor officials, rally-goers amassed at the Lincoln  
Memorial not to promote one capitalist politician over another, but to press  
their demands regardless of who occupies the White House. This was the  
class-conscious element of the labor movement, working people determined to  
speak for 
themselves â and confident that who is president matters less than  who is in 
the streets. 
Inspired by the march led by Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963, the Million  
Worker March was spearheaded by International Longshore and Warehouse Union  
(ILWU) Local 10 in San Francisco. "For too long has the labor movement been  
defensive and concessionary," said Trent Willis. "The Million Worker March is  
about changing that!"  
MWM co-chair Willis and other African American labor leaders from the ILWU  
and Teamsters Black Caucus provided the spark for the event and were central  
organizers. Their willingness to go against the tide, along with the  
predominance of people of color on the rally stage and in the crowd, showed  
once again 
where to look for leadership for genuine change: from the most  oppressed 
workers who need it most. 
The rallyâs extensive demands included jobs, healthcare, and housing for  
all; quality public education; a clean environment; and an end to Iraq war.  
(See 
www.millionworkermarch.org for more.) In addressing how to achieve these  
aims, many speakers discussed the history of U.S. labor radicalism, including  
the massive strikes of the 1930s. 
Freedom Socialist Party (FSP) leader Heidi Durham, a key organizer in the  
Northwest MWM committee, delivered a scathing indictment of the Democrats,  
including their rollback of unemployment benefits in Washington state. To  
roaring 
applause, she called for socialism as the ultimate solution to the  attacks 
on workers. Said Durham, "The time is now to rock the house of labor,  no 
matter who gets elected." 
Standing up to  bureaucrats. The thousands of people who came to  D.C., and 
the hundreds of unions that endorsed, did so despite the very vocal  
disapproval of the AFL-CIO labor federation. 
AFL-CIO leaders, believing that resources would be better used in the  effort 
to elect John Kerry, explicitly instructed federation-affiliated unions  not 
to support the MWM. This undoubtedly had an effect, but didnât stop the  
event. As Seattle ILWU member Celso Tolman remarked, "If they are not willing  
to 
lead, then we will lead and they can follow." 
Giselle Quezada, a phone tech who travelled from San Francisco to be in  
D.C., observed, "My union, the Communications Workers of America, does more to  
represent the company than to represent its members. Our voices are not being  
heard." 
The determination of unionists like Quezada and Tolman to breathe new life  
into labor made the MWM not only possible, but historic.  
For a world without war. Prominent themes were opposition to the Iraq war and 
occupation  and the need for internationalism in confronting corporate 
globalization and  U.S. imperialism.  
Picket signs demanded, "Union Jobs and Health Benefits, Not War!" Other  
signs and banners expressed solidarity with Iraqis, Palestinians, and the U.S.  
soldiers who three days earlier had refused to run a suicidal convoy. 
Angela C. Davis, an African American unionist from New York City, expressed  
the urgency of protesting, "especially at a time when most of the antiwar  
movement is putting their energy into electing Kerry." Women of color, Davis  
said, play a crucial leadership role. "We are disproportionately affected by  
poverty, lack of healthcare, and by going to war."  
>From the podium, Larry Holmes, chair of the International Action Center,  
called for work stoppages, boycotts and student walkouts to "end this war  
right 
now!" 
A woman from Haiti brought news of murder and repression following the  
U.S.-backed coup against Aristide. Lybon Mabasa, a socialist from South  
Africa, 
explained how the international debt racked up under apartheid still  cripples 
his countryâs economy. Messages of solidarity were delivered from  countries 
including Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, the Philippines, Pakistan, and  England. 
A new generation springs  forward. Another heartening feature of the day was  
the number of young people in attendance. "We need the hip-hop nation to rise 
 up!" declared MWM co-chair Willis. And, indeed, it was striking how many of  
the students participating in the rally are doing just that, as activists 
back  home in campus groups. 
"Itâs inspiring to see people my age who have labor on their minds," said  
Danielle Weeks, 23, a student at Sarah Lawrence College in New York. "The  
youth 
are important in this movement." 
NaâDina Mosley, 21, flew to D.C. from Seattle to represent Political Staff  
Workers Union, made up of staffers for the FSP, Radical Women (RW), and this  
newspaper. She and her co-unionists organized a raffle and sold tickets to  
raise funds for her trip. For Mosley, the event held special significance. Her  
mother, a former Black Panther, was part of the movement fighting for equal  
opportunity over 20 years ago. 
In our hands is placed the  power. Following the demonstration, at a packed  
reception hosted by FSP and RW participants at their hotel, Japanese railway  
workers and MWM organizers talked with unionists from around the U.S. Everyone 
 agreed the rally was a victory, but only a beginning. 
What was clear was the potential of the power of those who  had gathered at 
the Lincoln Memorial, and the need to push forward despite all  odds. 
As MWM co-chair Clarence Thomas said, "It is critical for working people to  
understand that the only time we gain any concessions from the system is when  
we organize independently of the two parties." The inglorious defeat of the  
Democratic Party in 2004 creates a new opportunity to develop something that  
has been a long time coming: workingclass political leadership independent of  
that party, and of the AFL-CIO officials who are bound to it.  
Jonathon Hurd, an electrical trainee and Northwest MWM Organizing Committee  
member, can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]) . 
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