Archives: 2008




From the International Migrants Alliance

Statement for the International Migrants Day

18 December 2008

Migrant workers shall suffer the brunt of globalization-induced crisis
Grassroots migrants shall be ready to intensify our struggle for our rights

 

Neo-liberal globalization has forced us to migrate and become commodities for sale by sending countries and cheap laborers for the receiving ones. Now, as neoliberal policies induced another global recession, we are again made to carry the brunt of the crisis.

Download the PDF version of this statement.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Slowly but surely, the crisis that started in the United States is spreading throughout the world. Considering the USA's position as the global economic master, it is understandable that many of the countries where migrants are working right now and countries where they come from are starting to feel the impacts of the crisis that are expected to intensify in the coming months.

The current recession is but an explosion of the crisis brewing for years. The crisis of overproduction inherent in the economy of the global centers – US, European Union and Japan – and hastened by neoliberal globalization policies, has become more uncontrollable than before. Concentration of finance capital to a few multinational banks and corporations through massive speculation has become more intense and made the crisis imminent.

Even the wars of aggression and occupation that the US led and joined in by many capitalist countries have failed to salvage the capitalist system from collapsing. In fact, these wars justified in the name of "anti-terror" have further aggravated the condition in the world as profit became more highly-concentrated while more and more people were displaced.

Now, various countries scramble to save their failing economies with whipped up solutions that are evidently targeted to save big businesses at the expense of the people and the workers who have long been victims of the very roots of this crisis.

The oppressed and disadvantaged classes and sectors that include the migrants did not cause the global crunch and yet, will be forced into more hardships. Indeed, what is just and right has no place where imperialists rule.

Global crisis spells crisis for migrants rights

Job security and wage of migrants are the most immediate casualties of the economic crunch.

The more recent cases of these are as follows:

In addition to this, the wage of migrants shall surely again be attacked. This was exactly what happened during and after the 1997 Asian Financial crisis. Wage of migrants in Korea, for example, dropped from US$750 to US$300 while foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong suffered two wage cuts – US$25 in 1999 and US$52 in 2003.

Undocumented migrants shall also be gravely impacted by the recession. For the past years, many countries have conducted widespread and violent crackdowns such as in Malaysia and South Korea. The European Union is also poised to implement its return directive policy by next year that is expected to target tens of thousands of undocumented migrants in the region.

But the impacts of the global economic problems are not restricted to the host countries. In fact, it may even be more severe in sending countries like Philippines and Indonesia whose economies are very dependent on the advanced capitalist countries like the US.

For sure, the governments of sending countries shall again turn its eye to the very profitable business of labor export.

This is not surprising considering that labor export brings in billions of US dollars worth of remittance to these countries and billions more profit from government charges on top of curbing unemployment inside the country. Both the Philippine and Indonesian governments have already expressed their intention to double their target deployment of their nationals to other countries.

Just recently, the Philippine government has proposed to implement a mandatory psychiatric test. While hypocritically claiming that it’s for protection of Filipino migrants, the truth is that it shall only be an additional financial burden to them and its ultimate goal is to make Filipino migrant workers more attractive to foreign businesses.

Governments of sending countries have tried to placate the restlessness of their people by promising their readiness to face the crisis. This, however, is mere bravado as the economies of these countries are highly-dependent to those of the capitalist centers. Their so-called readiness will soon be revealed as nothing but readiness to impose more severe taxation to the people, drastic cuts in the budget for social services, even more wanton implementation of neo-liberal globalization and more aggressive exportation of labor. In fact, what these countries, like Philippines and Indonesia, are doing now is to forge more bilateral agreements with labor-receiving countries to ensure the continued sale of migrants as cheap labourers.

The way forward for the migrants

These developments and more that will surely come will be faced squarely by the organized grassroots migrants.

The rights of migrants have never been respected. The second Global Forum on Migration and Development held last October in Manila, Philippines showed the hypocrisy of sending and receiving countries as they tackle the so-called rights of migrants but are actually concretizing steps on how more income can be generated from migration and migrant labor.

The International Migrants Day is a most opportune time to expose the condition and concerns of migrant workers. The more than 110 members of the International Migrants Alliance (IMA) from 25 countries are gearing up for various actions that will highlight issues of migrants of various nationalities as a sector.

In this light, the IMA calls on to its members and supporters to:

  1. Launch actions that will highlight the issues of job security and wage of the migrants. Policies that make these rights vulnerable to attacks must be targeted while remaining vigilant over new ones that governments will cook up. Give particular attention also to the plight of undocumented migrants.
  2. Conduct a massive education campaign among migrants on the roots and causes of the current global recession. Neoliberal globalization must be further exposed and concretized to the migrants to intensify our opposition against them.
  3. Aggressively organize migrants in the grassroots. Only the collective will and actions of the migrants can be our effective weapons against the onslaught of attacks to our rights that are sure to come.
  4. Gather the broadest unity with other migrant organizations and advocates for the campaigns that we shall conduct.
  5. Unite in solidarity with the local workers and other oppressed classes and sectors in host countries by establishing coalitions with their unions and federations that will serve as shields against neoliberal globalization's attacks to our rights as workers and oppressed peoples in the host country.
  6. Integrate our movement overseas with that in our respective home countries to advance the struggle against imperialism and for genuine democracy, human rights and social justice

In the coming months, migrants are to face hardships never seen before. It will show how right the people are to oppose neoliberal globalization policies. It will show how imperative it is to do actions for social justice and human rights. It will show how migrants are part of the struggle for change.

Through militant struggles, we can overcome and build a world that we and our people deserve.

May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (212) 561.1744
Email:may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights
(maydaymovement.blogspot.com)
Press Conference on

International Migrants Day

 
Statement from the
International Migrants Alliance

Download the PDF or scroll down.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Thursday, December 18
10 a.m.
777 United Nations Plaza, 8th Floor
44th Street & First Ave., Manhattan

Human and Immigrant Rights Activists to announce six month plans for events in the U.S. and around the world in defense of Immigrants
The International Migrant Alliance (IMA), MIREDES of Mexico and the May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights to be among groups holding events worldwide on Dec. 18

In 2000, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed December 18th International Migrants Day in the wake of the growing world wide crisis facing migrants.

Eight years later the situation for immigrants in the U.S. as well as for migrants around the world has only deteriorated. Raids and deportations have increased in record numbers. In 2008 two of the largest raids in U.S. history took place in Postville , Iowa and Laurel, Mississippi. They were brutal raids that devastated not only the families rounded up but the entire community.

The anti-immigrant climate in the U.S. has resulted in countless beatings and attacks against immigrants, especially Latinos. Three Latinos have been brutally killed recently in this country: in Patchogue, LI, Brooklyn, NY and Shenandoah, PA.

At a recent conference in Mexico , the Second Campaign on Migration & Human Rights: For A World Without Borders, groups from around the U.S., Mexico and Central America agreed to join groups around the world on December 18 to announce plans for the coming year. Plans for demonstrations in the U.S. and worldwide will take place on Jan. 21, March 8 and May Day 2009.

In addition, documentation on conditions for migrants here and around world will be provided. Invited to participate:

  • Welcoming remarks from Rev. Liberato Bautista, Assistant General Secretary for United Nations Ministry
  • Representative of New York City Human Rights Initiative
  • Walter Sinche, representing International Ecuadorian Alliance on the struggle for Justice for Ecuadorians recently killed: Marcelo Lucero and Jose Sucuzhañay
  • Victor Toro, Fighting for Political Asylum
  • Statement to the event from Elvira Arellano, who attended Mexico conference
  • Representative of Stella D'Oro Strike in the Bronx
  • Robyn Rodriguez, representing IMA (International Migrant Alliance), Rutgers University Professor
  • Representative of Willis Point struggle in Queens
  • Teresa Gutierrez, IMA & May 1st Coalition for Worker & Immigrant Rights
  • Larry Holmes, Bail Out the People Movement, on the significance of 80th Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King
  • Saul Linares, Long Island day laborer



National Day of Actions Across the Country

Support Chicago workers taking over their plant

We Demand:

Keep the Plant Open!

Jobs at a Living Wage are a Right!

English flier

Demonstrate
Wednesday, December 10
12 Noon
Bank of America, 261 Broadway

(Between Warren and Chambers Streets:
across from City Hall and billionaire Mayor Bloomberg.)
Subway: R/W to City Hall; 6 to Bklyn Bridge/City Hall; A/C/1/2/3 to Chambers

Over 250 heroic workers—overwhelmingly immigrants—at the Republic Windows & Doors factory in Chicago are fighting back! These members of Local 1110 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) have taken over their plant until they get their jobs back.

Their workplace was suddenly shutdown when Bank of America withdrew a line of credit. No 60 days notice was given to these workers, as required by the WARN (Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification) Act. Their vacation pay was stolen, too.

George Bush gave $25 billion of our money to his pals at the Bank of America. This financial octopus already has over $1.7 trillion in assets. With all this dough, they go ahead and steal the jobs of these Chicago workers.

Another victim of Bank of America—the country's biggest mortgage lender—is Lorene Parker of Detroit, who's had heart and liver transplants. She fell behind on her payments because of large medical bills. Bank of America has scheduled a sheriff's sale of Ms. Parker's home on Dec. 11. Let's tell Bank of America that they can't steal workers' jobs and homes.

The struggle of the Chicago workers fighting for their jobs and Lorene Parker fighting for her home is our struggle. Join the fight back against layoffs, foreclosures, racism, immigrant bashing, tuition and subway fare hikes!




Denounce Raids Sweeping New York Area and the Country
We will also demand political asylum for Victor Toro!

12 noon, Friday, October 12 • Dia de la Raza
26 Federal Plaza
Take #6 to Brooklyn Bridge Stop or N to City Hall

On October 4, the New York Times wrote in an editorial: "Armed squads bursting into homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons, terrorizing families and taking away anyone who lacks identity papers, even if they have raided the wrong house. It may sound like Baghdad , but it is the suburbs of New York City , the latest among hundreds of communities around the country where federal agents have been invading homes and workplaces in search of immigrants to deport."

The New York Times is no community newspaper, nor is it a newspaper of the unions, it writes on behalf of the corporations. But even the New York Times is denouncing the horrible raids that are sweeping the country.

On Friday, October 12 immigrant rights organizations across the country will hold press conferences, meetings and demonstrations to denounce these raids. Actions will take place in Los Angeles , San Francisco , Detroit and on the Texas/Mexico border.

Join them to say no to the raids! Solidarity, not union busting!

Photo Albums



check back soon for more photos
Download fliers

Endorse the NYC protest
We Say:
  • Black, Latin@, Asian, Indigenous, Arab, White &emdash; In Unity there is strength.
  • ICE raids are racist, anti-union and violate immigrant and US workers' civil rights & divide families.
  • Jobs & homes, not lay-off and foreclosures. Stop demolition of public housing in New Orleans & everywhere.
  • No war in Iraq. Bring the troops home now.
  • Political asylum for Victor Toro. No deporation for Flor Crisostomo.
  • Money for levees in New Orleans, not the US / Mexico border wall.
  • Repeal NAFTA, no more U.S. trade agreements that force migration & cause lay-offs here.

Thursday MAY 1st

Stop the Raids & Deportations
Legalization Now · Justice for ALL

MASS RALLY for IMMIGRANT & WORKER RIGHTS

12 pm: Gather at Union Square, 14th Street & Broadway

4 pm: Rally & March

Report to follow
May Day Actions in NYC and Beyond
Resolutions in Solidarity

What's Next After may Day?

May 1st Coalition Forum
Saturday, May 31 • 2-6 pm
Church of the Village
48 St. Mark’s Place, New York

1 block south of 9th St., between 1st & 2nd Avenues
L train to 1st Ave. / F to 2nd Ave. / 6 train to Astor Place

2-4 pm Building the movement in solidarity with immigrants & workers: organizing labor, students, the progressive movement, etc. for social change

4 pm Teatro Callejera: No Abres La Puerta

4:30-6 pm: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: With or without documents, you have rights. Hear legal and other experts on how immigrants & workers have the right to organize unions, what to say if ICE comes to your home or community, etc.

Refreshments will be served. Donations welcome.

Download Leaflet (PDF)Postcard (PDF)


April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

March 30: Street Theatre

Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos


Take Action

More Ways to Act

Boycott ABC-Disney Unless a Real Apology is Issued

Sign this petition generated by activists in the Filipino community.

Support the Victor Toro Defense Committee

Victor Toro, long-time political activist and community organizer, faces harrassment by by the Department of Homeland Security.

Stop ICE Raids NOW! Campaign

TELL HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY CHERTOFF, BUSH AND CONGRESS: STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

Please join the MAY 1 COALITION's online campaign to STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

YOUR EMERGENCY ACTION IS NEEDED NOW! Fill in Online Form Below

Tell Secretary Chertoff:

This Valentine's Day, Give the Gift of Love to the Children. STOP THE RAIDS!

As a country that claims to defend human rights in the U.S. and around the world and to value the integrity of the family, our government should:

  • Ensure the human rights of all people and that immigrant families are not broken apart
  • Stop breaking the civil rights of immigrants to enforce immigration laws
  • No one should be awakened by armed squads bursting into their homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn taking away parents and relatives leaving children alone.
  • No child should be abandoned because ICE took their parent while at work
  • Let local authorities enforce local criminal laws

We have to speak up because if it were happening to us we would want others to speak out.

Left without her father as he was taken away in the raids on September 24 in Long Island. Crying and hugging her father begging immigration police: "Do not brake the arm of my father, do not take him away." She still asks her mother when her father will come back.
Download Petition (Spanish and English)

Contains a printable flyer & petition for gathering signatures

Complete the following easy steps:
  • Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information
  • Step 2: Edit/tailor our sample letter to send, and
  • Step 3: Send the message!
Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information:
Title
First Name *
Last Name *
Address *
Address 2
City *
State/Province *
Zip *
Country *
Area Code* and phone
Email *
Sign me up for local organizing updates and anti-war and social justice action alerts from action.news@organizerweb.com (low volume)
Comment:
* = required field

Sample Text (you will be able to edit it in step 2):

To: Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security
CC: President Bush, Congressional leaders, and members of the media

Dear Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security

We ask you in the name of decency to stop the ICE raids in the homes and workplaces of the immigrant community. No family should have to endure armed squads bursting into their homes with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn. One's home should be a place of security and peace. Children should not be left alone or have to lose their parents through raids at their work, resulting in depression, traumatic stress disorder and separation anxiety. Children should live with love and joy. This is what America stands for.

This Valentine's Day, have a heart and STOP THE RAIDS!

Sincerely,
(Your signature will be appended here based on the contact information you enter to the right)

NYC May 1st Coalition for Immigrant & Workers Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (641) 715-3900 ext. 97869# (you must include #)
Tel. (516) 582-2720 (Spanish)
may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights (maydaymovement.blogspot.com)

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos

March 30: Street Theatre


Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

May 1 Coalition: Archive: May-Dec 2008  

Archives: 2008




From the International Migrants Alliance

Statement for the International Migrants Day

18 December 2008

Migrant workers shall suffer the brunt of globalization-induced crisis
Grassroots migrants shall be ready to intensify our struggle for our rights

 

Neo-liberal globalization has forced us to migrate and become commodities for sale by sending countries and cheap laborers for the receiving ones. Now, as neoliberal policies induced another global recession, we are again made to carry the brunt of the crisis.

Download the PDF version of this statement.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Slowly but surely, the crisis that started in the United States is spreading throughout the world. Considering the USA's position as the global economic master, it is understandable that many of the countries where migrants are working right now and countries where they come from are starting to feel the impacts of the crisis that are expected to intensify in the coming months.

The current recession is but an explosion of the crisis brewing for years. The crisis of overproduction inherent in the economy of the global centers – US, European Union and Japan – and hastened by neoliberal globalization policies, has become more uncontrollable than before. Concentration of finance capital to a few multinational banks and corporations through massive speculation has become more intense and made the crisis imminent.

Even the wars of aggression and occupation that the US led and joined in by many capitalist countries have failed to salvage the capitalist system from collapsing. In fact, these wars justified in the name of "anti-terror" have further aggravated the condition in the world as profit became more highly-concentrated while more and more people were displaced.

Now, various countries scramble to save their failing economies with whipped up solutions that are evidently targeted to save big businesses at the expense of the people and the workers who have long been victims of the very roots of this crisis.

The oppressed and disadvantaged classes and sectors that include the migrants did not cause the global crunch and yet, will be forced into more hardships. Indeed, what is just and right has no place where imperialists rule.

Global crisis spells crisis for migrants rights

Job security and wage of migrants are the most immediate casualties of the economic crunch.

The more recent cases of these are as follows:

In addition to this, the wage of migrants shall surely again be attacked. This was exactly what happened during and after the 1997 Asian Financial crisis. Wage of migrants in Korea, for example, dropped from US$750 to US$300 while foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong suffered two wage cuts – US$25 in 1999 and US$52 in 2003.

Undocumented migrants shall also be gravely impacted by the recession. For the past years, many countries have conducted widespread and violent crackdowns such as in Malaysia and South Korea. The European Union is also poised to implement its return directive policy by next year that is expected to target tens of thousands of undocumented migrants in the region.

But the impacts of the global economic problems are not restricted to the host countries. In fact, it may even be more severe in sending countries like Philippines and Indonesia whose economies are very dependent on the advanced capitalist countries like the US.

For sure, the governments of sending countries shall again turn its eye to the very profitable business of labor export.

This is not surprising considering that labor export brings in billions of US dollars worth of remittance to these countries and billions more profit from government charges on top of curbing unemployment inside the country. Both the Philippine and Indonesian governments have already expressed their intention to double their target deployment of their nationals to other countries.

Just recently, the Philippine government has proposed to implement a mandatory psychiatric test. While hypocritically claiming that it’s for protection of Filipino migrants, the truth is that it shall only be an additional financial burden to them and its ultimate goal is to make Filipino migrant workers more attractive to foreign businesses.

Governments of sending countries have tried to placate the restlessness of their people by promising their readiness to face the crisis. This, however, is mere bravado as the economies of these countries are highly-dependent to those of the capitalist centers. Their so-called readiness will soon be revealed as nothing but readiness to impose more severe taxation to the people, drastic cuts in the budget for social services, even more wanton implementation of neo-liberal globalization and more aggressive exportation of labor. In fact, what these countries, like Philippines and Indonesia, are doing now is to forge more bilateral agreements with labor-receiving countries to ensure the continued sale of migrants as cheap labourers.

The way forward for the migrants

These developments and more that will surely come will be faced squarely by the organized grassroots migrants.

The rights of migrants have never been respected. The second Global Forum on Migration and Development held last October in Manila, Philippines showed the hypocrisy of sending and receiving countries as they tackle the so-called rights of migrants but are actually concretizing steps on how more income can be generated from migration and migrant labor.

The International Migrants Day is a most opportune time to expose the condition and concerns of migrant workers. The more than 110 members of the International Migrants Alliance (IMA) from 25 countries are gearing up for various actions that will highlight issues of migrants of various nationalities as a sector.

In this light, the IMA calls on to its members and supporters to:

  1. Launch actions that will highlight the issues of job security and wage of the migrants. Policies that make these rights vulnerable to attacks must be targeted while remaining vigilant over new ones that governments will cook up. Give particular attention also to the plight of undocumented migrants.
  2. Conduct a massive education campaign among migrants on the roots and causes of the current global recession. Neoliberal globalization must be further exposed and concretized to the migrants to intensify our opposition against them.
  3. Aggressively organize migrants in the grassroots. Only the collective will and actions of the migrants can be our effective weapons against the onslaught of attacks to our rights that are sure to come.
  4. Gather the broadest unity with other migrant organizations and advocates for the campaigns that we shall conduct.
  5. Unite in solidarity with the local workers and other oppressed classes and sectors in host countries by establishing coalitions with their unions and federations that will serve as shields against neoliberal globalization's attacks to our rights as workers and oppressed peoples in the host country.
  6. Integrate our movement overseas with that in our respective home countries to advance the struggle against imperialism and for genuine democracy, human rights and social justice

In the coming months, migrants are to face hardships never seen before. It will show how right the people are to oppose neoliberal globalization policies. It will show how imperative it is to do actions for social justice and human rights. It will show how migrants are part of the struggle for change.

Through militant struggles, we can overcome and build a world that we and our people deserve.

May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (212) 561.1744
Email:may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights
(maydaymovement.blogspot.com)
Press Conference on

International Migrants Day

 
Statement from the
International Migrants Alliance

Download the PDF or scroll down.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Thursday, December 18
10 a.m.
777 United Nations Plaza, 8th Floor
44th Street & First Ave., Manhattan

Human and Immigrant Rights Activists to announce six month plans for events in the U.S. and around the world in defense of Immigrants
The International Migrant Alliance (IMA), MIREDES of Mexico and the May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights to be among groups holding events worldwide on Dec. 18

In 2000, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed December 18th International Migrants Day in the wake of the growing world wide crisis facing migrants.

Eight years later the situation for immigrants in the U.S. as well as for migrants around the world has only deteriorated. Raids and deportations have increased in record numbers. In 2008 two of the largest raids in U.S. history took place in Postville , Iowa and Laurel, Mississippi. They were brutal raids that devastated not only the families rounded up but the entire community.

The anti-immigrant climate in the U.S. has resulted in countless beatings and attacks against immigrants, especially Latinos. Three Latinos have been brutally killed recently in this country: in Patchogue, LI, Brooklyn, NY and Shenandoah, PA.

At a recent conference in Mexico , the Second Campaign on Migration & Human Rights: For A World Without Borders, groups from around the U.S., Mexico and Central America agreed to join groups around the world on December 18 to announce plans for the coming year. Plans for demonstrations in the U.S. and worldwide will take place on Jan. 21, March 8 and May Day 2009.

In addition, documentation on conditions for migrants here and around world will be provided. Invited to participate:

  • Welcoming remarks from Rev. Liberato Bautista, Assistant General Secretary for United Nations Ministry
  • Representative of New York City Human Rights Initiative
  • Walter Sinche, representing International Ecuadorian Alliance on the struggle for Justice for Ecuadorians recently killed: Marcelo Lucero and Jose Sucuzhañay
  • Victor Toro, Fighting for Political Asylum
  • Statement to the event from Elvira Arellano, who attended Mexico conference
  • Representative of Stella D'Oro Strike in the Bronx
  • Robyn Rodriguez, representing IMA (International Migrant Alliance), Rutgers University Professor
  • Representative of Willis Point struggle in Queens
  • Teresa Gutierrez, IMA & May 1st Coalition for Worker & Immigrant Rights
  • Larry Holmes, Bail Out the People Movement, on the significance of 80th Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King
  • Saul Linares, Long Island day laborer



National Day of Actions Across the Country

Support Chicago workers taking over their plant

We Demand:

Keep the Plant Open!

Jobs at a Living Wage are a Right!

English flier

Demonstrate
Wednesday, December 10
12 Noon
Bank of America, 261 Broadway

(Between Warren and Chambers Streets:
across from City Hall and billionaire Mayor Bloomberg.)
Subway: R/W to City Hall; 6 to Bklyn Bridge/City Hall; A/C/1/2/3 to Chambers

Over 250 heroic workers—overwhelmingly immigrants—at the Republic Windows & Doors factory in Chicago are fighting back! These members of Local 1110 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) have taken over their plant until they get their jobs back.

Their workplace was suddenly shutdown when Bank of America withdrew a line of credit. No 60 days notice was given to these workers, as required by the WARN (Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification) Act. Their vacation pay was stolen, too.

George Bush gave $25 billion of our money to his pals at the Bank of America. This financial octopus already has over $1.7 trillion in assets. With all this dough, they go ahead and steal the jobs of these Chicago workers.

Another victim of Bank of America—the country's biggest mortgage lender—is Lorene Parker of Detroit, who's had heart and liver transplants. She fell behind on her payments because of large medical bills. Bank of America has scheduled a sheriff's sale of Ms. Parker's home on Dec. 11. Let's tell Bank of America that they can't steal workers' jobs and homes.

The struggle of the Chicago workers fighting for their jobs and Lorene Parker fighting for her home is our struggle. Join the fight back against layoffs, foreclosures, racism, immigrant bashing, tuition and subway fare hikes!




Denounce Raids Sweeping New York Area and the Country
We will also demand political asylum for Victor Toro!

12 noon, Friday, October 12 • Dia de la Raza
26 Federal Plaza
Take #6 to Brooklyn Bridge Stop or N to City Hall

On October 4, the New York Times wrote in an editorial: "Armed squads bursting into homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons, terrorizing families and taking away anyone who lacks identity papers, even if they have raided the wrong house. It may sound like Baghdad , but it is the suburbs of New York City , the latest among hundreds of communities around the country where federal agents have been invading homes and workplaces in search of immigrants to deport."

The New York Times is no community newspaper, nor is it a newspaper of the unions, it writes on behalf of the corporations. But even the New York Times is denouncing the horrible raids that are sweeping the country.

On Friday, October 12 immigrant rights organizations across the country will hold press conferences, meetings and demonstrations to denounce these raids. Actions will take place in Los Angeles , San Francisco , Detroit and on the Texas/Mexico border.

Join them to say no to the raids! Solidarity, not union busting!

Photo Albums



check back soon for more photos
Download fliers

Endorse the NYC protest
We Say:
  • Black, Latin@, Asian, Indigenous, Arab, White &emdash; In Unity there is strength.
  • ICE raids are racist, anti-union and violate immigrant and US workers' civil rights & divide families.
  • Jobs & homes, not lay-off and foreclosures. Stop demolition of public housing in New Orleans & everywhere.
  • No war in Iraq. Bring the troops home now.
  • Political asylum for Victor Toro. No deporation for Flor Crisostomo.
  • Money for levees in New Orleans, not the US / Mexico border wall.
  • Repeal NAFTA, no more U.S. trade agreements that force migration & cause lay-offs here.

Thursday MAY 1st

Stop the Raids & Deportations
Legalization Now · Justice for ALL

MASS RALLY for IMMIGRANT & WORKER RIGHTS

12 pm: Gather at Union Square, 14th Street & Broadway

4 pm: Rally & March

Report to follow
May Day Actions in NYC and Beyond
Resolutions in Solidarity

What's Next After may Day?

May 1st Coalition Forum
Saturday, May 31 • 2-6 pm
Church of the Village
48 St. Mark’s Place, New York

1 block south of 9th St., between 1st & 2nd Avenues
L train to 1st Ave. / F to 2nd Ave. / 6 train to Astor Place

2-4 pm Building the movement in solidarity with immigrants & workers: organizing labor, students, the progressive movement, etc. for social change

4 pm Teatro Callejera: No Abres La Puerta

4:30-6 pm: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: With or without documents, you have rights. Hear legal and other experts on how immigrants & workers have the right to organize unions, what to say if ICE comes to your home or community, etc.

Refreshments will be served. Donations welcome.

Download Leaflet (PDF)Postcard (PDF)


April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

March 30: Street Theatre

Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos


Take Action

More Ways to Act

Boycott ABC-Disney Unless a Real Apology is Issued

Sign this petition generated by activists in the Filipino community.

Support the Victor Toro Defense Committee

Victor Toro, long-time political activist and community organizer, faces harrassment by by the Department of Homeland Security.

Stop ICE Raids NOW! Campaign

TELL HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY CHERTOFF, BUSH AND CONGRESS: STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

Please join the MAY 1 COALITION's online campaign to STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

YOUR EMERGENCY ACTION IS NEEDED NOW! Fill in Online Form Below

Tell Secretary Chertoff:

This Valentine's Day, Give the Gift of Love to the Children. STOP THE RAIDS!

As a country that claims to defend human rights in the U.S. and around the world and to value the integrity of the family, our government should:

  • Ensure the human rights of all people and that immigrant families are not broken apart
  • Stop breaking the civil rights of immigrants to enforce immigration laws
  • No one should be awakened by armed squads bursting into their homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn taking away parents and relatives leaving children alone.
  • No child should be abandoned because ICE took their parent while at work
  • Let local authorities enforce local criminal laws

We have to speak up because if it were happening to us we would want others to speak out.

Left without her father as he was taken away in the raids on September 24 in Long Island. Crying and hugging her father begging immigration police: "Do not brake the arm of my father, do not take him away." She still asks her mother when her father will come back.
Download Petition (Spanish and English)

Contains a printable flyer & petition for gathering signatures

Complete the following easy steps:
  • Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information
  • Step 2: Edit/tailor our sample letter to send, and
  • Step 3: Send the message!
Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information:
Title
First Name *
Last Name *
Address *
Address 2
City *
State/Province *
Zip *
Country *
Area Code* and phone
Email *
Sign me up for local organizing updates and anti-war and social justice action alerts from action.news@organizerweb.com (low volume)
Comment:
* = required field

Sample Text (you will be able to edit it in step 2):

To: Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security
CC: President Bush, Congressional leaders, and members of the media

Dear Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security

We ask you in the name of decency to stop the ICE raids in the homes and workplaces of the immigrant community. No family should have to endure armed squads bursting into their homes with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn. One's home should be a place of security and peace. Children should not be left alone or have to lose their parents through raids at their work, resulting in depression, traumatic stress disorder and separation anxiety. Children should live with love and joy. This is what America stands for.

This Valentine's Day, have a heart and STOP THE RAIDS!

Sincerely,
(Your signature will be appended here based on the contact information you enter to the right)

NYC May 1st Coalition for Immigrant & Workers Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (641) 715-3900 ext. 97869# (you must include #)
Tel. (516) 582-2720 (Spanish)
may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights (maydaymovement.blogspot.com)

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos

March 30: Street Theatre


Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

May 1 Coalition: Archive: May-Dec 2008  

Archives: 2008




From the International Migrants Alliance

Statement for the International Migrants Day

18 December 2008

Migrant workers shall suffer the brunt of globalization-induced crisis
Grassroots migrants shall be ready to intensify our struggle for our rights

 

Neo-liberal globalization has forced us to migrate and become commodities for sale by sending countries and cheap laborers for the receiving ones. Now, as neoliberal policies induced another global recession, we are again made to carry the brunt of the crisis.

Download the PDF version of this statement.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Slowly but surely, the crisis that started in the United States is spreading throughout the world. Considering the USA's position as the global economic master, it is understandable that many of the countries where migrants are working right now and countries where they come from are starting to feel the impacts of the crisis that are expected to intensify in the coming months.

The current recession is but an explosion of the crisis brewing for years. The crisis of overproduction inherent in the economy of the global centers – US, European Union and Japan – and hastened by neoliberal globalization policies, has become more uncontrollable than before. Concentration of finance capital to a few multinational banks and corporations through massive speculation has become more intense and made the crisis imminent.

Even the wars of aggression and occupation that the US led and joined in by many capitalist countries have failed to salvage the capitalist system from collapsing. In fact, these wars justified in the name of "anti-terror" have further aggravated the condition in the world as profit became more highly-concentrated while more and more people were displaced.

Now, various countries scramble to save their failing economies with whipped up solutions that are evidently targeted to save big businesses at the expense of the people and the workers who have long been victims of the very roots of this crisis.

The oppressed and disadvantaged classes and sectors that include the migrants did not cause the global crunch and yet, will be forced into more hardships. Indeed, what is just and right has no place where imperialists rule.

Global crisis spells crisis for migrants rights

Job security and wage of migrants are the most immediate casualties of the economic crunch.

The more recent cases of these are as follows:

In addition to this, the wage of migrants shall surely again be attacked. This was exactly what happened during and after the 1997 Asian Financial crisis. Wage of migrants in Korea, for example, dropped from US$750 to US$300 while foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong suffered two wage cuts – US$25 in 1999 and US$52 in 2003.

Undocumented migrants shall also be gravely impacted by the recession. For the past years, many countries have conducted widespread and violent crackdowns such as in Malaysia and South Korea. The European Union is also poised to implement its return directive policy by next year that is expected to target tens of thousands of undocumented migrants in the region.

But the impacts of the global economic problems are not restricted to the host countries. In fact, it may even be more severe in sending countries like Philippines and Indonesia whose economies are very dependent on the advanced capitalist countries like the US.

For sure, the governments of sending countries shall again turn its eye to the very profitable business of labor export.

This is not surprising considering that labor export brings in billions of US dollars worth of remittance to these countries and billions more profit from government charges on top of curbing unemployment inside the country. Both the Philippine and Indonesian governments have already expressed their intention to double their target deployment of their nationals to other countries.

Just recently, the Philippine government has proposed to implement a mandatory psychiatric test. While hypocritically claiming that it’s for protection of Filipino migrants, the truth is that it shall only be an additional financial burden to them and its ultimate goal is to make Filipino migrant workers more attractive to foreign businesses.

Governments of sending countries have tried to placate the restlessness of their people by promising their readiness to face the crisis. This, however, is mere bravado as the economies of these countries are highly-dependent to those of the capitalist centers. Their so-called readiness will soon be revealed as nothing but readiness to impose more severe taxation to the people, drastic cuts in the budget for social services, even more wanton implementation of neo-liberal globalization and more aggressive exportation of labor. In fact, what these countries, like Philippines and Indonesia, are doing now is to forge more bilateral agreements with labor-receiving countries to ensure the continued sale of migrants as cheap labourers.

The way forward for the migrants

These developments and more that will surely come will be faced squarely by the organized grassroots migrants.

The rights of migrants have never been respected. The second Global Forum on Migration and Development held last October in Manila, Philippines showed the hypocrisy of sending and receiving countries as they tackle the so-called rights of migrants but are actually concretizing steps on how more income can be generated from migration and migrant labor.

The International Migrants Day is a most opportune time to expose the condition and concerns of migrant workers. The more than 110 members of the International Migrants Alliance (IMA) from 25 countries are gearing up for various actions that will highlight issues of migrants of various nationalities as a sector.

In this light, the IMA calls on to its members and supporters to:

  1. Launch actions that will highlight the issues of job security and wage of the migrants. Policies that make these rights vulnerable to attacks must be targeted while remaining vigilant over new ones that governments will cook up. Give particular attention also to the plight of undocumented migrants.
  2. Conduct a massive education campaign among migrants on the roots and causes of the current global recession. Neoliberal globalization must be further exposed and concretized to the migrants to intensify our opposition against them.
  3. Aggressively organize migrants in the grassroots. Only the collective will and actions of the migrants can be our effective weapons against the onslaught of attacks to our rights that are sure to come.
  4. Gather the broadest unity with other migrant organizations and advocates for the campaigns that we shall conduct.
  5. Unite in solidarity with the local workers and other oppressed classes and sectors in host countries by establishing coalitions with their unions and federations that will serve as shields against neoliberal globalization's attacks to our rights as workers and oppressed peoples in the host country.
  6. Integrate our movement overseas with that in our respective home countries to advance the struggle against imperialism and for genuine democracy, human rights and social justice

In the coming months, migrants are to face hardships never seen before. It will show how right the people are to oppose neoliberal globalization policies. It will show how imperative it is to do actions for social justice and human rights. It will show how migrants are part of the struggle for change.

Through militant struggles, we can overcome and build a world that we and our people deserve.

May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (212) 561.1744
Email:may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights
(maydaymovement.blogspot.com)
Press Conference on

International Migrants Day

 
Statement from the
International Migrants Alliance

Download the PDF or scroll down.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Thursday, December 18
10 a.m.
777 United Nations Plaza, 8th Floor
44th Street & First Ave., Manhattan

Human and Immigrant Rights Activists to announce six month plans for events in the U.S. and around the world in defense of Immigrants
The International Migrant Alliance (IMA), MIREDES of Mexico and the May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights to be among groups holding events worldwide on Dec. 18

In 2000, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed December 18th International Migrants Day in the wake of the growing world wide crisis facing migrants.

Eight years later the situation for immigrants in the U.S. as well as for migrants around the world has only deteriorated. Raids and deportations have increased in record numbers. In 2008 two of the largest raids in U.S. history took place in Postville , Iowa and Laurel, Mississippi. They were brutal raids that devastated not only the families rounded up but the entire community.

The anti-immigrant climate in the U.S. has resulted in countless beatings and attacks against immigrants, especially Latinos. Three Latinos have been brutally killed recently in this country: in Patchogue, LI, Brooklyn, NY and Shenandoah, PA.

At a recent conference in Mexico , the Second Campaign on Migration & Human Rights: For A World Without Borders, groups from around the U.S., Mexico and Central America agreed to join groups around the world on December 18 to announce plans for the coming year. Plans for demonstrations in the U.S. and worldwide will take place on Jan. 21, March 8 and May Day 2009.

In addition, documentation on conditions for migrants here and around world will be provided. Invited to participate:

  • Welcoming remarks from Rev. Liberato Bautista, Assistant General Secretary for United Nations Ministry
  • Representative of New York City Human Rights Initiative
  • Walter Sinche, representing International Ecuadorian Alliance on the struggle for Justice for Ecuadorians recently killed: Marcelo Lucero and Jose Sucuzhañay
  • Victor Toro, Fighting for Political Asylum
  • Statement to the event from Elvira Arellano, who attended Mexico conference
  • Representative of Stella D'Oro Strike in the Bronx
  • Robyn Rodriguez, representing IMA (International Migrant Alliance), Rutgers University Professor
  • Representative of Willis Point struggle in Queens
  • Teresa Gutierrez, IMA & May 1st Coalition for Worker & Immigrant Rights
  • Larry Holmes, Bail Out the People Movement, on the significance of 80th Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King
  • Saul Linares, Long Island day laborer



National Day of Actions Across the Country

Support Chicago workers taking over their plant

We Demand:

Keep the Plant Open!

Jobs at a Living Wage are a Right!

English flier

Demonstrate
Wednesday, December 10
12 Noon
Bank of America, 261 Broadway

(Between Warren and Chambers Streets:
across from City Hall and billionaire Mayor Bloomberg.)
Subway: R/W to City Hall; 6 to Bklyn Bridge/City Hall; A/C/1/2/3 to Chambers

Over 250 heroic workers—overwhelmingly immigrants—at the Republic Windows & Doors factory in Chicago are fighting back! These members of Local 1110 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) have taken over their plant until they get their jobs back.

Their workplace was suddenly shutdown when Bank of America withdrew a line of credit. No 60 days notice was given to these workers, as required by the WARN (Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification) Act. Their vacation pay was stolen, too.

George Bush gave $25 billion of our money to his pals at the Bank of America. This financial octopus already has over $1.7 trillion in assets. With all this dough, they go ahead and steal the jobs of these Chicago workers.

Another victim of Bank of America—the country's biggest mortgage lender—is Lorene Parker of Detroit, who's had heart and liver transplants. She fell behind on her payments because of large medical bills. Bank of America has scheduled a sheriff's sale of Ms. Parker's home on Dec. 11. Let's tell Bank of America that they can't steal workers' jobs and homes.

The struggle of the Chicago workers fighting for their jobs and Lorene Parker fighting for her home is our struggle. Join the fight back against layoffs, foreclosures, racism, immigrant bashing, tuition and subway fare hikes!




Denounce Raids Sweeping New York Area and the Country
We will also demand political asylum for Victor Toro!

12 noon, Friday, October 12 • Dia de la Raza
26 Federal Plaza
Take #6 to Brooklyn Bridge Stop or N to City Hall

On October 4, the New York Times wrote in an editorial: "Armed squads bursting into homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons, terrorizing families and taking away anyone who lacks identity papers, even if they have raided the wrong house. It may sound like Baghdad , but it is the suburbs of New York City , the latest among hundreds of communities around the country where federal agents have been invading homes and workplaces in search of immigrants to deport."

The New York Times is no community newspaper, nor is it a newspaper of the unions, it writes on behalf of the corporations. But even the New York Times is denouncing the horrible raids that are sweeping the country.

On Friday, October 12 immigrant rights organizations across the country will hold press conferences, meetings and demonstrations to denounce these raids. Actions will take place in Los Angeles , San Francisco , Detroit and on the Texas/Mexico border.

Join them to say no to the raids! Solidarity, not union busting!

Photo Albums



check back soon for more photos
Download fliers

Endorse the NYC protest
We Say:
  • Black, Latin@, Asian, Indigenous, Arab, White &emdash; In Unity there is strength.
  • ICE raids are racist, anti-union and violate immigrant and US workers' civil rights & divide families.
  • Jobs & homes, not lay-off and foreclosures. Stop demolition of public housing in New Orleans & everywhere.
  • No war in Iraq. Bring the troops home now.
  • Political asylum for Victor Toro. No deporation for Flor Crisostomo.
  • Money for levees in New Orleans, not the US / Mexico border wall.
  • Repeal NAFTA, no more U.S. trade agreements that force migration & cause lay-offs here.

Thursday MAY 1st

Stop the Raids & Deportations
Legalization Now · Justice for ALL

MASS RALLY for IMMIGRANT & WORKER RIGHTS

12 pm: Gather at Union Square, 14th Street & Broadway

4 pm: Rally & March

Report to follow
May Day Actions in NYC and Beyond
Resolutions in Solidarity

What's Next After may Day?

May 1st Coalition Forum
Saturday, May 31 • 2-6 pm
Church of the Village
48 St. Mark’s Place, New York

1 block south of 9th St., between 1st & 2nd Avenues
L train to 1st Ave. / F to 2nd Ave. / 6 train to Astor Place

2-4 pm Building the movement in solidarity with immigrants & workers: organizing labor, students, the progressive movement, etc. for social change

4 pm Teatro Callejera: No Abres La Puerta

4:30-6 pm: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: With or without documents, you have rights. Hear legal and other experts on how immigrants & workers have the right to organize unions, what to say if ICE comes to your home or community, etc.

Refreshments will be served. Donations welcome.

Download Leaflet (PDF)Postcard (PDF)


April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

March 30: Street Theatre

Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos


Take Action

More Ways to Act

Boycott ABC-Disney Unless a Real Apology is Issued

Sign this petition generated by activists in the Filipino community.

Support the Victor Toro Defense Committee

Victor Toro, long-time political activist and community organizer, faces harrassment by by the Department of Homeland Security.

Stop ICE Raids NOW! Campaign

TELL HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY CHERTOFF, BUSH AND CONGRESS: STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

Please join the MAY 1 COALITION's online campaign to STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

YOUR EMERGENCY ACTION IS NEEDED NOW! Fill in Online Form Below

Tell Secretary Chertoff:

This Valentine's Day, Give the Gift of Love to the Children. STOP THE RAIDS!

As a country that claims to defend human rights in the U.S. and around the world and to value the integrity of the family, our government should:

  • Ensure the human rights of all people and that immigrant families are not broken apart
  • Stop breaking the civil rights of immigrants to enforce immigration laws
  • No one should be awakened by armed squads bursting into their homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn taking away parents and relatives leaving children alone.
  • No child should be abandoned because ICE took their parent while at work
  • Let local authorities enforce local criminal laws

We have to speak up because if it were happening to us we would want others to speak out.

Left without her father as he was taken away in the raids on September 24 in Long Island. Crying and hugging her father begging immigration police: "Do not brake the arm of my father, do not take him away." She still asks her mother when her father will come back.
Download Petition (Spanish and English)

Contains a printable flyer & petition for gathering signatures

Complete the following easy steps:
  • Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information
  • Step 2: Edit/tailor our sample letter to send, and
  • Step 3: Send the message!
Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information:
Title
First Name *
Last Name *
Address *
Address 2
City *
State/Province *
Zip *
Country *
Area Code* and phone
Email *
Sign me up for local organizing updates and anti-war and social justice action alerts from action.news@organizerweb.com (low volume)
Comment:
* = required field

Sample Text (you will be able to edit it in step 2):

To: Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security
CC: President Bush, Congressional leaders, and members of the media

Dear Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security

We ask you in the name of decency to stop the ICE raids in the homes and workplaces of the immigrant community. No family should have to endure armed squads bursting into their homes with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn. One's home should be a place of security and peace. Children should not be left alone or have to lose their parents through raids at their work, resulting in depression, traumatic stress disorder and separation anxiety. Children should live with love and joy. This is what America stands for.

This Valentine's Day, have a heart and STOP THE RAIDS!

Sincerely,
(Your signature will be appended here based on the contact information you enter to the right)

NYC May 1st Coalition for Immigrant & Workers Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (641) 715-3900 ext. 97869# (you must include #)
Tel. (516) 582-2720 (Spanish)
may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights (maydaymovement.blogspot.com)

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos

March 30: Street Theatre


Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

May 1 Coalition: Archive: May-Dec 2008  

Archives: 2008




From the International Migrants Alliance

Statement for the International Migrants Day

18 December 2008

Migrant workers shall suffer the brunt of globalization-induced crisis
Grassroots migrants shall be ready to intensify our struggle for our rights

 

Neo-liberal globalization has forced us to migrate and become commodities for sale by sending countries and cheap laborers for the receiving ones. Now, as neoliberal policies induced another global recession, we are again made to carry the brunt of the crisis.

Download the PDF version of this statement.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Slowly but surely, the crisis that started in the United States is spreading throughout the world. Considering the USA's position as the global economic master, it is understandable that many of the countries where migrants are working right now and countries where they come from are starting to feel the impacts of the crisis that are expected to intensify in the coming months.

The current recession is but an explosion of the crisis brewing for years. The crisis of overproduction inherent in the economy of the global centers – US, European Union and Japan – and hastened by neoliberal globalization policies, has become more uncontrollable than before. Concentration of finance capital to a few multinational banks and corporations through massive speculation has become more intense and made the crisis imminent.

Even the wars of aggression and occupation that the US led and joined in by many capitalist countries have failed to salvage the capitalist system from collapsing. In fact, these wars justified in the name of "anti-terror" have further aggravated the condition in the world as profit became more highly-concentrated while more and more people were displaced.

Now, various countries scramble to save their failing economies with whipped up solutions that are evidently targeted to save big businesses at the expense of the people and the workers who have long been victims of the very roots of this crisis.

The oppressed and disadvantaged classes and sectors that include the migrants did not cause the global crunch and yet, will be forced into more hardships. Indeed, what is just and right has no place where imperialists rule.

Global crisis spells crisis for migrants rights

Job security and wage of migrants are the most immediate casualties of the economic crunch.

The more recent cases of these are as follows:

In addition to this, the wage of migrants shall surely again be attacked. This was exactly what happened during and after the 1997 Asian Financial crisis. Wage of migrants in Korea, for example, dropped from US$750 to US$300 while foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong suffered two wage cuts – US$25 in 1999 and US$52 in 2003.

Undocumented migrants shall also be gravely impacted by the recession. For the past years, many countries have conducted widespread and violent crackdowns such as in Malaysia and South Korea. The European Union is also poised to implement its return directive policy by next year that is expected to target tens of thousands of undocumented migrants in the region.

But the impacts of the global economic problems are not restricted to the host countries. In fact, it may even be more severe in sending countries like Philippines and Indonesia whose economies are very dependent on the advanced capitalist countries like the US.

For sure, the governments of sending countries shall again turn its eye to the very profitable business of labor export.

This is not surprising considering that labor export brings in billions of US dollars worth of remittance to these countries and billions more profit from government charges on top of curbing unemployment inside the country. Both the Philippine and Indonesian governments have already expressed their intention to double their target deployment of their nationals to other countries.

Just recently, the Philippine government has proposed to implement a mandatory psychiatric test. While hypocritically claiming that it’s for protection of Filipino migrants, the truth is that it shall only be an additional financial burden to them and its ultimate goal is to make Filipino migrant workers more attractive to foreign businesses.

Governments of sending countries have tried to placate the restlessness of their people by promising their readiness to face the crisis. This, however, is mere bravado as the economies of these countries are highly-dependent to those of the capitalist centers. Their so-called readiness will soon be revealed as nothing but readiness to impose more severe taxation to the people, drastic cuts in the budget for social services, even more wanton implementation of neo-liberal globalization and more aggressive exportation of labor. In fact, what these countries, like Philippines and Indonesia, are doing now is to forge more bilateral agreements with labor-receiving countries to ensure the continued sale of migrants as cheap labourers.

The way forward for the migrants

These developments and more that will surely come will be faced squarely by the organized grassroots migrants.

The rights of migrants have never been respected. The second Global Forum on Migration and Development held last October in Manila, Philippines showed the hypocrisy of sending and receiving countries as they tackle the so-called rights of migrants but are actually concretizing steps on how more income can be generated from migration and migrant labor.

The International Migrants Day is a most opportune time to expose the condition and concerns of migrant workers. The more than 110 members of the International Migrants Alliance (IMA) from 25 countries are gearing up for various actions that will highlight issues of migrants of various nationalities as a sector.

In this light, the IMA calls on to its members and supporters to:

  1. Launch actions that will highlight the issues of job security and wage of the migrants. Policies that make these rights vulnerable to attacks must be targeted while remaining vigilant over new ones that governments will cook up. Give particular attention also to the plight of undocumented migrants.
  2. Conduct a massive education campaign among migrants on the roots and causes of the current global recession. Neoliberal globalization must be further exposed and concretized to the migrants to intensify our opposition against them.
  3. Aggressively organize migrants in the grassroots. Only the collective will and actions of the migrants can be our effective weapons against the onslaught of attacks to our rights that are sure to come.
  4. Gather the broadest unity with other migrant organizations and advocates for the campaigns that we shall conduct.
  5. Unite in solidarity with the local workers and other oppressed classes and sectors in host countries by establishing coalitions with their unions and federations that will serve as shields against neoliberal globalization's attacks to our rights as workers and oppressed peoples in the host country.
  6. Integrate our movement overseas with that in our respective home countries to advance the struggle against imperialism and for genuine democracy, human rights and social justice

In the coming months, migrants are to face hardships never seen before. It will show how right the people are to oppose neoliberal globalization policies. It will show how imperative it is to do actions for social justice and human rights. It will show how migrants are part of the struggle for change.

Through militant struggles, we can overcome and build a world that we and our people deserve.

May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (212) 561.1744
Email:may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights
(maydaymovement.blogspot.com)
Press Conference on

International Migrants Day

 
Statement from the
International Migrants Alliance

Download the PDF or scroll down.

Visit the International Migrants Alliance website

Thursday, December 18
10 a.m.
777 United Nations Plaza, 8th Floor
44th Street & First Ave., Manhattan

Human and Immigrant Rights Activists to announce six month plans for events in the U.S. and around the world in defense of Immigrants
The International Migrant Alliance (IMA), MIREDES of Mexico and the May 1st Coalition for Worker and Immigrant Rights to be among groups holding events worldwide on Dec. 18

In 2000, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed December 18th International Migrants Day in the wake of the growing world wide crisis facing migrants.

Eight years later the situation for immigrants in the U.S. as well as for migrants around the world has only deteriorated. Raids and deportations have increased in record numbers. In 2008 two of the largest raids in U.S. history took place in Postville , Iowa and Laurel, Mississippi. They were brutal raids that devastated not only the families rounded up but the entire community.

The anti-immigrant climate in the U.S. has resulted in countless beatings and attacks against immigrants, especially Latinos. Three Latinos have been brutally killed recently in this country: in Patchogue, LI, Brooklyn, NY and Shenandoah, PA.

At a recent conference in Mexico , the Second Campaign on Migration & Human Rights: For A World Without Borders, groups from around the U.S., Mexico and Central America agreed to join groups around the world on December 18 to announce plans for the coming year. Plans for demonstrations in the U.S. and worldwide will take place on Jan. 21, March 8 and May Day 2009.

In addition, documentation on conditions for migrants here and around world will be provided. Invited to participate:

  • Welcoming remarks from Rev. Liberato Bautista, Assistant General Secretary for United Nations Ministry
  • Representative of New York City Human Rights Initiative
  • Walter Sinche, representing International Ecuadorian Alliance on the struggle for Justice for Ecuadorians recently killed: Marcelo Lucero and Jose Sucuzhañay
  • Victor Toro, Fighting for Political Asylum
  • Statement to the event from Elvira Arellano, who attended Mexico conference
  • Representative of Stella D'Oro Strike in the Bronx
  • Robyn Rodriguez, representing IMA (International Migrant Alliance), Rutgers University Professor
  • Representative of Willis Point struggle in Queens
  • Teresa Gutierrez, IMA & May 1st Coalition for Worker & Immigrant Rights
  • Larry Holmes, Bail Out the People Movement, on the significance of 80th Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King
  • Saul Linares, Long Island day laborer



National Day of Actions Across the Country

Support Chicago workers taking over their plant

We Demand:

Keep the Plant Open!

Jobs at a Living Wage are a Right!

English flier

Demonstrate
Wednesday, December 10
12 Noon
Bank of America, 261 Broadway

(Between Warren and Chambers Streets:
across from City Hall and billionaire Mayor Bloomberg.)
Subway: R/W to City Hall; 6 to Bklyn Bridge/City Hall; A/C/1/2/3 to Chambers

Over 250 heroic workers—overwhelmingly immigrants—at the Republic Windows & Doors factory in Chicago are fighting back! These members of Local 1110 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) have taken over their plant until they get their jobs back.

Their workplace was suddenly shutdown when Bank of America withdrew a line of credit. No 60 days notice was given to these workers, as required by the WARN (Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification) Act. Their vacation pay was stolen, too.

George Bush gave $25 billion of our money to his pals at the Bank of America. This financial octopus already has over $1.7 trillion in assets. With all this dough, they go ahead and steal the jobs of these Chicago workers.

Another victim of Bank of America—the country's biggest mortgage lender—is Lorene Parker of Detroit, who's had heart and liver transplants. She fell behind on her payments because of large medical bills. Bank of America has scheduled a sheriff's sale of Ms. Parker's home on Dec. 11. Let's tell Bank of America that they can't steal workers' jobs and homes.

The struggle of the Chicago workers fighting for their jobs and Lorene Parker fighting for her home is our struggle. Join the fight back against layoffs, foreclosures, racism, immigrant bashing, tuition and subway fare hikes!




Denounce Raids Sweeping New York Area and the Country
We will also demand political asylum for Victor Toro!

12 noon, Friday, October 12 • Dia de la Raza
26 Federal Plaza
Take #6 to Brooklyn Bridge Stop or N to City Hall

On October 4, the New York Times wrote in an editorial: "Armed squads bursting into homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons, terrorizing families and taking away anyone who lacks identity papers, even if they have raided the wrong house. It may sound like Baghdad , but it is the suburbs of New York City , the latest among hundreds of communities around the country where federal agents have been invading homes and workplaces in search of immigrants to deport."

The New York Times is no community newspaper, nor is it a newspaper of the unions, it writes on behalf of the corporations. But even the New York Times is denouncing the horrible raids that are sweeping the country.

On Friday, October 12 immigrant rights organizations across the country will hold press conferences, meetings and demonstrations to denounce these raids. Actions will take place in Los Angeles , San Francisco , Detroit and on the Texas/Mexico border.

Join them to say no to the raids! Solidarity, not union busting!

Photo Albums



check back soon for more photos
Download fliers

Endorse the NYC protest
We Say:
  • Black, Latin@, Asian, Indigenous, Arab, White &emdash; In Unity there is strength.
  • ICE raids are racist, anti-union and violate immigrant and US workers' civil rights & divide families.
  • Jobs & homes, not lay-off and foreclosures. Stop demolition of public housing in New Orleans & everywhere.
  • No war in Iraq. Bring the troops home now.
  • Political asylum for Victor Toro. No deporation for Flor Crisostomo.
  • Money for levees in New Orleans, not the US / Mexico border wall.
  • Repeal NAFTA, no more U.S. trade agreements that force migration & cause lay-offs here.

Thursday MAY 1st

Stop the Raids & Deportations
Legalization Now · Justice for ALL

MASS RALLY for IMMIGRANT & WORKER RIGHTS

12 pm: Gather at Union Square, 14th Street & Broadway

4 pm: Rally & March

Report to follow
May Day Actions in NYC and Beyond
Resolutions in Solidarity

What's Next After may Day?

May 1st Coalition Forum
Saturday, May 31 • 2-6 pm
Church of the Village
48 St. Mark’s Place, New York

1 block south of 9th St., between 1st & 2nd Avenues
L train to 1st Ave. / F to 2nd Ave. / 6 train to Astor Place

2-4 pm Building the movement in solidarity with immigrants & workers: organizing labor, students, the progressive movement, etc. for social change

4 pm Teatro Callejera: No Abres La Puerta

4:30-6 pm: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: With or without documents, you have rights. Hear legal and other experts on how immigrants & workers have the right to organize unions, what to say if ICE comes to your home or community, etc.

Refreshments will be served. Donations welcome.

Download Leaflet (PDF)Postcard (PDF)


April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.

March 30: Street Theatre

Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos


Take Action

More Ways to Act

Boycott ABC-Disney Unless a Real Apology is Issued

Sign this petition generated by activists in the Filipino community.

Support the Victor Toro Defense Committee

Victor Toro, long-time political activist and community organizer, faces harrassment by by the Department of Homeland Security.

Stop ICE Raids NOW! Campaign

TELL HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY CHERTOFF, BUSH AND CONGRESS: STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

Please join the MAY 1 COALITION's online campaign to STOP THE ICE RAIDS NOW!

YOUR EMERGENCY ACTION IS NEEDED NOW! Fill in Online Form Below

Tell Secretary Chertoff:

This Valentine's Day, Give the Gift of Love to the Children. STOP THE RAIDS!

As a country that claims to defend human rights in the U.S. and around the world and to value the integrity of the family, our government should:

  • Ensure the human rights of all people and that immigrant families are not broken apart
  • Stop breaking the civil rights of immigrants to enforce immigration laws
  • No one should be awakened by armed squads bursting into their homes in the dead of night with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn taking away parents and relatives leaving children alone.
  • No child should be abandoned because ICE took their parent while at work
  • Let local authorities enforce local criminal laws

We have to speak up because if it were happening to us we would want others to speak out.

Left without her father as he was taken away in the raids on September 24 in Long Island. Crying and hugging her father begging immigration police: "Do not brake the arm of my father, do not take him away." She still asks her mother when her father will come back.
Download Petition (Spanish and English)

Contains a printable flyer & petition for gathering signatures

Complete the following easy steps:
  • Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information
  • Step 2: Edit/tailor our sample letter to send, and
  • Step 3: Send the message!
Step 1: Enter your contact/signature information:
Title
First Name *
Last Name *
Address *
Address 2
City *
State/Province *
Zip *
Country *
Area Code* and phone
Email *
Sign me up for local organizing updates and anti-war and social justice action alerts from action.news@organizerweb.com (low volume)
Comment:
* = required field

Sample Text (you will be able to edit it in step 2):

To: Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security
CC: President Bush, Congressional leaders, and members of the media

Dear Michael Chertoff, Chief, Homeland Security

We ask you in the name of decency to stop the ICE raids in the homes and workplaces of the immigrant community. No family should have to endure armed squads bursting into their homes with shotguns and automatic weapons drawn. One's home should be a place of security and peace. Children should not be left alone or have to lose their parents through raids at their work, resulting in depression, traumatic stress disorder and separation anxiety. Children should live with love and joy. This is what America stands for.

This Valentine's Day, have a heart and STOP THE RAIDS!

Sincerely,
(Your signature will be appended here based on the contact information you enter to the right)

NYC May 1st Coalition for Immigrant & Workers Rights
55 West 17 Street, #5C, New York, NY 10011
or
c/o Teamsters Local 808, 22-43 Jackson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (641) 715-3900 ext. 97869# (you must include #)
Tel. (516) 582-2720 (Spanish)
may1@leftshift.org
a member of the National May 1st Movement for Worker and Immigrant Rights (maydaymovement.blogspot.com)

March 28: Press Conference & Picket at ICE


More photos

March 30: Street Theatre


Street Theatre production of "No Habras La Puerta" by Las Mujeres por la Paz and May 1 Coalition.
More photos

April 25: Support for Sean Bell


May 1 Coalition members at a Queens rally in support of Sean Bell and all victims of Police Brutality. Protest held on the day 3 NYPD detectives in Sean Bell murder were acquitted on all charges.