Eyewitness Venezuela: 400,000 workers rally for May Day in Caracas

By Sean Orr |
May 2, 2019
Read more articles in
Massive May Day march in Venezuela.
Massive May Day march in Venezuela. (Fight Back! News/staff)

Caracas, Venezuela – On May 1, May Day, in the heart of downtown, 400,000 workers poured into the streets for two reasons: to honor their day, International Workers Day; and to celebrate the defeat of the coup attempt against their elected president Nicolas Maduro.

The energy was incredible in what can only be described as a victory rally, as the working class has defeated every attack inflicted against it by imperialism in the past 20 years. Workers marched in their work uniforms, behind the banners of their socialist unions – miners, oil workers, cement workers, teachers and all other sectors of the economy. As they marched, they sang along to “Bella Ciao” and other revolutionary songs playing from the main stage, at the bottom of a hill outside of the presidential palace.

Marching side-by-side with the unions were the Bolivarian militias, descending on the city from all corners of the country. In Venezuela, the revolutionary process is driven by a strategic alliance, the “civic-military union,” under the leadership of the revolutionary parties of the country. This union is organic and living, and is there for all to see. Many of the militia members are workers themselves, and march with pride in their crisp tan uniforms. They are the nation’s second line of defense, and I cannot imagine that any army in the world can break their spirit.

The only speaker at the rally was President Maduro – the “Presidente Obrero,” the Worker President – and the entire crowd hung on his every word. He spoke of the opposition for what they are: cowards and criminals, whose only policy proposals for the Venezuelan people are violence and terrorism. When Maduro notified the crowd that the soldier who was shot by the opposition was finally stable in the hospital, the entire avenue broke out in applause.

The Worker President talked about the challenges the revolutionary movement is facing, and that while U.S. imperialism has suffered a major defeat with the collapse of the Guaido-led opposition, they will not stop and the homeland must remain vigilant. He also spoke openly about the errors the government has made, and even read criticisms he had received from ordinary folks about weaknesses in his work. In an act of self-criticism, he declared his agreement with the criticism. In response, Maduro called for a great Congress of the Bolivarian Peoples this weekend, for the government to take in all of the proposals of the social organizations and trade unions and create a new, more radical plan to chart the country’s path forward.

Maduro explained that their struggle is like that of a boxer – with one fist, they defend the homeland from all external threats, and with the other fist they drive forward their revolution to new stages. He closed his speech with the chant of the Bolivarian movement – “Leales siempre, traidores nunca!” (Always loyal, never traitors). And as the crowd shouted back “Traidores nunca.” 400,000 fists shot up into the air. They will win.

_____________

Ongoing coverage: https://www.facebook.com/teleSUREnglish/

Venezuela

On May 2, 2019 Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro thanked the Bolivarian National Armed Forces (FANB) for staying united during Tuesday’s attempted coup and for protecting the nation’s peace.

_____________

Also coverage here: https://www.facebook.com/orinocotribune/

 

 

Chicago, May 18, 2019: Cuba-Venezuela: Their Gains and their Fight Against US War

Image may contain: one or more people, crowd, stadium, outdoor and text

Cuba-Venezuela: Their Gains and their Fight Against US War

37 S Ashland, Chicago, 7 – 9:30 P.M.

Richard Berg
Chicago Teachers Union staffer, back from Cuba

Bahman Azad
US Peace Council secretary, back from Venezuela

John Bolton, top US government official, calls Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua the “Troika of Tyranny” and has made clear Washington’s goal of destroying these nations as it has Libya, regardless of the will of the peoples of those countries.

Richard Berg recently returned from a delegation of Chicagoans to Cuba, reports on the effects of the ongoing 57 year US blockade and renewed threats against the country. He will discuss gains the Cuban people have made, such as free health care for all, free university education, and will counter disinformation in the US corporate press about Cuba.

Bahman Azad participated in a delegation of US anti-war leaders to Venezuela who met with community leaders, President Maduro, Foreign Minister Arreaza, top economists, officials of the Health Ministry and others. He will counter the “news” that the Venezuelan people are starving, suffering from brutal repression, that the government was not democratically elected.

Richard Berg’s and Bahman Azad’s eyewitness accounts directly contradict the stories coming from Washington and the corporate press and show how the people are fighting to maintain their national sovereignty. / Sponsored by Chicago Friends of US Peace Council, Chicago ALBA

How Trump & Wall Street’s Attacks Affect Federal Workers, Help Fight Back Now!

It’s never a dull moment with this Trump administration. This time the attack goes right to your wallet with proposals to:

  • Freeze federal workers’ wages next year
  • Require workers to pay 1% more every year toward their pension
  • Lower the monthly annuity employees receive when they retire
  • And the list goes on

Taken together with the administration’s illegal, union-busting executive orders and White House-supported anti-worker legislation, it’s clear this administration is bent on sabotaging our government, its workforce, and democracy itself.

Check out the May/June 2019 edition of the Government Standard for a breakdown on the 2020 budget and how you can fight back.

In solidarity,

AFGE

ALERT: Uber & Lyft Drivers Set to Strike – Take Action in Solidarity!

On Wednesday May 8, Uber and Lyft drivers will conduct a one day strike in Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, San Diego, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and other cities.

May 8 is also the day that Uber, a multibillion dollar global company with nearly 25,000 workers around the world, will be selling stocks on the New York Stock Exchange for the first time.

The International Workers Solidarity Network is issuing this urgent call to pledge to take action in solidarity with these workers!

They are demanding increased pay, basic benefits, decision-making transparency, and a greater voice for drivers. These poorly paid and mistreated workers are on the cutting edge of the gig economy. Showing solidarity with them is showing solidarity with all workers!

Tell the billionaire owners of Uber and Lyft that they cannot get even richer on stocks while drivers are underpaid, overworked and voiceless.

SIGN THE SOLIDARITY PLEDGE

  1. On May 8, do not use Uber or Lyft and turn the app off in solidarity with striking workers.

  2. If an action is planned in your city, be on the picket lines with Uber and Lyft workers.

  3. If there is not an action planned in your city, show your solidarity by:

    • organizing a demonstration or picket at a public and visible location;

    • distributing fliers and other informational material at grocery stores, transit hubs, and other locations where workers gather;

    • or by organizing other creative actions, no matter how modest or small in numbers, to spread the word about the courageous action these workers are taking to fightback

Let us know what you have planned by emailing info@workersolidarity.net so we can help to spread the word.

Image

Members of the Labor & People’s Movement in the Philippines Visits Milwaukee to Build International Solidarity

From Jacob of the Young Workers Committee Milwaukee

This week we welcomed leaders of the labor and people’s moments in the Philippines to Milwaukee. The Young Workers Committee hosted Mong Palatino from Bayan, an alliance of progressive organizations founded during the Marcos dictatorship on May 1st, 1985, and Ed Cubelo from the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) or “May First Movement” to Milwaukee for a very successful International Workers’ Day event at the Milwaukee Area Labor Council.

We visited the memorial for Milwaukee’s Bay View Massacre of the 1886 general strike for the eight hour day, which along with the Haymarket events in Chicago were the inspiration for the International Workers’ Day holiday celebrated by working people and labor activists around the world on this day.

Ed and Mong also spoke to a room full of labor, anti-war, environmental, and student activists about the political situation in the Philippines, where President Rodrigo Duterte is using widespread political repression to silence opposition to his Trump-like policies from the poor and working class people’s movements. Since Duterte took office, 42 labor leaders in the Philippines have been killed by extra-judicial means. There have been over 200 labor strikes to fight neo-liberal policies like the expansion of temp work to 70% of the workforce, the use of “company unions,” and general attacks on working conditions and labor rights.

Unionists, environmental activists, women’s rights activists, human rights activists, and Catholic priests have been the victims of illegal arrest and detention, arsons, torture, killings, and political repression from Duterte’s military and police forces.

Despite all this, the people’s movements in the Philippines are growing, and KMU is organizing the “difficult to organize” industries like temp-workers and call centers with incredible speed and success. Because of their effectiveness, Duterte has slandered the KMU as “terrorists,” in order to justify his attacks on labor leaders and activists.

The atrocities committed by Duterte’s military and police have been enabled by the generous financial support of U.S. taxpayers, and of course, the political backing of President Trump. Ed and Mong spoke to the Milwaukee Area Labor Council executive board about how we could stand in solidarity by calling on our legislators to cut U.S. support for the Duterte regime.

I am proud to announce that a resolution I brought to the labor council executive board was passed unanimously. The resolution condemns the human and labor rights violations committed by the Duterte Regime, and expresses our solidarity with the movements in the Philippines. The resolution calls on our U.S. representatives to be advocates for ending U.S. military aid to the Duterte regime, and to support the House and Senate resolutions that could enact this change. The resolution will also be used by activists to support the case against Duterte which is currently before the International Criminal Court. The resolution will go before the entire labor council delegate body tonight for ratification on International Workers’ Day.

As we say in YWC, “Working Class, Unite & Fight!”

Image may contain: 20 people, including Tracey Schwerdtfeger and Alex Brower, people smiling

Philippine May Day Marchers Rally Against Duterte

https://bit.ly/2ZQ3rgT

Thousands of Philippine protesters marched in Labor Day rallies on Wednesday, torching a giant effigy of President Rodrigo Duterte as they attacked his economic policies’ impact on the nation’s poor.

Rows of marchers flew red banners and chanted near the presidential palace in Manila, where they set fire to the horned effigy adorned with Chinese and U.S. flags – the two competing powers in the Philippines.

“We continue to call on the government to provide a reasonable and living wage not only for us teachers but for all the workers in this country,” demonstrator Alex Legaspi, an educator for 30 years, told AFP.

The Philippines’ economy is one of the strongest in Asia, with growth that is consistently above six percent. However, just under a quarter of the nation of 106 million live in deep poverty.

Marchers were particularly outraged at Duterte’s failure to outlaw employers misusing short-term employment contracts, despite a 2016 campaign promise to implement tighter regulations.

Workers get fewer benefits and protections under the practice, which is referred to as “contractualisation.”

“All of the workers with contractual employment should now be regularised since it was the promise of President Duterte,” said 43-year-old Mimi Doringo, a union organizer.

The economy is an issue that has previously made a dent the high approval ratings credited to Duterte by Philippine opinion polls.

Climbing inflation and a jump in prices for national staple food rice last year became a political liability before being tamed by central bank rate hikes and falling oil prices.

Police reported about 8,200 marchers attended "generally peaceful and orderly" rallies nationwide, with the majority in the capital.

Police reported about 8,200 marchers attended “generally peaceful and orderly” rallies nationwide, with the majority in the capital. | Photo: Reuters

Thousands Gather in Madison for May Day 2019 Demanding Drivers License For All & Declaring There are ‘No Borders in the Workers’ Struggle’ (No Hay Fronteras En la Lucha Obrera)!

By WI BOPM

MADISON, MAY DAY — In a mighty show of working class power, thousands of diverse workers descended on the state capitol in Madison on May 1, 2019, May Day.

Sponsored by the migrant and workers rights organization Voces de la Frontera and its youth organization Youth Empowered in the Struggle (YES), the theme for the day was “Day Without Latinxs and Immigrants.” Multiple organizations statewide endorsed and supported the protest. Well over 175 businesses statewide closed either in solidarity with the May Day action or due to a lack of workers.

Workers from well over a dozen cities in Wisconsin traveled to Madison to demand drivers licenses for all, union rights, no bans and no wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, and in-state tuition for undocumented students. Other slogans raised included “No Borders In the Workers’ Struggle,” “Education Not Deportation,” “Free Healthcare and Public Education for All,” “Free Chrystul Kizer,” “Money for People’s Needs Not Prisons,” and “Money For Federal Workers Not A U.S. Coup in Venezuela!”

Public education workers throughout the state participated in solidarity contingents to Madison. Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC) affiliate members from Madison, Milwaukee, Racine and other locations participated. Other union members from AFSCME, SEIU, the Sheet Metal Workers, the IWW, UFCW and others joined in.

Students and youth as well came from K-12 and higher education campuses statewide.

Beginning with fabulous live music and then a bold rally on the steps of the state capitol, multiple speakers from a rainbow of labor, community, faith-based, anarchist, socialist and student organizations pledged solidarity with the demands of Voces de la Frontera and YES. From there thousands of marchers marched around the state capitol multiple times and then entered the state capitol where they packed the rotunda. ###

MORE COVERAGE: Wisconsin Bail Out The People Movement

May 1st Day Without Latinxs & Immigrants—Driver Licenses for All

Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association

#DriverLicenses4All

#WIRedForED #FightForFunding

Image may contain: 11 people, people smiling, people standing and outdoor

Photo: WI BOPM

Image may contain: 3 people, people smiling, people standing and outdoor

Photo: WI BOPM

Image may contain: 8 people, crowd and outdoor

Photo: WI BOPM

Image may contain: 6 people, people smiling, outdoor

Photo: WI BOPM

Photo: WI BOPM

Image may contain: 1 person, standing, crowd and outdoor

Photo: Joe Brusky

Image may contain: 2 people, tree and outdoor

Photo: WI BOPM

MORE COVERAGE: Wisconsin Bail Out The People Movement

May 1st Day Without Latinxs & Immigrants—Driver Licenses for All

Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association

#DriverLicenses4All

#WIRedForED #FightForFunding