Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

The Oregon Center for Public Policy says Measure 118 would do more harm than good.

Reposted from The Oregon Center for Public Policy
 
August 21, 2024

(See here and here for past posts on this issue.)

By: Angie Garcia and Alejandro Queral

Measure 118 would do more harm than good.

Oregon Ballot Measure 118 is poorly designed. Its enactment would likely trigger several unintended, damaging consequences. Accordingly, the Oregon Center for Public Policy recommends a “no” vote on the measure.

Measure 118, also known as the Oregon People’s Rebate, would increase the state corporate minimum tax to 3% on business sales of more than $25 million in Oregon. The revenue raised from the measure would be distributed equally to all Oregon residents.

Although taxing large corporations to fund cash payments to families facing economic insecurity is sensible policy, Measure 118 comes with too many downsides.

Measure 118 would reduce available funding for schools and other essential services. If the measure were approved, some revenue from corporate taxes that currently funds education and other essential services would instead help pay for the cash rebates — including rebates for rich people. One of the more likely scenarios is that the Oregon General Fund — which pays for key services such as education, health and human services, and public safety — would lose more than $3.4 billion in the 2031-33 budget period.

Measure 118 would send rebates to people who don’t need them while making it harder to address existing crises. The measure would send rebate checks to everyone, including well-off people who don’t need it. The reality is that Oregon can only spend money it raises, so those limited dollars need to be spent on addressing the state’s most pressing needs, such as the lack of affordable housing, unaffordable child care, and the rising cost of higher education. Not only would a significant portion of Measure 118 go to people who do not need a rebate, but the proposal would make it more difficult to address pressing needs by foreclosing revenue-raising options and making it more difficult politically to raise revenue.

Measure 118 would likely result in vulnerable Oregonians losing public benefits while reducing the flow of federal dollars to Oregon. The federal government is likely to consider the state cash rebates created by the measure as taxable income, as well as income for determining eligibility for safety-net programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Thus, vulnerable Oregonians could lose partial or full access to such benefits. While the measure tries to anticipate this problem by providing “hold harmless” payments to make up the difference, the reality is that these payments would arrive well after families have lost their benefits and the ensuing financial harm. The “hold harmless” payments themselves could count as income for benefit determinations, potentially leading to a benefit-loss spiral. Finally, triggering the hold harmless provision would mean that a significant portion of the revenue raised by Measure 118 would simply go to fill the loss of federal dollars that would otherwise flow to Oregon — a loss caused by the measure itself.

While we agree that big corporations should pay more in taxes, and that giving cash rebates to vulnerable families is an effective way to improve economic security, Measure 118 would do more harm than good.


Alejandro Queral

Alejandro Queral is Executive Director of the Oregon Center for Public Policy

Angie Garcia
Angie Garcia is the Chair of the Board of Directors of the Oregon Center for Public Policy.

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

My Thoughts On The Remarks Made By Shawn Fain and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at the DNC

I found the remarks offered by UAW President Shawn Fain and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at the Democratic National Convention last night to be historic. That a militant union leader and a democratic socialist Congresswoman both addressed the convention and spoke one after the other signals a progressive shift in the Democratic Party and a change in our national political scene. Moreover, both support a ceasefire in Gaza, national healthcare, and a break with what gets called "neoliberalism." They were given enough time to make their cases, which they both did quite well, and their talks were scheduled close enough to the remarks made by Hillary Clinton and President Biden that listeners could not put Fain and Ocasio-Cortez in silos and forget about them or take the line that progressives and labor are being taken for granted at this point in the Democratic Party.

The lessons here are not that the Democratic Party gives us enough or is enough or that it can't move backward. What we're seeing is coalition politics and an exceptional level of unity against Trump and the far-right. So-called "Bidenomics" slowly and almost surreptitiously has begun to take us away from the worst aspects of globalization and neoliberalism, and the political expression of this philosophy has given the working-class in the United States the ability to make or win limited advances. I want to stress "limited" because progress has been uneven and has not gone deep enough or far enough and depends to some extent on a foreign policy and relations that risk world war, more famines, increasing global warming, and a deeper global and corporate fascist reaction. And---let's face it---some of the existing limits have been imposed by conservative and fascist forces here at home and through cave-ins by Sinema and Manchin and some others. 

I'm stressing "limited advances," but I also want to stress the potential in the current moment. If we can elect more pro-labor progressives in November, do much better at supporting progressive unions and union leadership at all levels, extend the unity and good vibes that many of us are feeling right now, build on the successes won under the Biden administration, make our movement younger and darker and women- and LGBTQIA+-led, and break the systemic drives to war, globalization, increasing exploitation we will be storming heaven, as the saying goes. And I do believe that we can do that.




Friday, August 16, 2024

From The Valley Labor Report: Is Tim Walz a Sign that Organized Labor's Political Influence is Growing?

I frequently repost videos from The Vallry Labor Report. I appreciate their great work, but I will say that when they dig in on an issue they stay dug in. With that in my mind I think this clip from them is significant and helpful because it goes a little closer to making progress on our need to win over people who are in the middle and then hold their support and attention:




And remember:
 


The United Mine Workers of America Endorses Senator Tim Kaine

Here are two videos for context: 









Thursday, August 15, 2024

The AFL-CIO Response to Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s anti-worker comments

August 13, 2024

AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler issued the following statement on Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s anti-worker comments during a Twitter/X Space conversation Monday night:

Last night, Donald Trump yet again made it crystal clear exactly who he is: a scab who will go to any lengths to crush working people.

Greedy bosses aren’t just laughing at workers in smoke-filled backrooms anymore. They’re broadcasting it for the world to hear. It’s no surprise coming from Trump and Elon Musk—two notorious union-busters who boast a combined record of crossing picket lines, underpaying workers, flouting health and safety laws, and retaliating against workers for demanding the rights and fair pay we deserve, with Musk even suing the National Labor Relations Board rather than being held accountable for charges he illegally fired workers. This special breed of arrogant and weird billionaire CEOs just want an America where they can get even richer at workers’ expense. No matter what script Trump reads, working people know that he doesn’t care about us and he has no intention of fighting for us. Trump only cares about his Project 2025 Agenda that favors his ultra-wealthy buddies like Musk while stomping on the fundamental freedoms of everyone else.

We applaud our union brothers, sisters and siblings at the UAW for filing federal labor charges against Trump and Musk for threatening and intimidating workers with the NLRB. That was illegal union-busting in real time, and they should be held accountable.

Last week, the AFL-CIO released our 2024 Executive Paywatch report, which found that the average S&P 500 CEO received 268 times what their average median worker earned last year. Elon Musk is the world’s richest CEO, and in 2024, Tesla’s shareholders voted to re-approve Musk’s $56 billion pay plan—the largest ever received by a CEO—which a Delaware court had struck down. Musk responded to the court decision on his pay package by reincorporating Tesla from Delaware to Texas.

Contact: Mia Jacobs, 202-637-5018

Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Karen Baker Shows A Hidden Truth Of Appalachia


Karen Baker is running for Congress as a Democrat in Virginia's 9th Congressional District. Her campaign is highlighting her having been a lawyer, judge, and nurse and her support for rural families. She also says on her Facebook page that "I am unequivocally Pro-Labor and I support the Pro-Act. Unions are historically, the culture hearth of America's middle class and can and should be again. " 

By anyone's measure Sister Baker has had a difficult working-class life, and she has struggled for all that she has achieved. She now has a multiracial and multigenerational coalition behind her that includes the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA). Sister Baker is an Associate Member of the UMWA.

The UMWA recently sponsored a "Unite The Ninth Union Rally" in Castlewood, VA.---Coal Country---and Sister Baker addressed the gathering and had a good time doing it. One union statement read "Baker’s background as an associate member of the UMWA and her involvement in advocacy work against the Moss 3 Landfill in Russell County demonstrates her deep connection to the coalfields region and her commitment to environmental and labor issues.”

There are indeed progressive voices in Appalachia and coalitions that unite diverse constituencies, inluding labor and working-class people. Don't let the Republicans fool you into believing otherwise. 

Photos from the United Mine Workers of America.

Tim Walz: Union Member!


For some context, please see this article by Edward Carver and this article by Jeffrey C. Isaac that recently appeared in Common Dreams.

Here is the Face the Nation clip with United Auto Workers union president Shawn Fain recorded before Vice President Harris named Governor Tim Walz as her running mate:


From Face the Nation: United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain said on Sunday that Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz are the union's top two picks for Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate — though he noted that the decision is hers to make."Those would be our top two if we had to pick any," Fain said on "Face the Nation" on Sunday. "That's who we believe would be best for labor and for working class people but you know, that's her decision."



Monday, August 5, 2024

Tax Fairness Oregon: Measure 118 is a hot mess!

A critical citizens’ initiative, Measure 118, will be on the ballot this November. If it passes it will dramatically change Oregon’s tax and spending policy. It would raise around $7 billion per year through a new gross receipts tax on corporations (that’s 50% more than the State’s current revenue from all taxes!) and devote it all plus some General Fund money to fund a one-of-a-kind rebate program to dole out payments to all residents who’ve lived here at least 200 days.

The proposed ballot measure is simple in concept and appeals to principles that Tax Fairness Oregon supports: increasing taxes on large businesses that have learned how to avoid paying taxes or hide their profits in tax shelters, and makings sure people have enough money to live with dignity. While the language of the measure was written by a group of folks in Eugene, funding for signature gathering and staff has been primarily financed by a California investor who supports a guaranteed minimum income and sees Oregon as a relatively inexpensive state in which to get a citizens’ initiative passed.

Unfortunately, we do not support the Measure as it was designed. Like most initiatives that are designed by a group without broad public discussion or legislative input, this attempt at funding a guaranteed minimum income is poorly drafted and fatally flawed.

This is an issue that will get a lot of attention in Oregon over the next four months. Let us know if you have questions. We encourage you to read not only our wonky set of talking points, but the measure itself and the State’s latest fiscal analysis (which will show you why we call Measure 118 a hot mess).

Tax Fairness Oregon
(503) 810-6654

Thursday, August 1, 2024

Project 2025 and Labor -- The Plan to Destroy Worker Power


The introduction to this podcast includes the following:

In this blogcast, Burnes Center for Social Change Senior Fellow Seth Harris is joined by Jody Calemine, director of advocacy at the AFL-CIO, and Karla Walter, director of the American Worker Project at the Center for American Progress, to discuss Project 2025's labor proposals. Watch now to hear about how the proposal would affect American workers, unions, and the labor movement if President Trump is re-elected in 2024. For more information on Project 2025, visit the AFL-CIO's guide to Project 2025 and Unions and the Center for American Progress' article, written by Aurelia Glass, "Project 2025 Would Undo the NLRB's Progress on Protecting Workers Right to Organize."

Labor for Harris Organizing Call and Five Related Video Clips


This is a recording of the August 1 Labor for Harris call that was sponsored by the AFL-CIO. Some of the powerhouses within the mainstream labor movement appear on this video. I believe that the most compelling speakers in this video---Teila Allmond, the rank-and-file member of UNITE HERE! who speaks, Fred Redmond, Claude Cummings, Jr., Clayola Brown, Lee Saunders, and Tryshanda Moton (my favorite of all of the speakers)---are coming to this from a place of of reflecting on their experiences as rank-and-file union members and with their ears to ground so that they are hearing what we are saying and what our concerns are.

It's clear from the video above that there is lots of work to get done quickly and that there is a place for everyone on board. It's also clear that Vice President Harris and her campaign needs to build her resume a little more with labor, remind us of what she has already done for us and with us, and that the pick for her running mate will be important to the union rank-and-file. Please see the videos below for some context. The clip from the Philadelphia Building Trades below signals a strong step forward.  



Vice-President Harris and Marty Walsh from 2021




Vice-President Harris with women labor leaders in 2021


The Phhiladelphia Building Trades announce their endorsement of Harris for President.

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

A Grassroots Slate Is Running For Four City Council Seats In Corvallis

Four young organizers are running for City Council seats in Corvallis. Their stated priorities are as follows:

Climate Crisis & Community Resilience – We are committed to meaningful and immediate action to address the climate emergency and build sustainable communities. We understand the urgency of climate action and the importance of preparing our city for current and future challenges.

Safe & Affordable Housing – Fight for affordability, livability, and tenants rights.

Housing Justice – Humane and supportive treatment of our unhoused neighbors.

Transparency & Public Input – Accountable leadership and clear communication.Safe Streets – Prioritize safety over speed, and recognize that streets are for pedestrians, bikes, and transit, not just motor vehicles.

I am not aware of the four candidates having picked up any labor endorsements yet, but their website says that they are "an alliance of young organizers working to build a resilient, livable future. We come from backgrounds in climate, housing, labor, and tenant organizing, and we are ready to take our passion and commitment to the Corvallis City Council, where we will fight for the issues that are important to you."

Two of the candidates--Beckett Hunt and Alison Bowden--are union members. Information on the candidates can be found here.

I do want to encourage our readers in Corvallis to contact the candidates and to support union mermbers when they run for office on progressive platforms. I'm looking forward to carrying more information from the four candidates on this blog.

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

NEA endorses Kamala Harris for president

The following communication has been sent out by the National Education Association. The American Federation of Government Employees has also sent out a mass communication supporting Harris in recent days.

NEA endorses Kamala Harris for president

Before turning to the latest in Congress, a brief word about the presidential race. NEA’s PAC Council and Board of Directors last week endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to be the next president! Read President Pringle’s statement about the endorsement, as well as her comments following President Biden’s announcement that he would not seek another term.

Meanwhile, members of Congress are eager to be home and not in Washington, DC. House GOP leadership announced last week a change in schedule, canceling votes for the upcoming week and putting the House in recess until September 9. Part of this was also due to the majority’s inability to secure enough votes to advance funding bills, including the education appropriations bill that contains extreme cuts as noted in this space last week. Thank you for your quick advocacy to push back on those cuts. Let’s keep it going in August (see alert below), as Congress will need to come together for at least a short-term funding agreement before the end of the fiscal year on September 30.

We also continue to press for action on full repeal of the GPO-WEP Social Security penalties, with passage of the Social Security Fairness Act (HR 82 / S 597). With a record number now of co-sponsors in both the House and the Senate, it’s time for a vote. Take a minute to send a new message to Congress in support of a “discharge petition”, a parliamentary move in the House to force a vote on the bill.

In solidarity,







Marc Egan


A Fresh Assessment by Chuck Wynns

A couple of weeks ago, I posted a commentary on the upcoming November election. The post was written out of a siege mentality, little hope, and an assessment that the working class has little to gain in the November election, but a lot to lose; nothing more. The MAGA Trump campaign seemed unstoppable. People who were not MAGA/Trump were in despair; far too many conversations about leaving for Canada or Mexico. Among those who were fighting back against MAGA, there was a grim determination to fight this campaign to the end, all with a background sense that this will probably be a failed fight.

What a difference a week makes!

With Biden out and Kamala Harris very likely to receive the Democratic nomination for President, the whole outlook of the Democratic base changed. In a week, an overflow of Democratic enthusiasm! In the space of a week, it dawned on millions of Democratic voters, the labor movement, civil rights activists, communities of poor and oppressed people that indeed, winning is very possible!

Enthusiasm is a wonderful thing! With enthusiasm and a sense of winning, the focus immediately turns to what we want to win. Civil rights and the possibility of a world without police violence and civil oppression are back on the table again. The right to vote is back on the table again. Women’s right to control their own bodies as a guaranteed right is back on the table again.

Shawn Fain of the UAW was interviewed on MSNBC a day ago (see that post below), and he spoke of the UAW’s four objectives; a living wage (more than a surviving wage), healthcare, a retirement system that makes retired life comfortable and worth living, And let’s not forget a life for working people that includes more than the right to work 12 hour days, seven days a week just to survive (remember “8 hours work, 8 hours rest, 8 hours for the thing we love best?”). Climate change is back on the table too, And I applaud Joe Biden’s announcement of Supreme Court reforms and term limits on Supreme Court Justices.

It seems right now that the overflow I was talking about is going hand in hand with an overflow of democratic possibilities and the possibility of a government that actually works for people and not for the billionaire class. And all that in just a week!

So I leave my gloom in the dust and let’s win this election!

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

AFL-CIO endorses Kamala Harris for president

The following post is a summary issued by the Metro Washington Council, AFL-CIO:

Following a vote of its Executive Council, the AFL-CIO on Tuesday unanimously endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for president in the 2024 election.

“From day one, Vice President Kamala Harris has been a true partner in leading the most pro-labor administration in history,” AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler said in a statement. “At every step in her distinguished career in public office, she’s proven herself a principled and tenacious fighter for working people and a visionary leader we can count on."

In addition, many of the international unions of Metropolitan Washington Council's Affiliates have also endorsed Harris, including AFGE, AFSCME, AFT, APWU, ATU, CWA, IATSE, IBEW, IFPTE, IUPAT, NNU, and SEIU.

The AFL-CIO press release reads as follows:

July 22, 2024

WASHINGTON—Following a vote of its Executive Council, which represents 60 unions and 12.5 million workers, today the AFL-CIO unanimously endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for president in the 2024 election.

“From day one, Vice President Kamala Harris has been a true partner in leading the most pro-labor administration in history,” said AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. “At every step in her distinguished career in public office, she’s proven herself a principled and tenacious fighter for working people and a visionary leader we can count on. From taking on Wall Street and corporate greed to leading efforts to expand affordable child care and support vulnerable workers, she’s shown time and again that she’s on our side. With Kamala Harris in the White House, together we’ll continue to build on the powerful legacy of the Biden-Harris administration to create good union jobs, grow the labor movement and make our economy work for all of us.”

As vice president, Harris: Played a critical role in rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure, investing in good-paying union jobs, bringing manufacturing back to America, lowering prescription drug costs and raising wages

Saved the pensions of more than 1 million union workers and retirees

Led the administration’s efforts to increase access to affordable child care and expand the child tax credit

Championed worker organizing and chaired the White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment, where she championed for new worker organizing and training to create pathways to good union jobs

Stood with striking writers

Other highlights of Harris’ record in support of workers include the following:As a U.S. senator, she fought to expand labor protections and fair wages for agricultural and domestic workers and walked the picket line with International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) workers. She was a vigorous advocate for workers’ freedom to form or join a union, including strongly supporting the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act to reform broken labor legislation that stacks the deck against workers.

As attorney general of California, she cracked down on corporate greed, took on the big banks after the 2008 financial crisis to deliver relief for struggling homeowners and protected the most vulnerable workers by tackling wage theft and other corporate crimes.

“The AFL-CIO is proud of our early and steadfast support for the Biden-Harris administration, and now we’ll ratchet up our mass mobilization of union workers to elect Vice President Harris as president,” Shuler continued. “Like Harris, the labor movement doesn’t back down—and we’ll never shy away from a tough fight when the future of workers and unions is on the line. Together, we will defeat Donald Trump, J.D. Vance and their devastating anti-worker Project 2025 agenda in November.”

Contact: Steve Smith, 202-637-5018

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Teamsters President Sean O'Brien speaks at Republican National Convention |



Additional coverage is here:

The Young Turks:


Coverage and commentary from Politico is here.


Coverage and commentary from People's World is here.

The Guardian's coverage is here.

Valley Labor Report ran this and this. Both are good for context.

Real News Network has posted this and this.


 

Friday, June 7, 2024

Two Interesting Books For Union Members---And One Of Them Is Free!

 


The International Workers Institute (IWI) https://www.theoryandpraxis.eu/ has issued a new biographical book by George Mavrikos, the Honorary President of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU).

The Wikipedia entry on George Mavrikos opens with the following:

George Mavrikos (born 1950) is the General Secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) in Athens, Greece. He is a leading member of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE), and former member of Greek parliament. He is largely credited for having led the successful efforts to halt the decline of the World Federation of Trade Unions since the fall of the Soviet Union. Since his election as general secretary during the congress in Havana in 2005, the World Federation of Trade Unions has seen an increase in its number of affiliates and has successfully managed to recruit several trade union of importances in Western Europe.

The publisher's advertisement for the book states the following:

Author George Mavrikos draws from his extensive experience as General Secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) as well as his involvement in Greek trade unions, highlighting critical WFTU Congresses while shedding light on the ideological currents and political contexts that shaped the organization’s trajectory.

Mavrikos delves into his personal journey, from his upbringing in Greece to his various roles in trade unions, the Greek parliament, and his leadership within WFTU. He emphasizes the continuous struggle to create and defend the WFTU in the post-World War II era, amid the shifting international relations and the emergence of competing international trade union organizations. Mavrikos also addresses the contemporary challenges faced by trade unions, including the re-packaging of reformist arguments and the persistence of political corruption within certain trade union organizations, contrasting WFTU’s commitment to decolonization and opposition to imperialism.

The book can be ordered here.




Linda Burnham, Max Elbaum and María Poblet have edited the book Power Concedes Nothing and have made it available as a PDF that is downloadable for free.

An announcement from the editors says

The high-stakes 2024 election is already underway.

Organizing in Latin American-descendant communities, cross-racial alliance building, and tapping the energy of working-class constituencies has never been more urgent.

A new resource full of strategies and practical lessons in taking on those challenges is now available: A Spanish language Edition of key chapters from the 2022 book Power Concedes Nothing: How Grassroots Organizing Wins Elections. This collection is available as a downloadable PDF free of charge from Convergence Magazine here.

Power Concedes Nothing tells the stories behind the 2020 victory that won both the White House and the Senate and powered progressive candidates to new levels of influence. It describes the on-the-ground efforts that mobilized a record-breaking turnout by registering new voters and motivating an electorate both old and new.

Some of the most salient lessons of organizing successes and challenges emerged from Latinx communities. For this Spanish edition of Power Concedes Nothing we have selected chapters that illustrate how long-term commitments to organizing for workers’ rights and the safety and well-being of Latinx communities can also serve as springboards for robust voter engagement strategies.

Contributors include: Cliff Albright, Linda Burnham, Max Elbaum, César Fierros Mendoza, Stephanie Greenlea, Beth Howard, Andrea Cristina Mercado, Rafael Návar, Adelina Nicholls, María Poblet, Ai-jen Poo, Marcy Rein, Nsé Ufot, Diana Valles, Mario Yedidia.


An earlier announcement regarding this book said


The November 2020 US election was arguably the most consequential since the 1860 election of Abraham Lincoln—and grassroots leaders and organizers played crucial roles in the contention for the presidency and control of both houses of Congress. Power Concedes Nothing recounts these on-the-ground efforts that mobilized a record voter turnout in 2020.



Camarada,

Las elecciones de 2024, de gran importancia, ya están en marcha.

Organizar en comunidades de descendientes de latinoamericanos, construir alianzas interraciales y movilizar la energía de los electores de la clase trabajadora nunca ha sido más urgente.

Ya está disponible un nuevo recurso lleno de estrategias y lecciones prácticas para afrontar esos desafíos: una edición en español de capítulos clave del libro de 2022 El poder no concede nada: cómo la organización de base gana elecciones. Esta colección está disponible como PDF descargable de forma gratuita en Convergence Magazine aquí.

El Poder no concede nada cuenta las historias detrás de una victoria que ganó tanto la Casa Blanca como el Senado y propulsó a candidaturas progresistas hasta nuevos niveles de influencia. Describe los esfuerzos en la práctica que movilizaron una participación electoral récord al inscribir a nueves votantes y motivaron a un electorado tanto mayor como joven.

Algunas de las lecciones más notables de los éxitos y desafíos del trabajo organizativo surgieron de las comunidades latinas. Para esta edición en español de El poder no concede nada, hemos seleccionado capítulos que ilustran cómo los compromisos a largo plazo para hacer trabajo organizativo a favor de los derechos de la clase trabajadora y la seguridad y bienestar de las comunidades latinas pueden servir como trampolines para robustas estrategias de participación electoral.

Les contribuidores incluyen: Cliff Albright, Linda Burnham, Max Elbaum, César Fierros Mendoza, Stephanie Greenlea, Beth Howard, Andrea Cristina Mercado, Rafael Návar, Adelina Nicholls, María Poblet, Ai-jen Poo, Marcy Rein, Nsé Ufot, Diana Valles, Mario Yedidia.

Saludos Solidarios,
Linda Burnham
Max Elbaum
María Poblet
Editores de El Poder no concede nada


Thursday, May 16, 2024

Three Upcoming Oregon AFL-CIO Get Out The Vote Events

From the Oregon AFL-CIO:

Labor 2024 Events

Canvass for Phil Chang for Deschutes County Commissioner and Anthony Broadman for State Senate
Saturday May 18, 2024 at 10:00AM to 1:00PM | Meet at SEIU 503 Bend Office in Bend.
Join Oregon Labor at a canvass for Phil Chang for Deschutes County Commissioner and Anthony Broadman for State Senate. Coffee, lunch and training provided. Sign up to volunteer.


Get Out the Vote Canvass with Willy Chotzen for HD 46 and Dan Rayfield for Attorney General
Saturday May 19, 2024 at 10:00AM to 1:00PM | Meet at the Oregon Labor Center in Portland
Join Oregon Labor at a canvass for Willy Chotzen for State Representative in HD 46 and Dan Rayfield for Attorney General. Coffee, lunch and training provided. Willy Chotzen and Dan Rayfield will be there to kick off the event!
Sign up to volunteer.


Get Out the Vote!

Monday May 20, 2024 and Tuesday May 21, 2024 | Meet at the Oregon Labor Center in Portland
Volunteer to knock on doors and make calls for a last push to get out the vote before the May 21st 8PM voting deadline. Sign up to get a phone list or stop by the Oregon Labor Center to grab a turf on Monday anytime between 11 and 5 or Tuesday between 11 and 4. Sign up to volunteer.