Media Advisory

24 04 2009

What

Press Conference to announce this year’s May 1 Immigrants’ Rights March

Who

A.Ch.A. of SDSU, Activist San Diego, American Friends Service Committee—U.S./Mexico Border Program, Black Contractors, Border Angels, Center for Social Advocacy, Day Laborers of San Diego County, Employee Rights Center, Filipino American Community Empowerment, Gay Student Alliance of San Diego, International Action Center, International Socialist Organization, M.E.Ch.A. of UCSD, Migrant Rights Awareness of UCSD, Raza Rights Coalition and its collectives, San Diego Alliance for Marriage Equality, San Diego Coalition for Peace and Justice, Saint Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, Service Employees International Union chapter 1877, Sí Se Puede Immigrants’ Rights Organization, United Domestic Workers, UNITE-HERE Labor Association, and other human, labor and immigrants’ rights organizations.

When

Tuesday, April 28, 2009. At 2:45 p.m.

Where

The front lawn of City College, downtown San Diego, on Park Avenue. (Across from McDonald’s.) 1313 Park Blvd., San Diego, CA.

Why

We will announce the May 1 Immigrants’ Rights March to take place this year in San Diego, calling for:

-A stop to the ICE raids, detentions and deportations.

-Legalization and the right to migrate for all.

-Dignified work for all—pass the Employee Free Choice Act.

-Equal access to education—pass the California State DREAM Act.

-No more wasteful spending on border wall





Media Advisory

6 04 2009

What

Press Conference to announce this year’s May 1 Immigrants’ Rights March

Who

United Domestic Workers, the collectives of Raza Rights Coalition, M.E.Ch.A. of UCSD, Sí Se Puede Immigrants’ Rights Organization, UNITE-HERE Labor Association, Service Employees International Union chapter 1877, Activist San Diego, Border Angels, Day Laborers of San Diego County, Gay Student Alliance of San Diego, Migrant Rights Awareness of UCSD, San Diego Alliance for Marriage Equality, International Socialist Organization, and other human, labor and immigrants’ rights organizations.

Contacts    

David Schmidt 619-781-2431   davidschmidt2003@hotmail.com

Richard Lawrence (619) 417-0324     rlawrence@udwa.org

When

Sunday, April 5, 2009. At 2:30 p.m.

Where

The front lawn of City College, downtown San Diego, on Park Avenue. (Across from McDonald’s.) 1313 Park Blvd., San Diego, CA.

Why

We will announce the May 1 Immigrants’ Rights March to take place this year in San Diego, calling for:

 -A stop to the ICE raids, detentions and deportations.

-Legalization and the right to migrate for all.

-Dignified work for all—pass the Employee Free Choice Act.

-Equal access to education—pass the DREAM Act.





San Diego May 1st March

22 04 2008

San Diego May 1st March

San Diego May 1st March





Primero de Mayo / May Day Tijuana & San Diego Todos a las calles: March for Workers and Immigrants Rights

22 04 2008

Primero de Mayo

May Day

Día Internacional de los y las Trabajadoras

International Workers’ Day

Tijuana /San Diego

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Tijuana

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Todos a la calle a exigir justicia y a defender nuestros derechos de trabajadoras y trabajadores

Punto de encuentro: Mercado de Todos, 5 pm marcharemos del Mercado de Todos a Las Brisas, Tijuana

Exigimos:

El respeto a la jornada de 8 horas.

Aumento salarial de emergencia en las maquilas.

Salud y seguridad laboral: derecho de los y las trabajadoras; obligación de patrones y gobierno

Respeto a la constitución Mexicana, a la Ley Federal del Trabajo y a la ley del Seguro Social

Fuera sindicatos fantasmas (CROC, CROM, FOSIM, Etc.) de las maquilas

Denunciamos:

Las empresas extranjeras que vienen a explotarnos.

Las arbitrariedades de la Junta de Conciliación y Arbitraje.

La lentitud y negligencia del IMSS.

La complicidad de los sindicatos charros, fantasmas y/o blancos.

Nos solidarizamos con las demandas de los y las trabajadoras de: Muebles Fino Buenos, Acorn, de quienes luchan por la salud laboral y por los derechos de los migrantes

Hacemos un llamado a los y las obreras, explotad@s y oprimid@s, y a l@s activist@s y a todo el pueblo en general para seguirnos organizando, ya que es la forma de cambiar nuestras condiciones de vida y trabajo.

Invitan: Centro de Información para Trabajadoras y Trabajadores (CITTAC), Red de Trabajadoras y Trabajadores, Extrabajador@s de Muebles Fino Buenos, Colectiva Feminista Binacional, La otra campaña Tijuana, Colectivo Chilpancingo pro Justicia Ambiental y Colectivo Cosme Damian.

Más información: Teléfono 622-4269 (Tijuana)

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San Diego

Primero de Mayo: Marcha por los Derechos de los y las Emigrantes

May First: Immigrants Rights March

La marcha comenzará en San Diego City College a las 2:30 pm. Marcharemos por la calle Broadway al Parque Pantoja y los eventos del día continuarán con una asamblea popular en el Parque Memorial, Oceanview Ave y Calle 30th.

Starting at San Diego City College at 2:30 pm march down Broadway to a demonstration at Pantoja Park at 4 pm, the day’s events will continue with a public assembly at Memorial Park at 5:30 pm, Oceanview and 30th.

Legalización para todos

Alto a redadas y deportaciones

Derecho a vivir en paz

Derecho a trabajo digno

Derecho a emigrarse

Derecho a una educación justa y equitativa

Legalization for all

Stop the Raids and Deportations

Right to Live in Peace

Right to Dignified Work for all People

Right to Migrate

Right to a Just and Equitable Education





Activistas buscan repetir la hazaña histórica del 2006, anunciaron la organización de una nueva marcha por derechos de los inmigrantes el próximo primero de mayo

21 04 2008

http://diariosandiego.com/bin/articulos.cgi?ID=48171

A dos años de las mega marchas de abril del 2006, el movimiento por los derechos de los inmigrantes de nuevo cobra fuerza a nivel nacional.

Esta vez, diferentes organizaciones activistas de nuevo hacen una convocatoria para realizar marchas y actividades de protesta el primero de mayo a lo largo del país para demandar la aprobación de una Reforma Migratoria

En varios ciudades importantes delpaís se anunció la semana pasada la organizaciónde una nueva mega marcha, en sitios con números importantes de inmigrantes hispanos como Los Ángeles, San Francisco, Chicago, y varias ciudades de Texas se iniciaron preparativos la semana pasada.

Sin quedarse atrás activistas locales se reunieron este domingo en restaurante Cuis de Barrio Logan para anunciar ante medios de comunicación que San Diego se une a la organización de protesta nacional.

Los organizadores dijeron que esperan que estas actividades hagan nuevamente historia, y que de nueva cuenta participen millones de personas que se vieron en la primera mega marcha, momento que despertó a lo que algunos llaman el gigante dormido de la nación.

“Mucha gente dejó de salir por miedo a las autoridades, por las redadas y deportaciones, pero también vimos que los sindicatos dejaron de participar tras la elección de la mayoría demócrata al Congreso y Senado, pues se tenía la esperanza de que hicieran algo, pero no lo hicieron, así que tenemos que volver a retomarlo todo”, dijo David Schmidt, de la organización ¡Sí se puede!.

Esta vez, además de las distintas organizaciones activistas de la región, se busca el apoyo de las organizaciones sindicales de ambos lados de la frontera.

En una conferencia de prensa activistas organizadores de la nueva marcha mencionaron que esta vez desde Tijuana vendrá a San Diego un contingente, pequeño, pero estarán presentes empleados del sector maquiladora para unirse a la lucha.

“Con esta marcha se quiere promover el principio universal del derecho humano del inmigrante, pedir que se pare la guerra y que se legalice a todos los inmigrates”, comentó por su parte Olga Torres del grupo, VAPPOR Oaxaca.

FUERA MIEDO

Históricamente a nivel local durante las marchas de abril del 2006, fueron más de 50 mil personas las que se reunieron el primer fin de semana de abril en el parque Balboa para marchar por el centro de San Diego hacia las oficinas de la administración del Condado.

Cuando las primeras personas que partieron de la esquina de la calle sexta y Laurel llegaron a la calle Broadway, todavía seguía saliendo gente del parque Balboa en la marcha.

En una imagen nunca antes vista en este Condado, una enrome humo blanca humana inundó las avenidas del centro de San Diego.

La nunca antes vista cifra de personas marcharon con un solo mensaje: respeto al derecho de millones de migrantes.

Pero así como fueron pasando los días, semanas y a casi 24 meses las constantes redadas, deportaciones, ataques de grupos anti inmigrantes y otros sucesos, se fue apagando la llama de ese sentimiento que prendió el entusiasmo de la gente que participó.

Hubo muchos que dijeron que las marchas lejos de hacer algo, fueron contraproducentes, pero todavía existe la esperanza que se reviva ese sentimiento de lucha.

“No queremos que se fragmenten las familias, ni que se nos criminalice, queremos que se nos reconozca, que tenemos derechos como fuerza laboral y económica en este país, que así como hay libre comercio de bienes y servicios que haya libre camino para trabajadores, que las empresas no se vayan a países de Latinoamérica donde pagan salarios de miseria, sino que paguen bien aquí”, dijo Torres.

Asimismo, la activista comentó que con estos movimientos se quiere formar conciencia y participación de la comunidad inmigrante que hoy vive atemorizada.

“Nunca vamos a sacar valor con el temor, con este miedo nunca vamos hacer nada”, agregó.

“SOMOS 12 MILLONES”

“Son muchas causas por las que mucha gente ya no participó en las marchas, por las redadas, por los castigos y despidos laborales, por muchas cosas, pero en cuanto a San Diego, nunca han llegado las autoridades migratorias a intimidar a gente, así que no hay razón para que esta vez no participen”, añadió Schmidt

El nieto de inmigrantes Rusos reconoce que como sus abuelos, los más de 12 millones de indocumentados vienen al país en busca de una mejor vida, por lo que estas acciones ya no son exclusivas de la comunidad hispana u otros grupos inmigrantes, sino que todos los grupos deberían de participar.

El llamado es para el próximo jueves primero de mayo a las 12:30 de la tarde en las instalaciones de City College, de ahí se marchará por toda la calle 12 hasta la Broadway en camino al parque Pantoja donde se realizará una manifestación y rally, antes de tomar camino para eso de las 5pm hacia el parque Chicano.

Los organizadores ya están en comunicación, tal y como lo piden las autoridades, con las fuerzas policiacas locales para que este evento se lleve de manera pacífica.





San Diego May 1st March

17 04 2008

May 1st March





Minutes From “May 1st 2008 Coalition” Meeting, March 16, 2008

7 04 2008

Compañeras y compañeros, friends, sisters and brothers:

Thank you and a round of applause to all who were able to attend. The show of solidarity and collaboration from all groups and individuals who attended was truly inspiring. Below you will find the minutes from today’s meeting, as we discussed today, to review with your respective groups, collectives and organizations. Please note, especially, the “points of unity” that were discussed today.

Please review the points of unity with your group and send comments and suggestions to sdmay1st2008 (at) yahoo (dot) com as soon as possible (no later than March 30).

Thank you again, and we look forward to working with all of you in the collective effort to build a powerful and meaningful march this May Day, 2008.

MINUTES:

1. Introductions of all present.

2. Break off into three smaller groups to discuss the particulars of May 1 for this year. Discussion focused on the message of May First, the route and time of the march. The following ideas were put forth:

PROPOSED POINTS OF UNITY

The Points of Unity / focus of May Day 2008 from all three groups were largely in unison with each other. In particular, these are the points of unity that were suggested by the three groups:
Group A:
-Common humanity
-stop dividing families
-Dignity for all working people
-Promote economic justice, stop forcing people to
migrate: repeal NAFTA
-Solidarity with workers internationally
-no to the militarization of the border
-stop raids and deportations
-pressure the presidential candidates

Group B:
-Stop the War in Iraq
-The right to a quality, relevant education
-Legalization now
-Stop the raids
-Stop separating families
-Revoke NAFTA

Group C:
-The right to dignified work for all
-The right to migrate
-The right to a just and equitable education
-Unity, solidarity among all people
-Black-Brown Unity
-Stop the raids and deportations
-No militarization of the border
-If any students decide to go forward with a walk out,
we should defend their rights and provide them with
any help if they should need it

As we discussed, the points of unity proposed by Group C seem to encompass the principles of all three
discussions. Please discuss these points with your group , emailing sdmay1st2008 (at) yahoo (dot) com with any comments or suggestions.

Keep in mind, these are the points of unity that unite all our respective groups. Under the umbrella of May
First, of course, each of our groups will bring its own particular focus and message, bringing the awesome
diversity that we saw at our meeting Sunday morning.

LOCATION, TIME OF MARCH

All groups independently discussed calling for the march to begin around 2:30 or 3:00 pm in front of City
College and marching down Broadway to Pantoja Park (like last year). This is an ideal time to bring in students as well as send a strong message, as Broadway will be shut down at rush hour. From Pantoja park, we will march further to meet up with the Asamblea Popular being organized by the Raza Rights Coalition
(scheduled to begin at 5:30pm). Altogether, we would see a unified, coordinated day of action extending
from 2:30 – 7:30pm (mas o menos).

Please discuss this proposal with your individual groups.

All three groups came back together and shared the ideas that were discussed; these ideas were largely in
concert with each other.

We discussed having one flyer that we will all use to promote May First. Yolanda, a local artist and
member of the Si Se Puede Organization, has volunteered to produce an image for this flyer. Please send your ideas for what the best image would be (even links to photographs, etc.) to the sdmay1st2008 email address.





For Workers Strikes Against the War! ILWU to shut down docks on May Day

8 01 2008

From the Internationalist

ILWU dock workers in San Francisco antiwar march, March 2004. It’s not just “Bush’s war” but
bipartisan imperialist war.
In a major step for the U.S. labor movement, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) has announced that it will shut down West Coast ports on May 1, to demand an immediate end to the war and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the Middle East. In a February 22 letter to AFL-CIO president John Sweeney, ILWU International president Robert McEllrath reported that at a recent coast-wide union meeting, “One of the resolutions adopted by caucus delegates called on longshore workers to stop work during the day shift on May 1, 2008 to express their opposition to the war in Iraq.”
This is the first time in decades that an American union has decided to undertake industrial action against a U.S. war. It is doubly important that this mobilization of labor’s power is to take place on May Day, the international workers day, which is not honored in the U.S. Moreover, the resolution voted by the ILWU delegates opposes not only the hugely unpopular war in Iraq, but also the war and occupation of Afghanistan (which Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama and Republican John McCain all want to expand). The motion to shut down the ports also demands the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the entire region, including the oil sheikdoms of the strategically important Persian/Arab Gulf.
ILWU longshore workers respected picket line on Oakland docks calling to refuse to handle war cargo, 19 May 2007. (The Internationalist Group has fought from the moment U.S. troops invaded Afghanistan in September 2002 for American unions to strike against the war. [See “Mobilize International Labor Action to Defend West Coast Dockers!” The Internationalist No. 14, September-October 2002.] Despite the fact that millions have marched in the streets of Europe and the United States against the war in Iraq, the war goes on. Neither of the twin war parties of U.S. imperialism – Democrats and Republicans – and none of the capitalist candidates will stop this horrendous slaughter that has already killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. The only way to stop the Pentagon killing machine is by mobilizing the power of a greater force – that of the international working class.
The action announced by the powerful West Coast dock workers union, to stop work to stop the war, should be taken up by unions and labor organizations throughout the United States and internationally. The ILWU should be commended for courageously taking the first step, and it is up to working people everywhere to back them up. Wherever support is strong enough, on May 1 there should be mass walkouts, sick-outs, labor marches, plant-gate meetings, lunch-time rallies, teach-ins. And the purpose of such actions should be not to beg the bourgeois politicians whose hands are covered with blood, having voted for every war budget for six and a half years, but a show of strength of the working people who make this country run, and who can shut it down!
Now is the time for bold class action. Opposition to the war is even greater in the U.S. working class than in the population as a whole, more than two-thirds of which wants to stop the war but is stymied by the capitalist political system. In his letter to Sweeney, the ILWU president asked “if other AFL-CIO affiliates are planning to participate in similar events.” Labor militants should make sure the answer to that question is a resounding “yes!”
There should be no illusions that this will be easy. No doubt the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) bosses will try to get the courts to rule the stop-work action illegal. The ILWU leadership could get cold feet, since this motion was passed because of overwhelming support from the delegates despite attempts to stop it or, failing that, to water it down or limit the action. And the U.S. government could try to ban it on the grounds of “national security,” just as Bush & Co. slapped a Taft-Hartley injunction on the docks during contract negotiations in the fall of 2002, saying that any work stoppage was a threat to the “war effort,” and threatened to occupy the ports with troops!
The answer to every attempt to sabotage or undercut this first labor action against this war, and against Washington’s broader “war on terror” which is intended to terrorize the world into submission must be to redouble efforts to bring out workers’ power independent of the capitalist parties and politicians. If the ILWU work stoppage is successful, it will only be a small, but very important, beginning that must be generalized and deepened. It will take industrial-strength labor action to defeat the imperialist war abroad and the bosses’ war on immigrants, oppressed minorities, poor and working people “at home.”
ILWU in the Forefront of Labor Action Against the War
May 2008 Oakland picket. Now ILWU itself is calling to stop work against the war on May Day 2008.
Workers strike action against imperialist war isn’t new – it just hasn’t happened here for a long, long time. During World War I there were huge mass strikes in Germany against the battlefield carnage, culminating in the downfall of the kaiser in November 1918. A year earlier in Russia, working-class opposition to the war led to the overthrow of the tsar and the October Revolution led by Lenin and Trotsky’s Bolsheviks. The Internationalist Group and League for the Fourth International call today for transport workers to “hot cargo” (refuse to handle) war shipments. In the early 1920s, Communist-led French dock workers did exactly that, boycotting ships carrying war materiel to suppress a colonial rebellion in the Rif region of Morocco, as they also did during France’s war in Indochina in the 1950s.
In the U.S., the ILWU struck in 1948 amid Cold War hysteria and in defiance of the “slave labor” Taft-Hartley Act to defend its union hiring hall against the bosses and government screaming about “reds” in the union leadership. In 1953, at the height of McCarthyite witch-hunting, the ILWU called a four-day general strike in Hawaii of sugar, pineapple and dock workers over the jailing of seven union members for being communists. During the Vietnam War, socialist historian Isaac Deutscher said that he would trade all the peace marches for a single dock strike. The ILWU was the first U.S. union to oppose the Vietnam war, but during war and especially during the 1971 strike union leader Harry Bridges refused to stop the movement of military cargo. (Ship owners made use of this by falsely labeling cargo as “military” to evade picket lines and undermine the strike.) This betrayal went hand in hand with a “mechanization and modernization” contract that slashed union jobs.
As the U.S.-led imperialist invasion of Iraq was looming, in January 2003 train drivers in Scotland refused to move a freight train carrying munitions to a NATO military base. The next month, Italian railroad unionists and antiwar activists blocked NATO war trains by occupying the rails. In the United States, ILWU dock workers were a target of “anti-terrorist” government repression, as police fired supposedly “less than lethal” munitions point blank at an antiwar protest on the Oakland, California docks, injuring six longshore workers and arresting 25 people (who eventually won their legal case against the police). [See “Oakland Cops Shoot at Longshore Workers and Antiwar Protesters,” The Internationalist No. 16, May-June 2003.] And every year since the war started, the San Francisco/Oakland ILWU Local 10 has voted for motions for labor action against the war. Usually they were voted down at caucuses and conventions of the ILWU, but not this time.
Last May, Local 10 longshoremen and Local 34 ships clerks refused to cross picket lines set up by the Oakland Teachers Association and antiwar activists, defying arbitrators’ orders by refusing to work ships of the notorious antiunion outfit, Stevedoring Services of America (see “Oakland Dock Workers Honor Picket, Shut Down War Cargo Shipper,” The Internationalist No. 26, July 2007). In the aftermath of that action, the union issued a call for a Labor Conference to Stop the War that would “plan workplace rallies, labor mobilizations in the streets and strike action against the war.” The Call to Action stated:
“ILWU Local 10 has repeatedly warned that the so-called ‘war on terror’ is really a war on working people and democratic rights. Around the country, hundreds of unions and labor councils have passed motions condemning the war, but that has not stopped the war. We need to use labor’s muscle to stop the war by mobilizing union power in the streets, at the plant gates and on the docks to force the immediate and total withdrawal of all U. S. troops from Afghanistan and Iraq.”
On 7 April 2003, police (above) fired point-blank at antiwar demonstrators and longshoremen at the port of Oakland. Right: antiwar protester hit by police projectiles. (Photos: Tim Wimborne/Reuters)
As the conference date approached, the union was the target of several police attacks, including a vicious cop assault on two black dock workers from San Francisco working in the port of Sacramento. Some 250 demonstrators from every ILWU local in Northern California rallied in their defense outside the courthouse. Their trial to be set march 18 at a hearing will encounter even larger demonstrations.
The Internationalist Group and its union supporters helped build and attended the October 20 conference, along with some 150 labor and socialist activists from the Bay Area, elsewhere in California and across the country. At the meeting, a particular focus was resistance to the Transportation Workers Identification Card (TWIC), which threatens minority workers and the union hiring hall, and which the Democratic Party in particular has been pushing in order to carry out a purge of dock workers in the name of the “war on terror.” Not long after that conference, a federal judge ordered Local 10 elections canceled and replaced by a Labor Department-run vote, on the eve of 2008 contract bargaining. Federal agents even invaded the union hall to enforce their order. This action is a threat to the independence of all unions.
This set the stage for the recent longshore-warehouse caucus, which voted on a motion for a 24-hour “No Peace, No Work Holiday” against the war. The resolution was introduced in Local 10 by Jack Heyman, who also presented the motion for the 24 April 1999 coast-wide port shutdown demanding freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal, the former Black Panther and renowned radical journalist who has been on Pennsylvania’s death row for the last quarter century. Although the union tops maneuvered to prevent Heyman from being elected as a delegate to the Coast Caucus, the motion passed in Local 10. At the Caucus, the delegate from Local 34 referred to the October Labor Conference to Stop the War as the origin of the motion.
At the close of the Caucus on February 8, there was a vigorous debate on the resolution. The union tops tried to stop it, to no avail. They kept asking, “are you sure you want to do this action.” The delegates overwhelmingly said “yes.” Even conservative trade unionists, including veterans of the Vietnam War, were getting up saying the government is lying to us, we’ve had it with this war, we’ve got to put a stop to it now. So instead the bureaucrats tried to gut the motion, which was cut down from 24 hours to 8, and changed into a “stop-work” meeting (covered by a contract clause) instead of a straight-out shutdown, thinking that this would lessen opposition from the employers. In the end there was a voice vote and only three delegates out of 100 voted against.
The efforts to undercut the motion continue, as is to be expected from a leadership which, like the rest of the pro-capitalist labor bureaucracy, seeks “labor peace” with the bosses. In his letter to Sweeney, ILWU International president tried to present the action as an effort to “express support for the troops by bringing them home safely,” although the motion voted by the delegates says nothing of the sort. Playing the “support our troops” game is an effort to swear loyalty to the broader aims of U.S. imperialism. It aids the warmongers, when what’s needed is independent working-class action against the system that produces endless imperialist war. Yet despite the efforts to water it down and distort it, the May 1 action voted for by the ILWU delegates is a call to use labor’s muscle to put an end to the war.
Mobilize Labor’s Power to Defeat the Bosses’ War!

Internationalist Group contingent in antiwar march in East Harlem, 19 March 2005. IG has called for
strikes against the war and hot-cargoing war materiel since outset of war on Iraq and Afghanistan.
(Internationalist photo)
For the West Coast dock workers union to shut down the ports against the war means a big step forward in the class struggle. The Internationalist Group has uniquely fought for workers strikes against the war, when all the popular-front “peace” coalitions dismissed this and even some shamefaced ex-Trotskyists refused to call for it, saying it had “no resonance” among the workers (see our October 20007 Special Supplement to The Internationalist, “Why We Fight For Workers Strikes Against the War [and the Opportunists Don’t]”). With signs, banners and propaganda we have sought to drive home the central lesson that it is necessary to defeat the imperialist war abroad and the bosses’ war “at home” by mobilizing the power of the workers movement independent of and against the capitalist parties.
That means fighting the war mobilization down the line. First and foremost, this means actively joining the struggle for immigrant rights as the government turns undocumented working people into “the enemy within.” Class-conscious workers should demand full citizenship rights for all immigrants. Last year, San Francisco Local 10 voted to stop work and join marches for immigrant rights on May 1, but this was opposed by the employers PMA and sabotaged at the last minute by the union tops. Shamefully, Local 13 in Los Angeles, a majority Mexican American port, made no protest when police attacked immigrant rights protesters that same day. Today, as the ICE immigration police stage Gestapo-style raids across the country, organized labor should take the lead in organizing rapid response networks to come into the streets to block the raids. Despite the campaign by the capitalist media and politicians to whip up anti-immigrant hysteria, there is widespread disgust among American working people toward the jackbooted storm troopers who are terrorizing immigrant communities.
Call for October 2007 labor conference to stop the war sponsored by ILWU Local 10. Now is the time to act!
At the same time, the unions should use the power to put a halt to the attacks on civil liberties which are part of the home front of the imperialist war. Driver’s licenses with biometric data, TWIC identification cards with “background checks,” warrantless spying and phone tapping, setting up special military tribunals for “trials” in which defendants are denied the right of habeas corpus, to know the “evidence” or even the charges against them – all these are part of a drive that is in high gear pushing the United States toward a full-fledged police state. There have been scores, perhaps hundreds of resolutions by unions and city, county and state labor bodies against the U.S.A. PATRIOT Act, showing that labor activists are well aware of the danger. But just as is the case with the countless union antiwar resolutions, there has been no labor action. It is commonplace in the labor movement to bemoan the lack of real action when Reagan broke the 1981 PATCO air traffic controllers’ strike, paving the way for massive union-busting, takeaways and racist attacks all down the line. Let’s not let the labor bureaucrats bury the vital struggles of today.
Now is the time to turn words into deeds, to speak to the capitalist rulers in the only language they understand. The imperialist war parties must be defeated by a class mobilization of the working people at the head of all the oppressed. The ILWU motion to stop work on May Day to put a stop to the war can provide working people everywhere with the opening to turn from impotent protest to a struggle for power. For that the key is to build a class-struggle workers party fighting for a workers government, for socialist revolution here and around the world, that will put an end once and for all to the system of endless war, poverty and racism. 
FOR WORKERS’ ACTION TO STOP THE WAR
The following resolution, originally introduced by International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 10, San Francisco Bay Area, was amended and approved overwhelmingly after debate at the Longshore-Warehouse Coast Caucus on February 8.
WHEREAS, on May 1, 2003, at the ILWU Convention in San Francisco resolutions were passed calling for an end to the war and occupation in Iraq; and
WHEREAS, ILWU took the lead among labor unions in opposing this bloody war and occupation for imperial domination; and
WHEREAS, many unions and the overwhelming majority of the American people now oppose this bipartisan and unjustifiable war in Iraq and Afghanistan but the two major political parties, Democrats and Republicans continue to fund the war; and
WHEREAS, millions worldwide have marched and demonstrated against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan but have been unable to stop the wars; and
WHEREAS, ILWU’s historic dock actions,
1) like the refusal of Local 10 longshoremen to load bombs for the military dictatorship in Chile in 1978 and military cargo to the Salvadoran military dictatorship in 1981 and
2) the honoring of the teachers’ union antiwar picket May 19, 2007 against SSA [Stevedoring Services of America] in the port of Oakland stand as a limited but shining example of how to oppose these wars; and
WHEREAS, The spread of war in the Middle East is threatened with U. S. air strikes in Iran or possible military intervention in Syria or the destabilized Pakistan;
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:
That it is time to take labor’s protest to a more powerful level of struggle by calling on unions and working people in the U. S. and internationally to mobilize for a “No Peace No Work Holiday” May 1, 2008 for 24 hours to demand an immediate end to the war and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan and the withdrawal of U. S. troops from the Middle East; and
FURTHER BE IT RESOLVED:
That a clarion call from the ILWU be sent with an urgent appeal for unity of action to the AFL-CIO, the Change to Win Coalition and all of the international labor organizations to which we are affiliated to bring an end to this bloody war once and for all.