Fight for 15 and Black Lives Matter Join Forces on Anniversary of … – The American Prospect
(Mike Brown/The Commercial Appeal via AP)
Christopher Smith, right, leads chants during a protest for higher wages for fast food workers outside a McDonald's in Memphis, Tenn., Thursday, April 14, 2016.
On the April 4, 1968, Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, where he had come to support the citys striking sanitation workers, virtually all of them African American. The workers were embroiled in a heated labor dispute with the city government over low wages, dangerous working conditions, and its unyielding opposition to recognizing their union.
Forty-nine years later, much has changed, yet much more has stayed the same. Despite landmark advancements in civil rights, black Americans still face staggering levels of systemic social and economic inequities and rampant state-sanctioned violence and discrimination. Black men are three times more likely to be killed by police than white men, and are incarcerated at a rate five times higher than white men. Meanwhile, black men make 22 percent less in wages compared with white men who live in the same areas, with the same levels of education and work experience. Black women make 11.6 percent less than their white counterparts. On average, white households hold 16 times the wealth of black households. Today, 54 percent of African American workers make less than $15 an hour.
And 49 years later, black activists are still leading large-scale movements to address these injustices. On the anniversary of Kings assassination, Fight for 15 workers and Black Lives Matter activistsmany already involved in both movementsare joining together for a series of protests across the country to elevate their intersecting demands for racial justice and economic justice. The actions today not only seek to emphasize and build upon African Americans inextricable and intertwined struggle for both civil rights and economic justice of the 1960s, but create a broader front of intersectional progressive power to face off against the Trump administrations attempt to roll back both.
Activists in 24 cities will be mounting demonstrations and teach-ins under the banner of Fight Racism, Raise Pay. They plan to call attention to the systematic targeting of communities of colorranging from abusive local police departments that harass people of color, to Republicans in the states advancing anti-protest legislation in response to Black Lives Matter and Fight for 15 while at the same time stifling local minimum-wage hikes through state legislation. Activists will also call out the Trump administration for advancing an anti-worker agenda, supporting voter suppression, and threatening immigrant communities.
Our two movements have a common bond in fighting the racism that keeps down people of color everywhere, saidLatierika Blair, a 23-year-old McDonalds worker in Memphis, in a statement.
The actions center on Memphis, Tennessee, where thousands of workers, activists, and civil rights leaders will march to and hold a memorial outside the Lorraine Motel. In the mid-South city, Fight for 15 activists have encountered aggressive resistance as fast-food workers organized for higher wages and union rights. As The Guardian reported, organizers alleged in an a lawsuit filed in March that, with the authorization from the president of McDonalds, the Memphis police department was authorized to arrest McDonalds employees and engaged in a widespread and illegal campaign of surveillance and intimidation. Last November, the suit states, police officers allegedly followed organizers home after meetings, banned activists from entering city hall, and in one instance even stepped behind a McDonalds counter to stop workers from signing a petition demanding better working conditions. Based on these and other allegations, the lawsuit argues that the police department was acting in concert with McDonalds.
White supremacy and corporate greed have always been linked in America, saidChelsea Fuller, an organizer with the Movement for Black Lives, in a statement. The fast-food workers who are going on strike for $15 an hour and the right to a union are resisting the same institutional racism and oppression that fuels police violence across the country. We are stronger when we stand together, and so our movements are going to keep fighting back against the twin evils of racial and economic inequality that continue to hold back black and brown people.
Less than 250 miles southeast, in Alabama, the state legislature, dominated by white lawmakers, passed a law prohibiting localities from instituting their own minimum-wage laws after the city council in majority-black Birmingham had passed legislation in 2015 to phase in a $10.10 hourly minimum wage. The NAACP promptly responded with a lawsuit claiming that the GOP super-majorities in the statehouse and the Republican governor rammed through the legislation in 16 days in order to block Birminghams ordinancewhich would have largely benefited black low-wage workersfrom going into effect, a move that the lawsuit claims was tainted with racial animus and undermines the power of the citys black electorate. A judge has since thrown out the case.
Republican state legislators in recent years have responded to the Fight for 15 by racing to prohibit cities and counties from increasing their own minimum wages higher than state lawa policy that is now the law of the land in 34 states. These laws have an unmistakable impact on the lives of the black workers who are trying to get by on the minimum wage in cities like Detroit, Saint Louis, and Atlanta, located in states where Republicans dominate the state government and have passed laws forbidding local minimum wages.
WHILE KING'S LEGACY CENTERSmost prominently on his fight for landmark civil rights laws, he was a strong ally for the labor movement, frequently speaking at union conferences and rallies, and saw the need to combine forces early on. The two most dynamic and cohesive liberal forces in the country are the labor movement and the Civil Rights movement, he pronounced at the Illinois AFL-CIO convention in 1965. Our combined strength is potentially enormous.
King and other civil rights leaders relied on funding and organizers from the more racially inclusive and progressive labor unions of the time like the United Auto Workers, United Packinghouse Workers, and the predominately African American Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, which was led by labor visionary A. Phillip Randolph. It was Randolph who organized the March on Washington (where King made his I Have a Dream speech) in 1963 that not only included civil rights demands but also called on Congress to increase the minimum wage of $1.25 (more than $9 in todays dollars) to $2.00 an hour (about $15.50 today) and to create a federal jobs guarantee for unemployed Americans looking for work. Randolph and march organizer Bayard Rustin were longtime avowed democratic socialists; King was, too, but seldom broadcast this for fear it would create one more hurdle that the civil rights movement would have to surmount.
Dr. Martin Luther King giving his "I Have a Dream"speech during the March on Washingtonin Washington, D.C., on 28 August 1963.
In the context of the early 1960s, this is a very substantial left-labor set of demands, says Eric Arnesen, a labor history professor at the George Washington University who has written extensively about the traditions of black trade unionism and labor activism. While they failed to achieve those demands, civil rights leaders did succeed in creating a fair employment guarantee through Title XII of the Civil Rights Act, which established the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. That is the result of the civil rights coalitions insistence that an economic aspect become embedded [in the legislation], Arnesen says. Its not the minimum wage increase or the federal jobs program, but it was certainly a substantial improvement.
Reverend Dr. William Barber II, a leading progressive Christian pastor who will march to Lorraine Motel, says that the prevailing narrative that King was slow to embrace an intersectional analysis of racial and economic justice is wrong. Barber points out that as early as 1956, in Kings Pauls Letter to American Christians address, he challenged the unchecked greed of American capitalism and never stopped employing critiques of the systemic violence perpetrated by capitalism, and the governments failure to address those problems. He did not see that as socialism, but rather as lining up with the tenets of his faith as a Christian, says Barber, who helms the Repairers of the Breach, a organization that seeks to build a progressive counterweight to the religious right.
Barber sees this current coalition of black (and other communities of color) and labor activists as the vehicle for continuing Dr. Kings work. We need to not only remember what he did, but imitate it, he says. He believes the confluence of the Fight for 15 and Black Lives Matter can play a central role in todays social justice movement, similar to that played by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the1960s. These are the front line troops of transformation in this country right now, Barber says. Were going to see some powerful things coming from them moving forward.
ORGANIZERS HAVE BEENworking to merge the work of the Fight for 15 and the Movement for Black Lives for some time now. The Fight for 15 held its first-ever convention in Richmond, Virginia, this past summer, culminating in a march and rally in front of a towering statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee. The strategy is a natural extension made by the leaders of the movement. It isnt a sort of institutional decision, Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union, the primary funder of the Fight for 15, told me in an interview in August. The Movement for Black Lives, meanwhile, has crafted an all-encompassing policy platform that includes calls for sweeping federal and state jobs programs, the uninhibited right to unionization, and protections for workers in the margins of the economy.
In Chicago on Tuesday, activists are holding a series of teach-ins about the intersection of labor and Kings legacy, which they hope will help build support for a general strike on May Day. Richard Wallace, deputy director of the Chicago-based Workers Center for Racial Justice, which helped write the Movement for Black Lives economic justice platform, says that a more concerted focus on racial justice and economic justice issues may help people expand what they understand labor organizing to mean. He says most people wouldnt see his groups work getting ban-the-box legislation (which prohibits employers from requiring disclosure of criminal records on job applications) passed in Illinois as a traditional labor issue. The main challenge in the city for African Americans is fighting for access to economy, Wallace says. Its hard to do the labor organizing if theres no black folks there. Our job is to remove the barriers to employment.
The Fight for 15 and Black Lives Matter have in recent years emerged as two of the most powerful and promising progressive campaignswith the former sparking an estimated $62 billion in raises for the countrys low-wage workers and the latter renewing nationwide scrutiny of American policing practices and the systemic shortcomings of the justice system, resulting in a slew of local reforms. Of course, neither has fully accomplished its ultimate mission. A higher minimum wage for millions of workers remains unattainable due to the GOPs opposition and its assault on local control, while SEIUs goal of unionizing fast-food and other low-wage sectors remains shrouded in uncertainty. Similarly, Black Lives Matter still struggles to win wide-scale criminal justice reforms or radical changes to policing.
Nonetheless, the convergence of these two movements could very well generate a level of strength and effectiveness they could not achieve separately, that can serve as a fulcrum for future civil rights and economic advancesand a bulwark against Trumpism.
View post:
Fight for 15 and Black Lives Matter Join Forces on Anniversary of ... - The American Prospect
- Analysis: Whatever happened to Black Lives Matter? - Church Times - February 14th, 2025 [February 14th, 2025]
- How old was Trayvon Martin when he died? A look back at the teen's death that sparked Black Lives Matter Movement - Soap Central - February 11th, 2025 [February 11th, 2025]
- On Trayvon Martins 30th Birthday, Black Lives Still Matter - Word In Black - February 5th, 2025 [February 5th, 2025]
- Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action in Olympia School District from Feb. 3-7 - The Jolt News - February 3rd, 2025 [February 3rd, 2025]
- Trump could undo everything the UK learnt from Black Lives Matter - inews - February 3rd, 2025 [February 3rd, 2025]
- Posters with Black Lives Matter term to be voted on by Lakeville school board - CBS News - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Lakeville school board to vote Tuesday on use of "Black Lives Matter" posters - CBS News - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Art by African Americans: From the Protest of the 60's to the Age of Black Lives Matter - TAPinto.net - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Community continues to demand answers concerning Rayvon Shahid during Black Lives Matter protests - Flint Courier News - November 28th, 2024 [November 28th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter protests police shooting of 17-year-old in Flint - WJRT - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter Flint hosts three-day protest for death of 17-year-old Rayvon Shahid - WEYI - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Davis, Black Lives Matter say police discipline bill is being rushed - WVPE Public Media - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Revealed: Starmer called for an export ban on police gear to Trump during the Black Lives Matter protests in 2 - Daily Mail - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter activist to vote for Donald Trump: 'I definitely would not be supporting Kamala Harris' - Fox News - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter activist to vote for Donald Trump: 'I definitely would not be supporting Kamala Harris' - MSN - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter activist to vote for Donald Trump: 'I definitely would not be supporting Kamala Harris' - AOL - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Lake County Black Lives Matter co-founder going to jail on contempt charge: They said I was trying to incite a riot - Chicago Tribune - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Portland Book Festival: Robert Samuels, author of His Name Is George Floyd, reflects on the police killing that ignited Black Lives Matter - Oregon... - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- Jury awards $6M to family members of Black Lives Matter protester killed by a car on Seattle freeway - Yahoo! Voices - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- Jury awards $6M to family members of Black Lives Matter protester killed by a car on Seattle freeway - The Associated Press - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- City of Ft. Lauderdale could stand trial following class action lawsuit after judge rules police have immunity in Black Lives Matter protester case -... - September 10th, 2024 [September 10th, 2024]
- Participating in Black Lives Matter Protest Isn't Protected by Federal Labor Law - Reason - August 29th, 2024 [August 29th, 2024]
- NYPD texted one another to Kick their a before mass arrests at Black Lives Matter protest - Gothamist - August 29th, 2024 [August 29th, 2024]
- One decade later: How Ferguson boosted the Black Lives Matter movement - The Alestle - August 29th, 2024 [August 29th, 2024]
- NYPD texted one another to Kick their a before mass arrests at Black Lives Matter protest - R Street - August 29th, 2024 [August 29th, 2024]
- From Ferguson to Minneapolis, AP reporters recall flashpoints of the Black Lives Matter movement - Toronto Star - August 29th, 2024 [August 29th, 2024]
- J.D. Vances 2020 Black Lives Matter Lie Shows the Threat He Really Is - The New Republic - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- How Do I Put This? J.D. Vance Thinks Amazon Funded the Black Lives Matter Movement. - Esquire - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter Attacks Democratic Party for Anointing Kamala Harris without Primary Votes - National Review - July 24th, 2024 [July 24th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter slams Democrats for 'anointing' Kamala Harris without primary vote - The National Desk - July 24th, 2024 [July 24th, 2024]
- California teachers were right to severely punish girl, 7, for writing these words under Black Lives Matter dr - Daily Mail - July 24th, 2024 [July 24th, 2024]
- A 2020 Black Lives Matter protest is revived as a neighborhood celebration in Mantua - WHYY - July 14th, 2024 [July 14th, 2024]
- Plymouth man accused of causing tens of thousands in damage to church, Pride and Black Lives Matter flags - Fall River Reporter - July 10th, 2024 [July 10th, 2024]
- Florida Republicans terrorized a teacher for her Black Lives Matter flag but now she's prevailed - Salon - June 24th, 2024 [June 24th, 2024]
- Black Lives Matter sign to return. Sacramento's Oak Park monument will receive updates - ABC10.com KXTV - May 7th, 2024 [May 7th, 2024]
- Cincinnati Artist Collective Creates Sculptural Series that Spells Out Black Lives Matter - Cincinnati CityBeat - May 7th, 2024 [May 7th, 2024]
- Viral SF Karen who went on rant against Fil Am man speaks out AsAmNews - AsAmNews - May 7th, 2024 [May 7th, 2024]
- Black History Matters; MET Gala Attendee Lewis Hamilton Is Taking On The World With One Outfit at a Time - EssentiallySports - May 7th, 2024 [May 7th, 2024]
- Court revives fired Whole Foods worker's lawsuit over Black Lives Matter masks - New York Post - April 28th, 2024 [April 28th, 2024]
- BLM Protests: Black Women Police Chiefs Led To More Peace - NewsOne - April 28th, 2024 [April 28th, 2024]
- Man who recorded fatal shooting of Ashli Babbitt on Jan. 6 sentenced - The Washington Post - April 28th, 2024 [April 28th, 2024]
- Amid Black Lives Matter flag debate, Milton school board votes to only fly U.S. and Vermont flags - VTDigger - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- Parkway sub tore down Pride and Black Lives Matter signs. He has no regrets. - St. Louis Post-Dispatch - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- The mass protest decade: From the Arab Spring to Black Lives Matter - The Real News Network - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- Substitute teacher escorted off the job in Chesterfield - KSDK.com - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- Liberal medias latest Black Lives Matter martyr tried to murder police officers - Washington Examiner - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- O.J. Simpson Is Dead. To Understand His Life, Watch These Two Shows - GQ - April 13th, 2024 [April 13th, 2024]
- What Happened to the 'Glove of Blades' Man Who Threatened Black Lives Matter Protesters? - The Root - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- "Black Lives Mat[t]er" + "Any Life" Drawing "Not Protected by the First Amendment" in First Grade - Reason - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- AP Black History Program Makes Discussing Black Lives Matter Optional and Won't Mention Rape - The Good Men Project - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- Employees have a right to express support for Black Lives Matter while they're on the job, according to a historic labor ... - New Pittsburgh Courier - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- City seeks to avoid trial over Black Lives Matter mural - Palo Alto Online - March 7th, 2024 [March 7th, 2024]
- NLRB: 'Black Lives Matter' insignia allowed New England Biz Law Update - New England Biz Law Update - March 7th, 2024 [March 7th, 2024]
- How parents talked with kids about Black Lives Matter differed by race - Futurity: Research News - February 19th, 2024 [February 19th, 2024]
- Vermont Conversation: What is happening to really ensure that Black lives matter? - VTDigger - February 19th, 2024 [February 19th, 2024]
- RFK Jr Confronted by BLM Leader Over Police Brutality - The Daily Dot - February 19th, 2024 [February 19th, 2024]
- How the Church Can Help Black Women Heal - ChristianityToday.com - February 19th, 2024 [February 19th, 2024]
- Seattle crews remove Black Lives Matter garden in Cal Anderson Park - KUOW News and Information - December 30th, 2023 [December 30th, 2023]
- City clears Black Lives Memorial Garden from Cal Anderson Park - CHS Capitol Hill Seattle News - December 30th, 2023 [December 30th, 2023]
- The City of Seattle Destroyed the Black Lives Memorial Garden - The Stranger - December 30th, 2023 [December 30th, 2023]
- Seattle removes Black Lives Matter garden from Cal Anderson Park - Crosscut - December 30th, 2023 [December 30th, 2023]
- Seattle Supporters Watch Black Lives Matter Garden Leveled After It Was Overrun by Drug Users, Homeless - The Messenger - December 30th, 2023 [December 30th, 2023]
- City finalizes $4.8M payout to protestors trapped by NYPD during 2020 BLM protest - Gothamist - October 26th, 2023 [October 26th, 2023]
- Jason Aldean removes Black Lives Matter protest footage from 'Try That In A Small Town' video - NME - July 30th, 2023 [July 30th, 2023]
- How Christian Theology Created the Need to Assert that Black Lives Matter - Religion Dispatches - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- Reckoning With the Marxists of Black Lives Matter 10 Years Later - Daily Signal - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- FBI Hired Social Media Surveillance Firm That Labeled Black Lives Matter Organizers Threat Actors - The Intercept - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- Science activism is surging. This is why | Opinion - Pennsylvania Capital-Star - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- Black men's resilience in the face of twin pandemics - KU Today - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- The English city facing up to its troubled past - BBC - July 11th, 2023 [July 11th, 2023]
- Black Lives Matter mural in Hartford unveiled following hateful vandalism - NBC Connecticut - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement Has Dropped Considerably From Its Peak in 2020 - Pew Research Center - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- Mayor Bowser Invites Residents to Commemorate Juneteenth 2023 ... - Executive Office of the Mayor - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- Juneteenth puts focus on preserving enslavement sites - Axios - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- The Racial Wage Gap Is Shrinking - The New York Times - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- What does the black heart emoji mean? - Android Authority - June 20th, 2023 [June 20th, 2023]
- Opinion | America's Poverty Is Built by Design - POLITICO - May 22nd, 2023 [May 22nd, 2023]
- Opinion | America Has Become Both More and Less Dangerous Since Black Lives Matter - The New York Times - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- David Starkey in bizarre claim that left-wing wants to replace Holocaust with BLM - The Independent - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Congress should fund the BLM (no, not that one) - The Economist - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]