Hundreds of thousands march for immigrant rights on May Day

On May 1, International Workers Day, hundreds of thousands of people marched in the United States for immigrant rights. Many hundreds of thousands demonstrated across the world for workers’ rights. The struggle of immigrants’ rights is part and parcel of the larger struggle for workers rights.

The U.S. protests were the largest immigrant rights demonstrations since the 2006 May Day political strike that revived international workers day in the United States and spelled the death of the fascist Sensenbrenner bill. The 2010 demonstrations, planned for months now, took on heightened importance after Arizona Governor Janice Brewer signed SB 1070 into law. The racist law criminalizes undocumented immigrants and institutionalizes racial profiling. The demonstrations that took place in cities across the United States proved, yet again, the power of immigrant workers in the face of such attack.

The following are reports from a few of the cities that had demonstrations on that day: 

Los Angeles, Calif.

“Our struggle will not end until we win full legalization,” said Juan Jose Gutierrez, leader of the Full Rights for Immigrants Coalition at a massive and historic march on May Day in Los Angeles. The mayor and the media estimated the crowd at 250,000, but the real count was closer to 350,000.

la may day 2010

Hundreds of thousands of people demanded immigrant rights and legalization in the biggest march in Los Angeles since the mass pro-immigrant marches in spring 2006. The march stretched over 12 huge city blocks and was stationary for hours due to the throngs of people in downtown LA. Along with the main route on Olympic and Broadway, marchers packed the major parallel streets.

The march was organized by all the major immigrant rights groups and coalitions, and the main logistics provided by the Full Rights for Immigrants Coalition, of which the ANSWER Coalition, Vamos Unidos USA, Hermandad Mexicana Nacional, and the Laborers International Union of North America, among others are member groups. ANSWER also was on the Steering Committee of the May Day march in LA.

ANSWER leaders and PSL members Carlos Alvarez and Ian Thompson spoke at the main rally, along with Gutierrez, LA County Federation of Labor Executive Director, Maria Elena Durazo, and other labor and immigrant rights leaders. Other speakers included LA Mayor Antonio Villariagosa, Cardinal Roger Mahoney, Angelina Corona of Hermandad, and Julio Marroquin of LIUNA.

The LAPD severely and consciously undercounted the march, estimating only 60,000 participants–a slap in the face to the hundreds of thousands of workers and families who attended. English-language media picked up this number was picked up, but it is a ridiculous lie. Villaragoisa, no friend to the working-class, was the first person to give a crowd estimate from the stage. His first words of were “I’m happy to be marching with over 250,000 people today!”

The PSL also led a spirited contingent of hundreds, along with allies from the Alliance-Philippines, KmB Pro-People Youth, the FMLN and GABNet/Af3irm.

May Day in LA was a truly electric march that showed a new willingness to fight for just immigration reform, no criminalization and full equality for all.

Chicago, Ill.

chicago PSL may day

Twenty thousand protesters came out in Chicago on May 1 to demand an end to racist immigrant profiling and immediate immigration reform.  The crowd gathered in Union Park for a lively rally, at which many of the speakers attacked the racist SB1070 recently signed into law in Arizona.
 
During the rally, a group of undocumented students stood on the park stage and revealed their immigration status. Nineteen-year-old Juan explained that he was only 4 months old when his parents brought him to the United States from Mexico. Nevertheless, because he is undocumented, he has had to drop out of school several times because he cannot qualify for financial aid. “It’s been a struggle,” he said. “I missed the mark by four months.”
 
Energy was high as the protesters marched from Union Park to Daley Plaza in the middle of downtown Chicago.  Popular chants included, “What do we want? Justice! When do we want it? Now!” and “Yes to immigrants! Down with racism!”

New York, N.Y.

Around 15,000 workers and immigrants gathered in Foley Square for a May Day march around City Hall. Organized chiefly by the city’s labor unions, the main demands were “Labor and Immigrant Rights! Jobs for All!” In addition to organizing a vibrant and youthful contingent, PSL members distributed flyers calling for full rights for all immigrants. The statement explained why the Democrats’ “reform” bill, sponsored by New York Sen. Chuck Schumer is a big business scam that all workers should oppose. A separate march and rally was organized at Union Square by the May 1 Coalition, which drew thousands more. PSL members participated in both events.

San Francisco Bay Area, Calif.

International Worker’s Day was celebrated in the San Francisco Bay Area with mass rallies and marches in support of immigrant rights and denouncing the racist illegal Arizona immigrations law SB 1070. 

San Francisco May Day 2010

There were May Day demonstrations in at least 10 northern California towns, with the numbers ranging from hundreds to thousands.  Actions took place in Santa Cruz and Watsonville, Sacramento, San Jose, Santa Rosa, Fremont, Oakland and Berkeley, San Francisco, as well as in Fresno and Modesto.  

In San Francisco, 6,000 people rallied at 24th Street and Mission and marched to Civic Center demanding full rights for immigrants. May Day 2010, a coalition of immigrant rights, Latin American solidarity and labor groups including the Party for Socialism and Liberation and ANSWER coalition, organized the demonstration.

As the Banda group Las Krudas played, people gathered with placards reading “alto la separacion de familias,” “ley racist de Arizona  ¡Decimos no!” and “Amnistia para todos los inmigrantes.” Following the rally, Yousef and Gaudy, two elementary students, chanted to begin the march.  The march went through the heart of the Latino district of San Francisco with a concluding rally at City Hall. At City Hall, speakers reaffirmed the need for unity in the struggle for immigrant rights and the idea that no human being is illegal.

Seattle, Washington

As many as 20,000 immigrants and their supporters streamed through the streets of Seattle for the tenth annual May Day march for immigrants rights. As the march progressed, many joined in from the sidewalks. The march wound through Seattle’s International District and then through the downtown area to Memorial Stadium in the Seattle Center.

The marchers were primarily Latino workers and their families. Unions were well represented, with large contingents from  SEIU local 6, Teamsters 177 and other unions. Casa Latina and Comite Pro-Amnistia also had a strong presence.

The Seattle ANSWER Coalition participated, attracting many to its contingent with militant chanting. One of the most popular chants was “Obama, escucha, Estamos en la lucha!” (Obama, Listen, we are in the struggle.) Many marchers held signs denouncing Arizona’s racist SB 1070. One contingent of marchers wore matching t-shirts reading “Do I look illegal?”

dc may day 2010

Washington, D.C.
 
Thousands came from throughout the D.C. metropolitan area and the country to rally outside of the White House. Participants included representatives of labor unions, including the Service Employees International Union, student, religious and immigrant rights organizations. A bus of young people came all the way from Florida to participate.

During the rally, Illinois Congressperson Luis Gutierrez announced that he and others would engage in an act of civil disobedience, remaining on the White House sidewalk until comprehensive immigration reform was signed or they were arrested.
 
As the crowd militantly changed “Obama, escucha, estamos en la lucha,” 35 people were arrested while sitting-in on the White House sidewalk wearing t-shirts that read “Arrest me, not my friends.” Event organizers have promised continued civil disobedience to demand immigration reform and protest anti-immigrant legislation, such as that just passed in Arizona.

Members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation participated in the demonstration and distributed a statement calling for full rights for immigrants and the repeal of SB 1070.

Austin, Tex.

Members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation and the ANSWER Coalition joined approximately 10,000 people at the Texas state capitol in Austin to defend the rights of immigrant workers and to celebrate International Workers Day. The demonstrators came from every age group and countless nationalities. They were a diverse group, united by the call for an end to the state-sponsored terrorism against immigrant communities, as their signs and chants clearly showed. People carried signs like “No Human Is Illegal,” “What shade of brown makes someone an immigrant?” and “Full Rights for All Immigrants.”

The rally began with a traditional Aztec dance and drum circle that inspired the crowd to clap in unison. At the same time, about twenty racist counter-protestors made every effort to be as visible as possible with their white flags and signs supporting SB 1070. In response, and as long as the racists were there, dozens of demonstrators spontaneously moved in to cover up the racist signs. After nearly an hour of competing with the demonstrators for visibility, the racists packed up and left.

Speeches during the rally called for unity across national lines and pointed out the fascistic nature of both the escalating ICE raids and SB 1070. Speaker Mike Chavez reminded the crowd that “we had slaves in this country because of laws on the book.” He maintained that the people of the United States would not stand by and allow these unjust trends to continue, and led the crowd in chanting “Que queremos? Justicia! Cuando? Ahora!”

San Diego, Calif.

At
least 5,000 people in San Diego spilled into the busy downtown streets to make
their voices heard. One spectator who had not heard of the march before that
day said, “I can’t believe what I’m seeing, I’ve never seen so many people
protest here in my life.”

Members of PSL
joined crowds of people that began to gather at Chicano Park in the
neighborhood of Barrio Logan. The PSL was on the Steering Committee of the San
Diego May 1 Coalition.

As murals of revolutionary
leaders, like Ernesto Che Guevara, Frida Khalo and a life sized statue of
Emiliano Zapata gazed upon the crowd in approval, the rally grew larger. 
The park filled up with people from all over San Diego, and even Tijuana,
Mexico. One worker, Jaime R., expressed his enthusiasm to
Liberation, “I want to do more to stop this bill (Arizona SB 1070) and
fight for our rights, but I’m not allowed to travel north of here (to Los
Angeles) because I am an immigrant and I might get caught on the way.”

The march began
with chants that could be heard throughout the city: “Arizona, escucha,
estamos en la lucha,” “Legalizacion, no deportacion,” and “El
pueblo, unido, jamas sera vencido” were the most popular.

The march began on
Logan Avenue, and continued onto the busy Market Street through downtown, where
traffic was stopped and hundreds more joined the march along with spectators
from the sidewalks. The march ended at the federal immigration building.

There the crowd was
met by nearly 100 policemen protecting a group of about 30 racist Minutemen.
Their hate speech was overwhelmed by the thousands that passed by and drowned
them out with chants like “Racists go home!”

New Haven, Conn.

May Day New Haven

In New Haven, 1,000 people took to the streets for the annual May Day march. The march went down a main avenue in Fair Haven, a predominantly Latino section of the city. Marchers were loud, spirited and energetic, chanting “¡Obama, escucha, estamos en la lucha!” and “Full rights now!” as people from the neighborhood joined the demonstration. The Party for Socialism’s Connecticut branch mobilized heavily for the event.

As the march ended, it fed into the Federal Plaza downtown for a rally. Speakers denounced the lack of progress on real and meaningful immigration reform in Congress, Arizona’s  racist SB 1070 and the terror of ICE across the country. Speakers also condemned racist police tactics in New Haven and neighboring East Haven, where recent community action and an investigation into racial profiling caused the Chief of Police to be put on leave last week.

Baltimore, Maryland

baltimore may day protest

In Baltimore, the international workers day demonstration was organized by United Workers, which has been fighting for fair wages. Members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation joined hundreds of workers and allies to participate in a day of action around United Workers’ latest struggle to get the city of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor to put into place a “Fair Development Agreement” which would require all vendors, such as national chains Cheesecake Factory and ESPN Zone and locally owned Phillip’s Seafood, to pay workers a living wage. The workers are also demanding funding for education and health care.

Armando Tema, a member of United Workers, had this to say about the day and the struggles ahead; “We can’t just sit around and wait for someone to make the change for us. We the poor are responsible for fighting injustice for ourselves, our families, and our society.”

“Earth, Education, and Work” were the themes of three street plays also taking place simultaneously in separate locations throughout the city. These themes were chosen because these are the themes that affect the community the most. When each of the acts ended, that group marched to City Hall. The final gathering issued a call to action for the community to work with United Workers.

Santa Fe and
Albuquerque, NM

Members of ANSWER-NM and the PSL traveled to Santa Fe to
participate in the May 1 march and rally. The march stepped off at about 2:00
pm from near the De Vargas Mall. The crowd was multi-national, consisting of
people of all ages. Demonstrators traveled from all over the state to make up
the crowd of about 1,000 people.

children with white crosses, banner for immigrant rights

Santa Fe,NM

A spirited pre-rally, led by organizers from Somos Un Pueblo
Unido, got the crowd fired up. Dozens of children led the march, followed by
protestors carrying white crosses, representing those who have died on or near
the U.S. border.  The crowd moved
quickly underneath an overcast sky, chanting, “Obama, escucha! Estamos en la lucha!”
and “Queremos amnestía
par tu tia y la mia!”

Workers waved from the tiny windows of the adobe buildings
lining the narrow streets of Old Town Santa Fe and onlookers cheered as the
marchers went by. Demonstrators from Las Vegas, Española, and Santa Fe were
present. Albuquerque was also heavily represented. The march ended with a rally.
The crowd cheered as one Native speaker announced the decision of all tribal
leaders in the state of Arizona to condemn SB1070, branding it as racist, and
to demand its immediate repeal. The city of Gallup, NM has also denounced the
bill and has pledged to boycott the state of Arizona.

Later, ANSWER NM and PSL members returned to Albuquerque for
a Day of Action in front of the Plaza de Encuentro in the historic district of
Barelas. Some 300 people attended this event, organized by several immigrant
rights groups. The event was lively and festive, with colorful cultural
performances and speeches from several community leaders. “Really, what we’re
seeing is a culmination of what’s happening in Arizona,” said Rachel LaZar,
executive director of El Centro de Igualdad y Derechos. As in Santa Fe,
speakers and protestors denounced the racist Arizona SB1070.

Boston, Mass.

A diverse crowd of over 500 rallied in the Boston Commons for an energetic May Day celebration.  The action was organized by the Boston May Day Committee, of which the PSL is a member, and endorsed by nearly two dozen organizations.  

In addition to drawing hundreds from the Boston area, three buses from Fitchburg and Worcester drove in for the action.  Speakers at the opening rally included Roxbury City Councilor Chuck Turner; journalist John Ross; Mike Upton, strike captain and member of UFCW Local 791; Elizabeth Ponce of the Student Immigrant Movement; and Jennifer Zaldana of the PSL.  

Ponce opened her talk saying, “I’m undocumented but not illegal! And I’m not scared to say it!”  She described being denied access to costly higher education because of her citizenship status. She spoke of her realization that the 9 digit Social Security number she lacked was more important than her high SAT scores.

The march following the rally stopped at the Hyatt Hotel, honoring the “Hyatt 100” housekeepers who have been fighting to reclaim their jobs after being outsourced in August of 2009. It ended at a military recruitment office, drawing the important connection between U.S. wars abroad and those being waged against poor and working people here.  Speaking during the rally, ANSWER organizer and PSL member, Jennifer Zaldana strongly remarked, “Just as the U.S. is occupying the streets of Afghanistan—our streets are being occupied in our neighborhoods by the police, by the landlords, by the banks and corporations that own more today than all of us combined will ever see in a lifetime”.

In addition to the Boston march and rally, an estimated 2,000 people marched and rallied in Everett, Chelsea and East Boston. Centro Presente, Chelsea Collaborative, Jobs with Justice and many others organized the event.  The action, endorsed by SEIU, explicitly called for the passage of the “Gutierrez bill” HR 4321.  The bill, while providing a path to citizenship, accepts the skewed logic of “securing our borders”.  The only true solution is full, unconditional legalization and equity between all workers.

ANSWER organizers and members of the PSL in Boston participated, bringing placards and literature with important slogans such “Amnistia Ahora! Full Rights for All Immigrants!” and “The Workers Struggle Has No Border”.

Lake Worth, Florida

About 200 people gathered on the steps of City Hall in Lake Worth, Florida.  The Palm Beach Immigrant Rights Coalition, of which the ANSWER Coalition is an active member organized the action in less than a week in response to the signing of SB 1070 in Arizona.

Speakers included Jo-Ann Golden, Vice-Mayor of Lake Worth, religious leaders, political activists, students, and members of the Latino community who wanted to express their outrage about the escalation of racist attacks against immigrants.
Isabel Vinent, one of the organizers, noted that the line that separates the conditions of immigrants in Arizona and those in Florida is very thin.

Only three days after SB 1070 was signed into law in Arizona, Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced that eight counties in Florida, including Palm Beach County, finalized agreements to join the so-called “Secure Communities” program—bringing the total number of Florida counties participating to 24.   

Similar to the 287(g) agreements that have permitted and granted legal backing for Sherriff Joe Arpaio’s terror campaign against immigrant communities in Arizona, “Secure Communities” places federal immigration enforcement into the hands of local police departments. The program allows state and local police to check the fingerprints of an individual they are booking into a jail against Department of Homeland Security immigration databases.  As with SB 1070, this is a prescription for widespread racist profiling against the Latino population.

 

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