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Workers Fight Back: The Midwest Unites to Defend the Commons
I’d never been to Madison, Wisconsin before this Saturday, and seeing the city filled with 70,000 people demanding their rights on a cold, late winter day was the best possible first impression. Standing in front of the capital with firefighters, teachers, LVNs, nurses, teaching assistants, and other public workers and their supporters, I was one small part of an overwhelming crowd spilling over the capitol lawn and onto the streets, far too large to take in from any one vantage point. I was there with the Graduate Employees Organization from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, sleep deprived from our early morning rise in order to make the drive from Illinois in time for the 10:30am rally.
Was it Scott Walker who brought us here? At first thought, the convergence seems a sad occasion, in a country where we appear to be losing ideological ground as a rightwing resurgence slowly chips away at hard-won rights. In one fell swoop, a governor seeks to erase organizing rights that were historically gained and preserved through the blood, sweat, and tears of workers and organizers. Gov. Walker’s bill would erode collective bargaining rights for public workers on all issues except wages and force public workers to pay substantially more for their healthcare and pensions, amounting to an 8% pay decrease. All of this in the state that was the first to grant collective bargaining rights over half a century ago.
But on second glance, the scene is a cause for hope. It was the sixth day of Wisconsin workers crowding the streets, showing up in the tens of thousands to fight Walker's draconian measures, and the energy was overwhelming. In moments of convergence like these, the fight becomes about more than the issue at hand. These are transformative spaces: small Midwestern cities changed into loci of regional protest. Ordinary people taking extraordinary measures: calling in sick, walking out of class, driving across country, stopping traffic, handing out food to thousands of strangers.
People overwhelmingly insisted that the battle is “not about money,” but respect and dignity. It’s about allowing public workers to follow through on their obligations to educate our children, treat our sick, and serve our public. It is about defending the commons.
After the 10:30am rally, protesters streamed into the capital. Over eight thousand people filled the multiple layers of that icon of Wisconsin state power. Protesters chanted "Union Power!" and "There ain't no power like the power of the people ‘cause the power of the people don't stop!”
Of course, the Tea Party came to show their support for Walker's anti-union bill, and of course, the mainstream media disproportionately covered them, even though they were a tiny presence, dwarfed by those defending their union rights.
We know the Tea Party doesn’t represent working-class America, despite their media spotlight. Working-class America is in the streets of Wisconsin in the tens of thousands, holding out for another freezing cold day with signs reading "Show teachers some respect" and "We make Wisconsin work."
As a graduate student active in my own union, I am grateful that my generation has the opportunity to witness the movements, uprisings, and revolutions sweeping the Middle East and North Africa. Not just because these revolts unravel the notion that the U.S. is an unstoppable empire free to support and instate dictators at will. Not just because these events highlight the cruel irony of the U.S. government’s economic support for dictatorships, wars, and occupations in this region while eroding the public goods of its own citizens. I’m grateful because these events remind us that people can, and do, struggle collectively for a better world, in the tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, in the millions.
The repression and government onslaught in the Middle East has been horrific, and many of us have watched in horror as governments have repressed, wounded, and murdered their people, with the number of dead in Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, and Iran still climbing. We have also watched as the U.S. government has continued to support dictators of strategic interest, even as they kill people in the streets (sometimes with U.S. weapons).
There is no way to tell which way things are headed, but it is crystal clear that revolt is sweeping the region. Things are changing, dictators are falling, and others shaking with fear.
This is not to say that Madison is Tahrir Square, but simply to say that we must believe that people working collectively can and will change society, no matter how bleak the conditions that bring us together. And we can dream big, fight the root causes behind these political attacks. We can build alternatives to capitalist approaches that place trust in the power of brute self-interest and roll back public goods, spaces, and decision-making power. The numbers in the streets show that Wisconsin wants something better and is willing to fight for it. Walker may have started a fight, but now a larger storm is brewing.
My first experience of Madison was one in which the city was swirling with hope, energy, and possibility. Let's keep going from here.


9 Comments so far
Show All(Comments just made to the AFL-CIO NOW BLOG:)
Attack on Labor: Six Reasons Sustainability Activists Should Care
http://blog.aflcio.org/2011/02/21/attack-on-labor-six-reasons-sustainability-activists-should-care/#comments
2 Comments
1.
JerryWells on 21.02.2011 at 10:45 (Reply)
The essential fact about the massive attack upon organized labor, and why this attack is resulting in the destruction of the organized labor movement, is that the attack on organized labor and working people in general: THE ATTACK UPON LABOR IS BI-PARTISAN!
Repeatedly, on this BLOG, the Republicans, The Tea Party anti-labor kooks, Rush Limbaugh and corporate media propagandists, are rightly denounced.
BUT OBAMA AND THE DEMOCRATS, MASSIVELY SUPPORTED BY THE AFL-CIO, HAVE USED THEIR POWER TO DESTROY TRADE UNIONISM, THE MIDDLE CLASS (HOUSING), PUBLIC EDUCATION, ETC. OBAMA REFUSED TO “BAIL OUT” THE STATES (public sector workers, teachers) WHILE TRILLIONS GO TO WALL STREET AND BILLIONS GO TO EXPAND the wars for profit in the Middle East.
President Obama , funded by massive corporate aid, forced the auto workers to accept 50% wage cuts and effectively destroyed the value of trade unionism. Obama’s “Health Care Reform” retained corporate profiteering.
The time to BREAK WITH THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY IS NOW !!!
Organized labor, in order to survive, in order to struggle politically, must call for a new anti-corporate political party to unite all working people, organized and unorganized!
2.
JerryWells on 21.02.2011 at 11:45 (Reply)
My suggestion for a name for our new party, using words that have deep roots in American history, that can communicate the goals of the new party:
The Commonwealth Democracy Party
Basic elements:
* A party that struggles politically for the economic betterment of all working people, trade union organized and unorganized working people.
* A party that rejects all corporate and capitalist funding and agendas that seek to maximize private profit at the expense of the public commonwealth.
* A party that struggles to build an economy “of, by, and for” the economic needs of the people.
Good luck organizing this new party. many have tried ask the Greens or the Socialist workers etc. The MONEY party has a lock on our faux Democracy you get the far right or the right that's it. If you try to go around this equation they send in the goons and they have plenty of $$. You think what Gaddifi is doing today is nasty, you have no idea how nasty it would be if we rose up against the thugs that OWN this country. We have been CRUSHED in the 40 yr. Class war that most people never even understood was being waged against them and their children. Get over it. We both know Americans won't left a friggin finger till they try to do what's happening in Wis. and they won't do that again. Walker got a little to cocky Class War central will now adjust the game back a notch and then cont. to push.
The AFL-CIO gave over $200 million total in the 2008 and 2010 elections.
The AFL-CIO has 11 million members, 3 million in Working America.
Organized labor has the potential seed resources to make a new "second" party
become established, perhaps in time for 2012 election.
This is not a call for another "third" party or in support of any existing socialist
party, all impoverished. Past failures in establishing an alternative political party
(I happen to be a registered voter to the Peace and Freedom Party in California.)
have nothing to do with this proposal, aimed at especially organized labor and it's self-destructive support of the Democratic Party.
Happened before.
Your assessment of Obama is right on. It sickens me to think that the Democrats have allowed him to throw their party. I and others used to be Democrats but I would not want to associate with what they have become now.
(see reply below)
Check this CATO Institute Union Bashing article, one British word for this guy.... Wanker
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=12799
Here's a simple thought one can use for any people who would actually support the fascist idiocy in WI:
Which of these three groups has NO history of EVER helping the average American worker?
1) Communists
2) Socialists
3) Neoliberals
The people in this country are so brainwashed that incredibly millions of average workers support a economic system - as represented by the Democrats and Republicans - that works to the detriment of their own livelihoods and which seeks to impose levels of exploitation not seen since feudal times.
You are right polycarpe.
But worse, it keeps getting worse.
At least in feudal times you could warm yourself sleeping in the stalls with the horses.
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