Support Nissan Workers Fighting for a Union

http://drivingchangeatnissan.org/

As clergy, elected leaders, racial justice advocates, students and Nissan owners, we are coming together to demand that Nissan stop abusing the labor and civil rights of its workers in Mississippi.

Nearly 5,000 Nissan auto workers—80 percent of them Black—in Canton, Miss., are forming a union to improve workplace safety, stop the mistreatment of temporary employees, gain a secure retirement, and get the respect and dignity they deserve.

The Coalition for Rights at Nissan supports these workers’ struggles because now more than ever we need companies like Nissan to recognize that workers’ rights are civil rights. A victory for justice in Mississippi is a win for justice in our communities. Take action now!

Nissan’s misconduct has already drawn the attention of federal regulators:

  • The National Labor Relations Board has cited Nissan with serious violations of federal labor statutes including threatening to close the plant if workers vote for a union, unlawfully interrogating employees about the union, threatening to fire employees for supporting a union and, illegally preventing workers from expressing their union support.
  • The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) cited Nissan in February 2017 for serious safety violations after a worker had several fingers ripped off after a conveyor the employee was working on was restarted. OSHA had to seek a warrant from a judge allowing employee representatives to participate in an OSHA inspection of the Canton plant following this incident. This follows another citation received in March 2016 after a worker suffered a serious injury from a fall into an unguarded pit in the plant’s floor. This was the second fall in five months that resulted in a worker being hospitalized.
  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is currently investigating charges filed in 2015 by Canton plant workers alleging racial discrimination.

And now Nissan’s anti-worker actions have our attention too.

Take action online and in your city.

 

Unionists lead, join D.C. section of women’s strike

http://www.dclabor.org/home/unionists-lead-join-dc-section-of-womens-strike

For Randi Weingarten, “raising our families is real, but so are our challenges, like sexual harassment on the job” and unequal pay for equal work. For Jean Ross, the chaos in the U.S. health care system is real – and the Republican revisionist health care plan would make it worse. And for Rosa DeLauro, the women’s strike is real – but so is the fact that millions of U.S. women couldn’t afford to miss work to join it. All that led the two union presidents — Weingarten of the Teachers and Ross, co-president of National Nurses United – to lead the D.C. section of the National Women’s Strike, March 8. DeLauro, the veteran congresswoman and women’s rights advocate, spoke. The strike, the second of two marches that day in the nation’s capital, drew almost 1,000 women, plus some male supporters, into the streets around the U.S. Labor Department. The earlier pro-choice march drew even more, and confronted the White House, people said.

Besides the Teachers (AFT) and NNU, members of the Government Employees, Jobs With Justice, the Postal Workers, the Communications Workers, the Restaurant Opportunities Center, the Electrical Workers (IBEW) and Bricklayers marched.

And they made their demands known, through speeches, homemade signs, T-shirts and chants. “Woman workers united will never be defeated,” was a frequent one. “We won’t give up,” a sign said. And “What do we want? One fair wage. When do we want it? Now!”

The D.C. action was buttressed by teachers from several school districts. Their administrators closed for the day because their predominantly female teaching and support staff planned in advance not to show up. Participants also came to D.C. from Detroit, Pennsylvania and DeLauro’s home, Connecticut.

The marchers, like those elsewhere in the U.S., made clear they had a twin agenda. One part was to campaign for equal pay for equal work, a raise in the minimum wage to $15 an hour and abolition of the lower “tipped minimum” of $2.13, an end to sexual harassment, or worse, on the job, and the right to organize.

The other was to strike back at the anti-woman actions and attitudes of the Republican Trump administration and its GOP congressional allies, including their new health care plan. That plan, if enacted, could restore insurer discrimination against women, among other things.

And, as Weingarten pointedly said, the best route for woman workers is to organize.

“The power of collective action is real,” she told the crowd. “The way we gain power is in collective bargaining and at the ballot box. Women in unions earn 31 percent more than women who aren’t in unions, and women of color in unions earn even more” in a percentage gap “than that.”

As for the foes, Trump included, Weingarten added, “They want to stop our power because they don’t want any checks on their power…That is why we will resist and persist.”

“We’re looking not just for economic justice, but for health care justice and safety on the job,” Ross added in an interview. NNU is also campaigning “against officials who put private profit above public health and safety,” she told the crowd. Despite the small crowd, she said afterwards, the strike “will be successful if it gets media attention, because people will take note” of the problems it addresses.

Ross conceded her union would “would support not doing away with” the Affordable Care Act, which the GOP wants to repeal and replace, at least for now. “But we don’t have a health care system in this country,” Ross declared. “So we need Medicare for all.” Her red T-shirt made the same point, adding jobs and Social Security preservation as NNU’s goals.

That wasn’t the only goal. “I stand here today for millions of women who couldn’t afford to take the day off. We need paid sick and family leave and paid child care,” said DeLauro.

March 8 marches both in the U.S. and abroad were peaceful, if pointed. They included:

• New York City participants paraded from Columbus Circle to the Trump International Hotel in midtown. Organizers then sat down in front of it “as a form of civil disobedience” and were peacefully arrested.

• Before the D.C. protest began, at least 10 female Democratic U.S. House members, all wearing red in solidarity with the marchers, walked out for a speech on the Capitol stairs.

“We walked out today for ‘A Day Without a Woman’ to send a clear message: That we stand with our sisters across the country who have walked out in defense of equal rights for women,” said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif. “We are raising our voices for the millions of women who can’t.”

• Some businesses, notably NARAL Pro-Choice America, closed down in solidarity with their staffers. Others suffered as female workers stayed home.

• While U.S. women wore red, those overseas wore black. They were in solidarity with Polish women whose general strike last year – which idled half the country – forced the right wing Polish government to drop a planned near-total ban on abortion.

– Mark Gruenberg, PAI Staff Writer; photos by Korey Hartwich, NNU

2017-03-09-womens-strike2_1

In response to the Chicago Tribune: Rasmea Odeh is a survivor of sexual torture

http://www.stopfbi.net/

In commentary for the Chicago Tribune March 5th, Peggy Shapiro, who is simply described as a retired professor from the Chicago City Colleges, attacks Rasmea Odeh, an activist from Chicago’s Palestinian community.

Shapiro is a one-time Breitbart contributor and the Chicago coordinator of Stand With Us, a famously right-wing, pro-Israel advocacy group that is also anti-Palestinian and a defender of acts of violence by the Israeli military. Stand With Us has embraced Donald Trump, as his attacks on Arabs and Muslims have made Israeli President Netanyahu a supporter.

In short, Israel can do no wrong. Stand With Us didn’t blink an eye when the Israeli military bombed Gaza in 2014, killing over 2200 Palestinians, including 504 children. But Shapiro writes to attack Jewish Voice for Peace for supporting justice for Rasmea.

Rasmea was convicted of a 1970 bombing by an Israeli military court, which has military officers, and not civilians, as prosecutors and judges; and which convicts over 99% of its Palestinian prisoners. Its main evidence was a confession by Rasmea.

Shapiro dismisses Rasmea’s claim that she signed this confession after brutal torture that included sexual assault, even though this has been documented for decades, including in testimony to the United Nations.  Then Shapiro writes that Rasmea was found guilty in 2014 in a trial in Detroit for lying on an application for U.S. citizenship, intentionally omitting that the jury in that trial was not allowed to hear any of the evidence about torture, and only the evidence from Israel.  In fact, Rasmea won an appeal and a new trial expressly based on the excluded torture evidence.

Shapiro ignores that Mary Fabri, a world renowned expert on torture, evaluated Rasmea and diagnosed her with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder from being tortured by Israeli prison guards; that the government’s own expert concluded she had been tortured; and that the judge in the case also believed she had been tortured.

Shapiro exposes herself. Rasmea is not guilty. She was tortured into a forced confession and unjustly convicted by the Israelis, and then the U.S. government used evidence gained through torture to convict her of a violation of immigration law.

Shapiro doesn’t care, because she accepts any crimes by Israel in the defense of its occupation of Palestine. She is not just a “retired professor”; she is also a purveyor of Israeli hasbara (propaganda).

Rasmea Defense Committee

P.S. Also see Rasmea’s powerful address to 1,000 people on #InternationalWomensDay March 8.

 

Rasmea_Family

Support AFSCME Local 526 at Milwaukee Public Museum, Say NO to Union Busting!

Defeat “Right to Work” in Wisconsin

Employees at the Milwaukee Public Museum ask the community to help preserve the prestige of our beloved museum.

The MPM employees’ union, AFSCME Local 526, is asking the community to make phone calls to demand MPM maintain the same level of quality it has produced for over 100 years, and save the jobs of the employees that make our museum great.

On Tuesday, MPM management announced $1 million in cuts that will eliminate the Exhibits and Graphics department, and cut staff in maintenance, security, and many other important roles throughout the museum. The cuts came as a shock to staff, whose union just finished contract negotiations with management, where no mention of layoffs was made.

***Please call MPM President Dennis Kois (414-278-2746) and ask him to suspend the layoffs.***

In the interest of County residents, MPM members, employees, and the priceless collections, we ask our County Board Finance Committee to call a hearing for MPM to present the evidence of their claims to the Board. We ask the Board to hear testimony from museum employees about the immense negative impact this cut will have on a prized Milwaukee County institution, and the effects layoffs will have on MPM’s programming, exhibits, collections storage, and ability to provide the quality service that Milwaukee County residents have come to expect.

Finally, we ask the Board to consider the impact layoffs will have on the invaluable and irreplaceable collections, which belong to the people of Milwaukee County. How will MPM be able to provide proper care for our collections with fewer staff, when the museum is already understaffed?

AFSCME 526 is asking MPM management to suspend all layoffs until members and supporters of the museum, employees, county residents, the County Board and all museum stakeholders are presented with a thorough justification for these devastating cuts.

Please call the Milwaukee County Board (414-278-4222) and ask your Supervisor to demand that MPM explain its justification for these cuts.

Find your County Supervisor here: http://county.milwaukee.gov/FindSupervisor

Theodore Lipscomb

414-278-4222

theodore.lipscomb@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Marina Dimitrijevic

414-278-4232

marina.dimitrijevic@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Sequanna Taylor

414-278-4278

sequanna.taylor@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Eddie Cullen

414-278-4263

eddie.cullen@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Jason Haas

414-278-4252

jason.haas@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Willie Johnson, Jr.

414-278-4233

willie.johnson@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Michael Mayo, Sr.

414-278-4241

michael.mayo@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Supreme Moore Omokunde

414-278-4265

supreme.mooreomokunde@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Marcelia Nicholson

414-278-4261

marcelia.nicholson@milwaukeecountywi.gov

David L. Sartori

414-278-4231

david.l.sartori@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Jim Luigi Schmitt

414-278-4273

james.schmitt@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Dan Sebring

414-278-4253

dan.sebring@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Steve F. Taylor

414-278-4267

steve.taylor@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Anthony Staskunas

414-278-4247

anthony.staskunas@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Sheldon A. Wasserman

414-278-4237

sheldon.wasserman@milwaukeecountywi.gov

John Weishan, Jr.

414-278-4255

john.weishan@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Peggy A. West

414-278-4269

peggy.west@milwaukeecountywi.gov

Deanna Alexander

414-278-4259

deanna.alexander@milwaukeecountywi.gov

AFSCME 526 MPM Employees Union

John Catalinotto, Author of ‘Turn the Guns Around, Mutinies, Soldier Revolts and Revolutions’ on Riverwest Radio’s ‘The Grass Is Greener’ March 11

From Ms. Babette Grunow, Co-Host of The Grass Is Greener:

We have a special guest this week on the Grass is Greener on Riverwest Radio 104.1FM on Sat March 11 at 8pm. The author of Turn the Guns Around, Mutinies, Soldier Revolts and Revolutions will be joining us. Active in the anti-war movement since 1962, John Catalinotto from 1967-70 was the key civilian organizer working with anti-war GIs in the American Servicemen’s Union. Since 1982 he has been a managing editor of the socialist weekly newspaper, Workers World. You can also listen at riverwestradio.com online.

turn-the-guns-around-january-2017

 

March 25-26, 2017: Midwest WWP conference to link theory and practice

For details, view the Facebook event page at ­tinyurl.com/zpnhrej; complete online registration at tinyurl.com/hqcpc2h.

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By Joe Mchahwar posted on March 9, 2017

The Detroit branch of Workers World Party is co-hosting a Midwest Fightback Conference on March 25-26 with the Wayne State University branch of Students for a Democratic Society. WWP members from across the ravaged rustbelt will come together to put forward an analysis, forged in struggle, of the austerity, economic crises and national oppression that have come to characterize the region.

Guest speakers, such as the Venezuelan Consul General in Chicago and representatives of the Boston School Bus Drivers Union, United Steelworkers Local 8751, will help elevate these struggles and analyze both locally and beyond the Midwest, attacking imperialism at its very roots here and ­internationally.

Detroit was once an epicenter of working-class power and the Black Liberation struggle. Today it is at the heart of capitalist decay, financial dictatorship and genocidal national oppression. Though these assaults have permeated throughout the U.S., Detroit has long served as the frontline in the war against workers and oppressed people. Bankers, desperate for every last dollar of profit, imposed the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history on the city of Detroit, looting hundreds of millions of dollars from the people.

Thousands of families have had their water shut off to help clear neighborhoods for corporate scum intent on colonizing the city. This ethnic cleansing was preceded by hundreds of thousands of home foreclosures in pursuit of the same goal. The devastation wrought to Detroit by Wall Street’s insatiable greed is very tangible and apparent. The homes, water, schools and communities of Detroit have all served as variables in an experimental project the ruling class wants to export throughout the U.S.

Confronting capital directly

The Detroit branch of WWP and its allies in the community have challenged this massive offensive head on, organizing revolutionary intervention and direct confrontations with the might of finance capital. Long before the municipal bankruptcy began, the very nature of capitalist relations were challenged. WWP raised the slogan “Make the banks pay!” — a demand that became the rallying cry of the movement.

Before the bankruptcy, during years of the ongoing foreclosure crisis, WWP members and friends were in the communities physically preventing foreclosures when court struggles failed. Throughout this fight, activists maintained the demand for a moratorium on foreclosures and evictions, while raising legal precedents and analysis proving a moratorium is a feasible, no-cost demand. At every turn Detroit comrades have faced down the guns of finance capital, forging a revolutionary analysis of late-stage capitalism through this struggle.

Detroit WWP, our allies in SDS and other Midwest WWP cadre are holding this conference to bring our depth of experience to the new period we have entered. Many officials in the Trump administration are taking their devastating austerity policies from the Midwest to the federal level, giving our cadre in this region a unique perspective on the new attacks facing the workers and oppressed. The conference will also dive into the deep crisis of the imperialist empire, bringing analysis on conflicts from Syria to Africa and tying them to the war at home against racism, fascism and exploitation.

If you want to truly see the lengths capital will go to secure its profits, and the lengths the masses will go to resist, be in Detroit March 25-26 to hear it from revolutionaries on the frontlines.

For details, view the Facebook event page at ­tinyurl.com/zpnhrej; complete online registration at tinyurl.com/hqcpc2h.

Baltimore, April 8: WWP Conference on Socialism & Liberation

https://workersworldbaltimore.org/conference-registration/

Hosted by Workers World Party – Baltimore

Baltimore, Maryland, Washington D.C., Virginia
REGIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOCIALISM & LIBERATION
April 8th will bring together revolutionaries and socialists, not only to discuss resistance in the epoch of Trumpism, but also to plan and strategize for the “Global Strike on May Day”. Our conference comes at a critical juncture for the entire working class. There is a challenge before us to defend immigrants and fight racism. Genuine solidarity is critical.
We are excited to announce that Larry Holmes, who is the first secretary of Workers World Party will give the key note talk. It’s very important to register in advance if possible. We will have to cut off registration after 200 people sign up, so please do so early. it’s also crucial so that we can provide lunch and dinner. Link for registration https://workersworldbaltimore.org/conference-registration/

April 8th card Baltimore 2017

Milwaukee, March 18: Money For The People Not War rally

More info: Pam Richard, 510-542-7688

Noon –  1 PM, March 18

North Side: Capitol and Teutonia

South Side: 43rd and National

Trump wants to increase military spending and cut social programs, the EPA, diplomacy and foreign assistance. Move the money from war and militarism to a full employment green economy with ZERO poverty!

Sponsors: End the Wars Committee of Peace Action Wisconsin, a coalition of Peace Action WI, the United Nations Assn. of Greater Milwaukee, Vets for Peace, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and others.