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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.
An Iranian official said Trump's operation "failed completely" and that Iran "will not participate in direct negotiations until the United States formally announces the end of the blockade."
US President Donald Trump announced late Tuesday that he is putting his administration's scheme to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz on hold after just one full day, a decision that came hours after top American officials touted the president's so-called "Project Freedom" at press briefings.
Trump said in a social media post that he paused the project—which allowed just two commercial ships to pass through the strait—"based on the request of Pakistan and other countries." The US president, whose war of choice is historically unpopular with the American public, also asserted that "Great Progress has been made toward a Complete and Final Agreement with Representatives of Iran," a claim that Iran rejected.
As Pakistan's prime minister welcomed Trump's announcement, an unnamed Iranian official told Drop Site's Jeremy Scahill that the US president's short-lived operation "failed completely" and that his statement announcing the pause of Project Freedom was "riddled with falsehoods." The official added that "we will not participate in direct negotiations until the United States formally announces the end of the blockade."
The US president said in his post that the illegal US naval blockade of Iran would "remain in full force and effect."
"Trump is desperately bouncing from one extreme to another," said political scientist Robert Pape in response to Trump's announcement.
Trump's decision to put Project Freedom on hold came shortly after Pentagon Secretary Pete Hegseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio hailed the president's initiative as a bold mission to rescue some 1,600 vessels stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran closed in response to the unlawful US-Israeli war and subsequent naval blockade.
"Iran's plan, a form of international extortion, is unacceptable. That ends with Project Freedom," Hegseth declared during a press briefing on Tuesday morning.
Rubio similarly decried Iran's actions in the Strait of Hormuz—located in Omani and Iranian territorial waters—as violations of international law.
"There is no international law that allows you to say: I’m going to put mines in an international body of water, and I’m going to blow up ships that don’t listen to us and try to go through," said Rubio.
Legal scholar Maryam Jamshidi rejected the top US diplomat's assessment, calling it "all wrong."
"Hormuz is not international waters," Jamshidi wrote. "It’s an international strait composed of the territorial waters of Iran and Oman. Iran can mine its territorial waters during wartime. The laws of naval warfare also allow Iran to target ships in certain cases. The US is the only criminal here."
Israeli forces intercepted and detained at least 175 people off the coast of Greece, including 14 Americans, some of whom reportedly suffered broken bones and other injuries.
Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and 18 other House Democrats on Tuesday condemned the US State Department's failure to protect 14 Americans aboard the latest humanitarian aid convoy seized by Israeli forces en route to Gaza, as well as the agency's threat to punish US participants in the flotilla.
"On Wednesday April 29, 2026, Israeli military forces illegally intercepted and attacked nearly two dozen civilian vessels in international waters and abducted at least 175 unarmed humanitarians, journalists, and solidarity activists taking part in the Global Sumud Flotilla, a brave effort to end the Israeli government's ongoing starvation blockade of Gaza and deliver essential food and medical aid, establish a humanitarian corridor, and save lives," the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
"This attack on a civilian humanitarian mission involving participants from over 55 countries, including the United States, conducted an unprecedented 600 miles into international waters, is a grave violation of international law," the letter states. "It demands action and accountability from the United States to protect abducted US citizens, to allow the free flow of humanitarian aid to Palestinians in Gaza enduring forced starvation, and an end to the decades of impunity that enable these crimes."
The lawmakers continued:
We are outraged that instead of speaking out and taking action to ensure the safety and immediate release of the at least 14 US citizens illegally abducted by the Israeli military, the Department of State went out of its way to issue a formal condemnation of their humanitarian efforts, smearing them with libelous falsehoods that expose them to greater danger and violence and threatening allied countries who allow port access to this humanitarian mission. This is an abdication of your duty to protect the safety of all Americans and is an Orwellian distortion where providing food to the hungry is terror and forced starvation is peace.
While we are relieved by reporting that most abducted flotilla passengers have now been released and will not be forced to suffer the abuse and inhumane conditions endured for days by participants of the previous flotilla illegally detained in Israeli prison, we are disturbed by reports that abductees were violently abused while held on Israeli vessels and that multiple US citizens have been hospitalized following their release. After all this, it is extremely alarming that US participants in the flotilla may face additional unjust persecution upon their return home.
Numerous people aboard the flotilla reported being brutally beaten by their captors, with some allegedly suffering broken ribs, noses, and other injuries, some of which reportedly required hospitalization.
Instead of assisting US victims, State Department spokesperson Thomas Piggott said his agency "will explore using available tools to impose consequences on those who provide support to this pro-Hamas flotilla."
The lawmakers' letter calls on Rubio and the Trump administration "to rescind these threats against flotilla participants, their supporters, and states that open their ports to this humanitarian mission and urge you to use your immense leverage to secure the freedom of all passengers who continue to be illegally detained."
"Above all else, we urge you to address the issue at the root of this voyage: the brutal Israeli blockade and genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza," the Democrats said.
"The ongoing forced starvation of the Palestinian population in Gaza is a direct result of the Israeli government’s siege and blockade of the territory, which continues to impede the entry of food and humanitarian aid in flagrant violation of legally binding orders from the International Court of Justice," they continued.
"Likewise, the United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry has determined that the Israeli government is committing the crime of genocide in Gaza and that this blockade is deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the physical destruction of the Palestinian people in whole or in part," the letter notes.
"While the Trump administration fails to use its immense leverage to end this blockade and fulfill the United States’ binding legal obligations under the Genocide Convention, the activists on board the flotilla are an example of profound solidarity and humanitarianism," the lawmakers added. "Undeterred by this latest attack, additional flotilla ships continue their mission to deliver aid to Gaza. We call on you to deter any further hostile actions against the flotilla and ensure the successful completion of its humanitarian mission.”
Earlier Tuesday, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva condemned Israel’s twice-extended detention of two Global Sumud Flotilla members—Thiago Ávila of Brazil and Spanish-Swedish national Saif Abu Keshek—who Israeli authorities claim without providing evidence are linked to the Palestinian militant resistance group Hamas. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has also condemned the activists' abduction and demanded their release, as have numerous humanitarian groups and advocates around the world.
In addition to Tlaib—the only Palestinian American member of Congress—the letter was signed by Reps. Mark Pocan (Wis.), Delia Ramirez (Ill.), Ro Khanna (Calif.), Jesús "Chuy" García (Ill.), André Carson (Ind.), Jim McGovern (Mass.), Pramila Jayapal (Wash.), Greg Casar (Texas), Henry "Hank" Johnson (Ga.), Nydia Velásquez (NY), Ayanna Pressley (Mass.), Maxine Dexter (Ore.), Summer Lee (Pa.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ), Al Green (Texas), Lateefah Simon (Calif.), and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY).
"This is a clear attempt to seize and hold power over our elections by sending a message that any county or state that doesn't vote in favor of the president or his preferred candidates may be subjected to a harassment campaign."
Democracy defenders sounded the alarm just over three months ago, when the Federal Bureau of Investigation executed a search warrant at a Georgia election hub. They expressed concerns again after a court filing revealed late Monday that President Donald Trump's Department of Justice is demanding the names of Fulton County's 2020 election workers.
For years, the Republican president has "obsessively propagated the debunked conspiracy theory that Fulton County 'stole' the 2020 election from him. And he has made it clear that he seeks retribution against those who refuse to indulge his baseless claims," notes the county's Monday filing aimed at blocking the April 20 grand jury subpoena for election workers' personal data.
The largely Democratic county—which includes most of Atlanta—argued that it should not have to turn over workers' names, home addresses, emails, and telephone numbers due to federal overreach and First Amendment concerns, according to CBS News. It also suggested the subpoena is politically motivated and highlighted the statute of limitations for 2020 election crimes.
"After illegally seizing our election records in January, the federal government once again is attempting to misuse criminal process," Fulton County Commission Chairman Robb Pitts said in a statement announcing the motion.
"This is yet another act of outrageous federal overreach designed to intimidate and to chill participation in elections. This harassment should not be allowed, so we have asked the court to act," he continued. "I will always stand up for our elections workers and for the truth. Let me be crystal clear. Fulton County will not be intimidated."
Voting rights advocates echoed the concerns noted by the filing and Pitts. Lauren Groh-Wargo, who leads Fair Fight Action, told The New York Times that election workers across the United States now face heightened threats and harassment.
"Roughly a third of election officials are threatened on the job, and more than half worry it's making it harder to hire and keep election workers," Groh-Wargo said. "They're trying to break our democracy by attacking the infrastructure, but we are fighting back hard."
Trump's DOJ is losing in Fulton County – so they've resorted to harassing election workers. In 2020, workers saw death threats due to false claims.This case was initially rejected by ATL's FBI Chief. It's built on false claims that were investigated and rejected, including by Republican officials.
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— Max Flugrath🗳️ (@maxflugrath.bsky.social) May 5, 2026 at 8:31 AM
All Voting Is Local Georgia state director Kristin Nabers stressed in a statement that "the conspiracy theories and lies that dictate White House policy have real-world consequences beyond appeasing the president's fragile ego—they are being weaponized to target the people from our communities who run our elections and ensure our votes are counted."
"This is a clear attempt to seize and hold power over our elections by sending a message that any county or state that doesn't vote in favor of the president or his preferred candidates may be subjected to a harassment campaign like that of Fulton County," she continued. "This intimidation tactic is a slap in the face to the millions of county election workers and volunteers around the country who work tirelessly to make sure our elections run smoothly."
Nabers added that "the all-out assault on Fulton County and its poll workers creates a blueprint for the administration to see what it can get away with during the midterm elections when results in key counties and states don't go its way. Election workers in Fulton County and beyond will not be intimidated by this desperate bullying."
The fight in Fulton County—where Trump and others initially faced criminal charges for their effort to overturn his 2020 loss—comes as some primary elections are underway across the country, and amid mounting concerns about what the president may try in November, particularly if the GOP-controlled Congress passes the attack on voting rights that the White House is pushing.
Michael McNulty, policy director of the group Issue One, said Tuesday that "Americans should be furious" about Trump's demands in Georgia, which "are based solely on debunked conspiracy theories from 2020 that courts and post-election audits have repeatedly rejected."
"Targeting these heroic election workers does nothing to strengthen our democracy—it puts ordinary public servants at risk in an attempt to erode trust in elections," he warned. “The Trump administration's goal is to make Americans feel distrust and cynicism about the election process. While the administration is framing its actions using the 2020 elections, it is proceeding with this year's midterms in mind."
As McNulty detailed, Trump's "election takeover playbook" includes:
"If this playbook is left unchecked, the Trump administration will continue to abuse its power and attempt to meddle in elections like authoritarian leaders in other countries," he said. "Congress must stop this."
"It should use oversight and funding authority to halt the executive branch from weaponizing federal power against the heroes who run our elections," McNulty argued. "Members of Congress swore an oath to the Constitution when they agreed to serve, and now is a test of whether they are willing to live up to that oath and protect the American people."
Some members of Congress joined voting rights advocates in speaking out against the subpoena this week. Sharing the Times report on social media Tuesday, Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) declared that "Trump's attacks on our free and fair elections won't stop."