Most of the world recognizes May 1 ā May Day ā as International Workersā Day. Here in one of the few countries that doesnāt, itās worth pausing to ask how U.S. workers are doing.
At an event last December, Fight for $15 organizer Terrence Wise recalled āgoing to bed at night, ignoring my own stomachās rumbling, but having to hear my three little girlsā stomachs rumble. Thatās something no parent should have to endure.ā
Wise was marking the launch of the Poor Peopleās Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival.
Last month, the Institute for Policy Studies and the Poor Peopleās Campaign released The Souls of Poor Folk, a report on 50 years of change in the issues that affect working people, and particularly those at the bottom. We looked at systemic racism, poverty, militarism, and ecological devastation.
We found some startling and unhappy results. For the most part, workers like Wise are struggling hard to get by.
With the destruction of industries and the cities that housed them, the nature of our economy has shifted. Although the official unemployment rate is low, employment today often means low-wage work that offers little job security.
Our societyās treatment of workers has changed, too. For example, 28 states have passed so-called āright to workā laws that undermine the ability of workers to organize.
Thatās meant steadily declining union membership, which keeps workers from getting their fair share of the wealth produced by the U.S. economy over the past 50 years. Despite enormous growth in the overall economy, wages for the bottom 80 percent of workers have remained largely stagnant.
In 2016, there wasnāt a single county or state in which someone earning the federal minimum wage could afford to rent a two-bedroom apartment at market rate. Yet today there are 64 million people working for less than $15 an hour.
Meanwhile, nearly one in five families have zero or negative net worth. That number rises to over a quarter of Latin American households and 30 percent of black households.
Of course, these changes havenāt happened in a vacuum. Itās not a coincidence that while most Americans are struggling, just three individuals ā Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and Warren Buffett ā together own as much wealth as half of the country combined.
Itās also probably no coincidence that the American politicians backed by billionaires donāt recognize May Day.
People in power made choices like passing āright to workā laws that have led to these outcomes. And it will have to be other people ā people like Terrence Wise ā that set things right. At that same press conference where he described his familyās plight, Wise talked about how the Fight for $15 had helped raise the wages of 20 million workers and promoted their fight for a union.
Starting the day after Motherās Day, the Poor Peopleās Campaign plans to engage in 40 days of civil disobedience in at least 30 state capitals and Washington, DC. It aims to show how systemic racism, poverty, militarism, and ecological devastation are all interconnected, and all undermine workers today.
Among numerous demands, theyāre calling for federal and state living wage laws, a guaranteed annual income for all people, full employment, and the right to unionize.
These steps will restore a sense of well-being and economic security to Americaās workers and give them what the hollow promises of politicians cannot: dignity. Join them this May Day at www.poorpeoplescampaign.org and make it one to remember for U.S. workers too.
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