FROM PLANTON TO OCCUPY
Unions and Immigrants and the Occupy Movement
By David Bacon
http://www.truth-out.org/unions-and-immigrants-join-occupy-movements/1323183717

        OAKLAND, CA  (12/5/11) -- When Occupy 
Seattle called its tent camp "Planton Seattle," 
camp organizers were laying a local claim to a 
set of tactics used for decades by social 
movements in Mexico, Central America and the 
Philippines.  And when immigrant janitors marched 
down to the detention center in San Diego and 
called their effort Occupy ICE (the initials of 
the Immigration and Custom Enforcement agency 
responsible for mass deportations), people from 
countries with that planton tradition were 
connecting it to the Occupy movement here.



The banners at Occupy Seattle

        This shared culture and history offer new 
possibilities to the Occupy movement for survival 
and growth at a time when the Federal law 
enforcement establishment, in cooperation with 
local police departments and municipal 
governments, has uprooted many tent encampments. 
Different Occupy groups from Wall Street to San 
Francisco have begun to explore their 
relationship with immigrant social movements in 
the U.S., and to look more closely at the actions 
of the 1% beyond our borders that produces much 
of the pressure for migration. 
        Reacting to the recent evictions, the 
Coalition for the Political Rights of Mexicans 
Abroad recently sent a support letter to Occupy 
Wall Street and the other camps under attack. 
"We greet your movement," it declared, "because 
your struggle against the suppression of human 
rights and against social and economic injustice 
has been a fundamental part of our struggle, that 
of the Mexican people who cross borders, and the 
millions of Mexican migrants who live in the 
United States."
        Many of those migrants living in the U.S. 
know the tradition of the planton and how it's 
used at home.  And they know that the 1%, whose 
power is being challenged on Wall Street, also 
designed the policies that are the very reason 
why immigrants are living in the U.S. to begin 
with.  Mike Garcia, president of United Service 
Workers West/SEIU, the union that organized 
Occupy ICE, described immigrant janitors as 
"displaced workers of the new global economic 
order, an order led by the West and the United 
States in particular."
        Criminalizing the act of camping out in a 
public space is intended, at least in part, to 
keep a planton tradition from acquiring the same 
legitimacy in the U.S. that it has in other 
countries.  That right to a planton was not 
freely conceded by the rulers of Mexico, El 
Salvador or the Philippines, however -- no more 
than it has been conceded here.  The 99% of those 
countries had to fight for it. 
        Two of the biggest battles of modern 
Mexican political history were fought in the 
Tlatelolco Plaza, where hundreds of students were 
gunned down in 1968, and three years later in 
Mexico City streets where more were beaten and 
shot by the paramilitary Halcones.  In both El 
Salvador and the Philippines, strikers have a 
tradition of living at the gates of the factory 
or enterprise where they work.  But even today 
that right must be defended against the police, 
and (at least until the recent election of the 
Funes and Aquino governments) even the military.
        Plantons or encampments don't stand 
alone.  They are tactics used by unions, 
students, farmers, indigenous organizations and 
other social movements.  Each planton is a 
visible piece of a movement or organization -- a 
much larger base.  When the plantons are useful 
to those movements, they defend them.  That 
connection between planton and movement, between 
the encampment and its social base, is as 
important as holding the physical space on which 
the tents are erected.

        For the last two years that relationship 
has been very clear in the Zocalo, Mexico City's 
huge central plaza.  During that time, fired 
members of Mexico's independent leftwing 
electrical workers union, the SME, have lived in 
a succession of plantons.  They've often been 
elaborate, with kitchens, meeting rooms and 
communications centers, in addition to the tents 
where people slept and ate. 
        At various time, the SME encampment was 
one of several in the huge square.  A year ago 
the workers were joined by indigenous Triqui and 
Mixtec women from Oaxaca, who protested the 
violence used by their state's previous governor 
against teachers' strikes and rural 
organizations.  The social movement in Oaxaca, 
which the women represented in Mexico City, grew 
strong enough to finally knock the old ruling 
party, the PRI, from the governorship it had held 
for almost 80 years.
        In the Zocalo plantons, people from 
different organizations mix it up.  Last 
September's Day of the Indignant brought together 
people from very diverse movements.  Some see 
electoral politics as a vehicle for change, but 
many indigenous activists and SME members don't. 
Even among those who do, there are deep 
disagreements over how to participate in the 
electoral process. 
        But the people in the Zocalo have two 
things in common.  Different plantons may not see 
every political question eye-to-eye, but each 
represents a social movement in the world outside 
the plaza.  And the planton itself has value 
primarily because it forces public attention to 
focus on the crisis that has led each group to 
set up its encampment.
        The SME workers used their plantons to 
dramatize repression by the Federal government. 
When Mexican President Felipe Calderon dissolved 
the state-run power company for central Mexico 
and fired its 44,000 employees, he sought to 
destroy their union and move towards the 
privatization of the electrical system -- to 
benefit Mexican and foreign 1%ers. A year ago, 
several SME members conducted a hunger strike at 
the planton that generated front page headlines 
for weeks, and lasted so long that doctors warned 
participants they were risking death.  At the 
height of the protest, the union battled police 
in front of the power stations, as it tried to 
exercise its legal right to strike and picket. 
        The planton and the movement outside it 
were intimately connected.  The hunger strikers 
were few, but spoke for a union of tens of 
thousands of workers.  In the end, the SME 
negotiated the removal of its last planton in 
return for government acknowledgement of its 
right to exist.  It organized other unions to 
resist the government's assault on labor rights, 
and mobilized electricity consumers to protest 
rising bills and cuts in service.  The planton 
helped to focus attention on these demands, and 
to pull the union's allies into action.
        Clearly someone in Seattle knows this 
tradition of plantons in the Zocalo, perhaps even 
as a participant.  When the painter made the 
Seattle banner, she or he also included, right 
next to the word "planton", the anarchists' "A" 
with the circle around it.  This symbol was a 
reminder of another aspect of cross-border 
fertilization.  Many anarchists or 
anarcho-syndicalists -- members of the Industrial 
Workers of the World - fought in the Mexican 
Revolution.  Because of that revolutionary 
upheaval, even today, almost a century later, 
ordinary Mexicans expect certain rights, 
including the right to set up a tent in the 
Zocalo.  U.S. workers crossed the border to fight 
alongside Mexicans in that insurrection long ago, 
for a government that would acknowledge that 
right.  The planton, therefore, is a common 
heritage, with a history that makes it as 
legitimate on Wall Street as it is in Mexico City.
        Not long after the OWS camp was set up in 
Zuccotti Park, the planton/occupy movement 
crossed the U.S./Mexico border.  In Tijuana, home 
to a million people, mostly displaced migrants 
from Mexico's south, activists came together and 
set up an occupation on the grassy median of the 
Paseo de los Heroes.  Their tents were pitched in 
the middle of the Zona del Rio, where the city's 
1% meet in fancy hotels and work in government 
offices.  Then, on October 18 police reacted even 
earlier than they did in most U.S. cities, 
arresting two dozen activists at the urging of 
local businessmen.  Occupy Tijuana condemned the 
detentions, declaring, "We are not assassins, 
delinquents, tramps or crooks."

        In the U.S. we have our own history of 
defending public space for protest, and it isn't 
necessary to reach back a hundred years to find 
it.  In just the last few decades, immigrant 
workers have popularized the use of the planton 
here, helping unions recover the militant tactics 
of their own past.  In 1992 immigrants trying to 
join the United Electrical Workers mounted the 
first strike among production workers in Silicon 
Valley, and set up a planton and conducted a 
hunger strike to pressure their employer.  A year 
later other Latino immigrants in San Francisco 
erected their tents on the sidewalk in front of 
Sprint's headquarters, after their workplace was 
closed days before they were scheduled to vote in 
a union election.  
        A decade ago anti-globalization activists 
and unions shut down the meeting of the World 
Trade Organization in Seattle.  Young protestors 
chained their arms together inside metal pipes, 
and lay down in the intersections of downtown 
Seattle.  Tens of thousands took over the 
streets.  Other anti-globalization protests 
followed, in which activists battled for their 
right to use public space to challenge the 
international policies of the 1%. 
        Working=class support for the battle in 
Seattle had its roots in the impact of the North 
American Free Trade Agreement.  Workers could see 
the cost of free trade in the loss of their own 
jobs, as production moved south.  Over the last 
two decades, many have also discovered that those 
same agreements and policies didn't make Mexicans 
better off, but led to their impoverishment as 
well.
        NAFTA and free market policies forced on 
developing countries produced opportunities for 
banks and corporations to reap profits.  They 
drove down wages, forced farmers off their land, 
and destroyed the unions and livelihood of 
millions of people.  This system was designed on 
Wall Street, by the same bankers Occupiers hold 
responsible for the current crisis of 
foreclosures and unemployment in the U.S.  The 
current economic crisis doesn't stop at the 
border.  In fact in Mexico, Central America, the 
Philippines and elsewhere, it's been a fact of 
life for a long time.  This is the source of 
forced migration -- what Garcia condemned at 
Occupy ICE.
        The 99% live in all those countries where 
free trade agreements and structural adjustment 
policies are imposed.  They also live in the 
communities of people who have come here as a 
result.  Who, then, are more natural allies for 
Occupy protestors than people who've been on the 
receiving end of these policies for years?
        In New York this connection wasn't lost 
on Occupy Wall Street.  In October a group, 
Occupy Wall Street - Español was formed at the 
first Asemblea en Español.  They, in turn, 
translated the first issue of the Occupied Wall 
Street Journal.  Participants formed a subgroup, 
Occupy Wall Street Latinoamericano to spread the 
movement to Spanish-speaking communities, 
recognizing that the city is home to so many 
Mexicans from the state of Puebla that its 
nickname is PueblaYork, as well as much older 
established communities of Puerto Ricans, 
Colombians, Ecuadorians and other 
Spanish-speaking people.  The group will soon 
publish the first issue of its own newspaper, 
with articles talking about immigration, 
globalization, and the specific attacks by the 1% 
on Latinos.
        Claudia Villegas, a women's rights 
activist working with the group Occupy Wall 
Street Latinoamericano, helped organize a 
demonstration of immigrant women four days after 
police raided the Zuccotti Park encampment.  "We 
decided to change our original plan for a march 
because we were afraid they would stop it," she 
says.  "Nevertheless, 23 organizations 
participated including women's rights groups and 
above all, those working with immigrant women."
        In San Francisco a joint march of 
immigrant activists and Occupy participants 
helped to defend that city's encampment.  In the 
general assembly meeting preceding it 
participants talked about the city's offer to 
move the Occupiers into an abandoned building in 
the Latino Mission District several miles away. 
Few wanted to give up the camp on Justin Herman 
Plaza, and most felt the city was just trying to 
move them out of sight.  But many people also 
felt that having an Occupy camp in the barrio was 
a good idea.
        "We're still really working in parallel," 
Villegas says.  She draws attention to the 
potential power of the immigrant rights movement, 
and what it could mean to OWS.  "We have to 
include the movement that began in 2006, when 
there were hundreds of thousands of people in the 
streets across this country.  People were 
reacting to the injustice of the system then 
too."  They're separate movements, though, she 
warns, and "our agenda has to come from 
immigrants themselves.  We need to integrate, and 
at the same time the Occupy movement has to learn 
to accept us.  But we're all on the same path."

        Bringing the immigrant and Occupy 
movements together means more than setting up an 
encampment.  The San Diego demonstration didn't 
set up an overnight camp, but it brought 
thousands of workers and supporters down to the 
ICE detention center to protest the firings of 
immigrant janitors. 
        The Occupy ICE protest was intended to 
draw public attention to the Federal government's 
immigration enforcement strategy that requires 
employers to fire undocumented workers.  In 
Southern California, the multinational 
corporations who clean office buildings are 
terminating 2000 union members.  Earlier waves of 
firings have targeted unionized building cleaners 
in Minneapolis, Seattle and San Francisco, sewing 
machine operators in Los Angeles, food service 
workers on university campuses, and thousands of 
others.
        Garcia says ICE and the employers are in 
collusion.  After firing union janitors with high 
seniority and benefits, using immigration status 
as a pretext, the companies can then hire new 
workers at lower wages with fewer benefits.  "To 
hide their greed the commercial real estate 
industry has used the tools of government to 
confuse and divide the 99%," he charges. "They 
first said we were unskilled workers who should 
be happy to be working. They then weakened worker 
protections to make organizing virtually 
impossible. Over the last decade the industry has 
used immigration as a wedge to intimidate and, if 
need be, replace our workers.  ICE is doing what 
the 1% corporate real estate industry wants: 
using immigration laws to recycle well paid 
janitors in the hopes of taking back gains in pay 
and benefits our union has won."  [Ironically the 
week USWW organized Occupy ICE its parent union, 
SEIU, endorsed the reelection of President Obama, 
who is responsible for the ICE policy of firing 
workers.] 
        For Occupy, defending workers under 
attack is a way to survive, grow roots and 
develop a strong base.  That's not always the 
direction activists take, however.  Near Oakland, 
over two hundred immigrant workers at the largest 
foundry on the west coast, Pacific Steel Casting 
in Berkeley, are being fired in another "silent 
raid" like that hitting the janitors.  Through 
the summer and fall, foundry workers went to city 
councils, unions, churches and community 
organizations, seeking help to pressure ICE not 
to force them from their jobs.  Their campaign 
held "the migra" off for months, but the firings 
began nevertheless in November.  Now these 
immigrant families are trying to survive.  Occupy 
Oakland has yet to respond, however. 
        Instead, some of its activists are trying 
to shut down work in Oakland's port a second 
time, as well as others along the west coast.  An 
earlier march to close the port after the first 
eviction of Occupy Oakland drew thousands of 
people.  The proposal for a second coast-wide 
shutdown, however, is opposed by the longshore 
union.  The ILWU's opposition does not come from 
conservatism.  The union, whose members make a 
living from international shipping and trade, has 
been one of the most vocal critics of U.S. free 
trade agreements.  ILWU members have taken action 
many times to defend the SME and unions in 
Mexico, as well as other countries.  Its locals, 
however, had no role in the decision to try to 
close the ports, nor did other port workers.
        Solidarity is a two-way street, based on 
mutual respect.  In most cities, including 
Oakland and San Francisco, labor has welcomed 
Occupy and sought to defend the encampments.  In 
New York, Occupy activists have been given 
resources in many union halls, and unions have 
mobilized against police raids at Zuccotti Park. 
An alliance of unions, immigrants and Occupiers 
has great potential strength, not just in 
numbers, but also in the exchange of ideas and 
tactics.  Unions in particular might benefit from 
wider use of the planton or Occupy encampment. 
Occupy ICE challenges the Occupy movement to take 
up the firings of immigrant workers, but it's 
also a challenge to unions themselves, many of 
whom have watched in silence as longtime members 
were forced from their jobs. 
        The vision of Occupy -- the 99% vs. the 
1% -- has enormous support among immigrants and 
unions.  In place of the tired rhetoric of 
politicians, shedding crocodile tears for the 
"middle class" while demonizing the poor, Occupy 
gives workers a vision of their commonality in 
the 99%.  This powerful message blows away 
illusions that higher-paid workers have more in 
common with stockbrokers than with immigrants 
laboring at minimum wage, or unemployed young 
people on the streets of African American ghettos 
or Latino barrios.
        The Coalition for the Political Rights of 
Mexicans Abroad shares the same vision of 
class-based commonality.  "We are outraged," it 
says, "that U.S. citizens, when they demand 
justice and expose the inequalities that exist in 
their society, are treated like criminals.  With 
the same outrage, we condemn the criminalization 
of migrant Mexicans by the U.S. government, the 
raids by immigration authorities [and] the 
militarization of the border...No human being 
should be treated as a criminal because they 
struggle to find better conditions in which to 
live."


For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization 
Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants 
(Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the 
U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 
2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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