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A broad coalition including Peoples Climate Movement, 350.org, Sierra Club, SEIU, California Environmental Justice Alliance, Organizing for Action, and dozens more, are mobilizing tens of thousands of people for Rise for Climate, Jobs, and Justice September 8th, a national and international mobilization for climate action. On September 8th, four days before the start of Governor Jerry Brown's Global Climate Action Summit (GCAS) and two months before the midterm elections, people from across the country and around the world will take to the streets to demonstrate the power and energy of the climate movement, demand bold action on climate change, and amplify the leadership of those most impacted by the climate crisis.
Over the past week, California's wildfires have destroyed hundreds of acres of land from the Oregon border to Napa County and Santa Barbara to San Diego. Thousands of firefighters are battling hotter-than-usual temperatures and windy conditions far ahead of when summer fire season usually begins. On the Atlantic side of the United States, Puerto Rico, still recovering from Hurricane Maria, was hit with heavy rain and winds, creating flash-flood conditions on the island and exacerbating power outages that have remained since last year's climate-related weather crisis. With hurricane season already underway, communities across the Gulf are already bracing themselves for the next wave of destruction.
As climate impacts steadily worsen, the federal government continues to roll back climate and environmental policies, all the while increasing attacks and undermining the dignity and human rights of families and communities.
In the absence of federal action, Rise for Climate, Jobs, and Justice September 8th will set the bar for the Summit by demonstrating what real climate leadership looks like and challenging local elected officials and international governments to accelerate progress towards just and equitable climate solutions. Rise for Climate, Jobs, and Justice September 8th will call on leaders and elected officials to invest in real solutions to the climate crisis that prioritize the most impacted and vulnerable of our communities, like a massive, just transition to a 100% clean and renewable energy economy that ensures safe and healthy communities, the right to organize for all workers, and millions of family-sustaining jobs.
Dozens of events are planned for September 8th. An anchor event in San Francisco expecting tens of thousands of participants will be echoed by marches, rallies, and forums in New York City; Miami; New Orleans; Flint, MI; Joliet, IL; Denver; Minneapolis; and many more around the globe.
Quote Sheet:
"As Trump continues to line the pockets of Big Oil executives, we must push forward a brilliant vision for a fossil free world that is racially and economically just and prioritizes those most impacted by the climate crisis. Everyday, this administration is scapegoating and violating the rights of immigrants and putting the health and safety of communities at risk. That's why here and around the world, communities are rising up to demand that elected officials step up on climate action. We need a fast, fair, and just transition away from fossil fuels to a 100% renewable energy economy, that protects vulnerable people already impacted by climate change and creates good paying jobs and opportunities for all. We are rising for climate on September 8th ahead of the Global Climate Action Summit to put ourselves on the path to a safe and just future for everyone. Now, our leaders must step up to the plate." - May Boeve, Executive Director, 350.org
"The time to act is now. All across California we have seen the effects of climate change through the intense wildfires. This is only the beginning. If we don't act, more people will continue to get hurt.""This march is going to be a space for those who care about the environment to show that there is a need for us to change the relationship we have with the environment, because the one we have right now isn't working. Our work will continue the momentum we build at this march. In Sonoma County, we have been working on directly addressing the lack of access people have to a clean environment. The first step in this work is to change the way we, as people, perceive the environment. People's lives are affected everyday by environmental racism, therefore we won't stop working until all communities have access to clean air, water, and a clean environment." - Raquel Guevara Bolanos, Justice for the environment task force, North Bay Organizing Project.
"Migration and the climate crisis are inextricably linked. Not only are families fleeing violence, they are leaving their home countries due to the economic hardships they live under, oftentimes made worse by climate change. The mindset that allows for corporations to plunder land in Mexico or Central America for profit, is the same as the one that ignores the pain caused by separating families seeking asylum and a better life. We need to respect the right to clean air, water and land and the right to due process." - Antonio Diaz, Organization Director, PODER
"Our democracy is being shredded, our rights are being taken away, our most vulnerable communities are under attack, and our planet is in crisis. We must show up on September 8th to demand the bold climate action that we need and that will leave no one behind. Then, we must - and will - educate people on why they should, and how they can, vote for Climate, Jobs, and Justice on November 6th." - Paul Getsos, National Director, Peoples Climate Movement
"With increased attacks on our families and communities, health and environmental threats worsening, and a green light at the highest levels to discriminate, now is the time to take action for our people and our planet! We must engage in the joint practice of standing up with fierce love, being a caring neighbor, and realize that long term wins for the climate are won when we lock arms together and demand change. It isn't going to come from the top down, it seldom does." - Angela Adrar, Executive Director of the Climate Justice Alliance
"Climate action" cannot be top-down, market-based, or removed from frontline solutions. Our organized communities - indigenous, black, people of color, working class, immigrant, women, LGBTQ people, all those on the frontlines of climate change and economic exploitation - are those who should be leading the solutions we need. Any approach to tackling climate change must acknowledge this and recognize that this is one symptom of systems crisis, interlinked with militarization and violence globally as a product of capitalism, institutional racism and patriarchy. As It Takes Roots, we are working with this broad coalition for the Rise for Climate, Jobs, and Justice mobilization to provide that grassroots voice for a just transition to a new and regenerative system." - Maya Bhardwaj, It Takes Roots National Coordinator
"It is important that Indigenous people and our voices are uplifted at the Rise march in San Francisco in September. Many of us have a deep understanding of the balance of life on Earth, and many intact traditional Indigenous communities continue to maintain the knowledge of how to live within the natural laws of our planet. We understand that the false solutions by elected officials are not in alignment with what is necessary for life to continue. As an Indigenous person growing up near a refinery, the impacts I have faced daily are alarming. Even more so because of the false solution of carbon trading which allows refineries like Chevron in Richmond, CA to continue to harm my community and the climate." - Isabelle Zizi, organizer, Idle No More SF Bay
"Here in California, our summer has gotten off to an ominous start, with an unprecedented heat wave and dangerous wildfires kicking off the start of what could be an especially dangerous fire season. As summer heats up, so too is organizing for the Rise for Climate, Jobs and Justice march, and with good reason. Our climate emergency requires true climate leadership, and California can lead the way by standing up to Big Oil and keeping fossil fuels in the ground. This September, the streets will be filled with concerned community members demanding nothing less." -David Turnbull, Strategic Communications Director, Oil Change International
"We stand with indigenous and grassroots leaders in the global call to keep fossil fuels in the ground from California to the Amazon. They demonstrate the real climate leadership we so desperately need in the face of this climate crisis and the world must hear their voices loud and clear at the RISE mobilization and beyond."- Leila Salazar-Lopez, Executive Director, Amazon Watch
"For people of faith, the Earth's sacredness and our duty of care are non-negotiable. Rising for climate, jobs and justice is a profound expression of our deepest moral values - to protect life, to protect families, workers and communities, to protect our precious planet. People of faith and spirit are ready to rise!" - Reverend Fletcher Harper, Executive Director, Green Faith
"At this critical juncture in human history, with the very future of the Earth and our lives on the line - people are standing up around the world with bravery, hope, and transformative, strategic vision for a healthy and livable world. Women, though most adversely impacted by climate change, are continuing to rise up on the frontlines of struggles for social and ecological justice everywhere we look. Women community organizers, activist, students, advocates, and educators are the backbone of our peoples movements - with Indigenous and women of color standing strong as lights to lead the way forward. This September, expect the voices, solutions and resistance efforts of women for climate justice to be bold, creative, and unstoppable." - Osprey Orielle Lake, Founder and Executive Director of the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International
"Now more than ever, Americans are rising up to demand real leadership on the systemic injustices that plague our communities. From flooding on the coasts to rampant wildfires on the west, Americans are hurting and demanding change over contrition. When our leaders fail us in Washington, we will take to the streets and create the groundswell to raise the tide for political action. We demand justice - justice for jobs, for public health, and for our environment." - Rebecca Sobel, Climate and Energy Senior Campaigner, Wild Earth Guardians
"As Dr. Martin Luther King eloquently put, 'we are caught in an inescapable network of mutualities...whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly'. This is at the very core of our work on climate actions and our shared understanding on justice, jobs and climate specifically." -- Bettina Hausmann, Executive Director, UN Association San Diego Chapter.
350 is building a future that's just, prosperous, equitable and safe from the effects of the climate crisis. We're an international movement of ordinary people working to end the age of fossil fuels and build a world of community-led renewable energy for all.
"The billions in funding in this bill will only embolden ICE and CBP to continue arresting our neighbors—immigrant and US citizen alike," warned one ACLU attorney.
Seven Democrats in the US House of Representatives voted with nearly all Republicans on Thursday to pass a Department of Homeland Security funding bill despite growing calls from across the country for Congress to rein in the Trump administration's deadly immigration operations, which are led by DHS agents.
Democratic Reps. Henry Cuellar (Texas), Don Davis (NC), Laura Gillen (NY), Jared Golden (Maine), Vicente Gonzalez (Texas), Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (Wash.), and Tom Suozzi (NY) joined all Republicans but Rep. Thomas Massie (KY) for the 220-207 vote that sent the legislation to the Senate—where the GOP also has a majority, but it's so narrow that most bills need some Democratic support to pass.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) notably refused to pressure members of his caucus to oppose the bill, even though voters clearly oppose federal operations featuring violence and lawlessness by agents with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) everywhere from California and Illinois, to Minnesota and Maine.
Jeffries and other Democratic leaders have faced growing public pressure to use a rapidly approaching deadline—if Congress doesn't pass legislation by January 30, the federal government shuts down again—to freeze ICE funding. The bill that advanced out of the House on Thursday would give ICE $10 billion and CBP $18.3 billion.
"I just voted HELL NO to giving ICE a single penny," declared Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), who's part of the progressive Squad. "Congress should not be funding an agency that has terrorized our communities, kidnapped our neighbors, and killed people on the street with impunity. We must abolish ICE and end qualified immunity for ICE agents NOW."
Two weeks ago, ICE officer Jonathan Ross fatally shot Renee Good, a 37-year-old US citizen and mother of three, in the Twin Cities, where President Donald Trump has sent thousands of federal agents. Videos, eyewitness accounts, analyses of the shooting, and an independent autopsy have fueled calls for Ross' arrest and prosecution.
Squad member Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), whose district includes Minneapolis, said ahead of the vote: "Deporting children with cancer. Using a 5-year-old as bait. Shooting moms. ICE is beyond reform. And today the House is voting to bankroll more terror. Hell no."
Another Squad member, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), said: "DHS is using our tax dollars to terrorize our neighbors and detain 5-year-olds. It's shameful. ICE must be abolished. Kristi Noem must be impeached. And not one more penny should go to this rogue agency."
The entire Congressional Progressive Caucus opposed the bill. CPC Chair Greg Casar (D-Texas) said in a video posted to social media after the vote that "this mass deportation machine is out of control: detaining and deporting US citizens and veterans, arresting little kids, ripping up families, killing innocent people. It's got to stop."
"Our taxpayer money does not need to got to Donald Trump's out-of-control mass deportation machine," Casar added. "We should be sending it to our schools and to childcare, and to bringing down the cost of living for everyday people."
MoveOn Civic Action spokesperson Britt Jacovich said in a Thursday statement that "Americans want healthcare and lower costs, not masked ICE agents kidnapping kids from playgrounds and schools. The House just failed their latest test to hold Trump and his dangerous ICE street gang accountable for killing innocent people like Renee Nicole Good and many others. Senate Democrats need to step up for the American people and block any funding bill that gives another dime for ICE to abduct 5-year olds and kill citizens."
Kate Voigt, senior policy counsel at the ACLU—which has been involved in multiple lawsuits over recent DHS operations—similarly stressed that "the House vote in favor of excessive funding for ICE with no meaningful accountability measures is wildly out of touch with polling that shows the majority of voters oppose ICE and Border Patrol's attacks on our communities."
"The bill fails to rein in ICE and Border Patrol at a time when they are engaged in an unprecedented assault on our rights, safety, and democratic way of life," she continued. "The billions in funding in this bill will only embolden ICE and CBP to continue arresting our neighbors—immigrant and US citizen alike—no matter the costs to our communities, economy, and integrity of our Constitution.
"While the House narrowly passed this bill, we thank the members of Congress who held the line and voted against this harmful legislation," Voigt added. "Now we need our senators to hold firm and refuse to be complicit in fueling ICE's reckless abuses in our communities."
Every representative who voted yes voted for more brutalization of our neighbors, more kidnapping of our children, more trampling of our rights, and more murder from this government.
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— Indivisible ❌👑 (@indivisible.org) January 22, 2026 at 6:53 PM
The group Indivisible emphasized that "the House had an opportunity to impose meaningful restrictions on ICE and it failed. As the regime terrorizes our communities with masked federal agents and unchecked violence, Congress stood quietly by and passed a DHS funding bill that continues to funnel taxpayer dollars into ICE's slush fund."
"Passing this bill without any meaningful check on this lawless agency is beyond the pale," Indivisible added. "In an egregious failure of leadership, House Democratic 'leaders' personally opposed the bill while declining to whip against it."
The DHS legislation advanced alongside a three-bill appropriations package, which passed by a vote of 341-88. According to the Hill: "The House will combine the four bills with a two-bill minibus it passed last week and send the full package to the Senate. The upper chamber is expected to take up the bills when it returns from recess next week ahead of a January 30 deadline."
"The maniac in the White House does not have the authority to bomb and invade anywhere he wants across the globe," said Rep. Rashida Tlaib. "Congress must put an end to this."
The latest in a series of congressional efforts to rein in President Donald Trump's military aggression against Venezuela failed Thursday as Republican lawmakers again defeated a war powers resolution by the tightest possible margin.
House lawmakers voted 215-215 on H.Con.Res.68—introduced last month by Rep. James McGovern (D-Mass.)—which "directs the president to remove US armed forces from Venezuela unless a declaration of war or authorization to use military force for such purpose has been enacted."
Unlike in the Senate, where the vice president casts tie-breaking votes, a deadlock in the House means the legislation does not pass.
Every House Democrat and two Republicans—Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska and Thomas Massie of Kentucky—voted in favor of the measure. Every other Republican voted against it. Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.) did not vote.
The House vote came a week after Vice President JD Vance’s tie-breaking vote was needed to overcome a 50-50 deadlock on a similar resolution introduced last month by Sens. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY).
The War Powers Resolution of 1973—also known as the War Powers Act—was enacted during the Nixon administration toward the end of the US war on Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. The law empowers Congress to check the president’s war-making authority by requiring the president to report any military action to Congress within 48 hours. It also mandates that lawmakers approve any troop deployments lasting longer than 60 days.
Thursday's vote followed this month's US bombing and invasion of Venezuela and kidnapping of its president, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife on dubious "narco-terrorism" and drug trafficking allegations. Trump has also imposed an oil blockade on the South American nation, seizing seven tankers. Since September, the US has also been bombing boats accused of transporting drugs in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean.
"If the president is contemplating further military action, then he has a moral and constitutional obligation to come here and get our approval," McGovern said following the vote.
House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Gregory Meeks (D-NY) lamented the resolution's failure, saying, "The American people want us to lower their cost of living, not enable war."
Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) said on Bluesky: "Only Congress has the authority to declare war. Today, I voted for a war powers resolution to ensure Trump cannot send OUR armed forces to Venezuela without explicit authorization from Congress."
Cavan Kharrazian, senior policy adviser at the advocacy group Demand Progress, also decried the resolution's failure.
“We are deeply disappointed that the House did not pass this war powers resolution, though it's notable that it failed only due to a tie," he said.
"As with the recent Senate vote, the administration expended extraordinary energy pressuring Republicans to block this resolution," Kharrazian added. "That effort speaks for itself: With the American people tired of endless war, the administration knows that a Congress willing to enforce the law can meaningfully curtail illegal and escalatory military action. We urge members of Congress to continue fully exercising their constitutional authority over matters of war.”
"Let him talk," said one observer of the vice president. "He's his own iceberg."
US Vice President JD Vance left observers scratching their heads Thursday after he touted the Trump administration's economic policies by comparing them to the doomed ocean liner Titanic.
Speaking at an event in Toledo in his home state of Ohio under a banner reading, "Lower Prices, Bigger Paychecks," Vance addressed the worsening affordability crisis by once again blaming former Democratic President Joe Biden—who left office a year ago—for the problem.
“The Democrats talk a lot about the affordability crisis in the United States of America. And yes, there is an affordability crisis—one created by Joe Biden’s policies,” Vance said. “You don’t turn the Titanic around overnight. It takes time to fix what was broken.”
Responding to Vance's remarks, writer and activist Jordan Uhl said on X, "The Titanic, a ship that famously turned around."
Other social media users piled on Vance, with one Bluesky account posting: "Let him talk. He's his own iceberg."
Podcaster Brian Tyler Cohen asked on X, "Does he know what happened to the Titanic?"
One popular X account said, "At least he's admitting what ship we're on."
In an allusion to the Titanic's demise and the Trump administration's deadly Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdown, another Bluesky user quipped, "Ice was the villain of that story too."
Puns aside, statistics and public sentiment show that Trump has utterly failed to tackle the affordability crisis. The high price of groceries—a central theme of Trump's 2024 campaign—keeps getting higher. And despite Trump's claim to have defeated inflation, a congressional report published this week revealed that the average American family paid $1,625 in higher overall costs last year amid tariff turmoil, soaring healthcare costs, and overall policies that favor the rich and corporations over working people.
A New York Times/Siena College poll released Thursday found that 49% of respondents believe the country is generally worse off today than it was when Biden left office a year ago, while only 32% said the nation is better off and 19% said things are about the same. A majority of respondents also said they disapprove of how Trump is handling the cost of living (64%) and the economy (58%).
"You know, a thing about a phrase like 'lower prices, bigger paychecks' is that you can't actually fool people into thinking that you've delivered these things if they can look at their own bank account and see it's not true," Current Affairs editor Nathan J. Robinson wrote on X.
"I know the Trump administration's standard strategy is to just make up an alternate reality and aggressively insist that anyone who doesn't believe in it is a domestic terrorist," Robinson added, "but personal finances are really an area where that doesn't work."