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Ten National Unions Call for Anti-Trump Resistance

Ten national unions and dozens of locals representing more than 3 million members have issued a joint statement demanding the release of immigrant workers recently snatched by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (You can add your name below)

Members of various unions rallied in protest March 27 outside the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, Washington, where farmworker organizer Lelo Juarez and SEIU member Lewelyn Davis are being held.,Credit: The Stand // Labor Notes

The statement names farmworker union leader Alfredo “Lelo” Juarez, who was picked up in what appears to be blatant retaliation for his organizing; SEIU Local 925 member Lewelyn Dixon, a University of Washington lab technician detained on her way home from visiting family; SEIU Local 509 member Rumeysa Ozturk, a graduate student whose detention by federal agents was captured in chilling footage; sheet metal worker Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a SMART Local 100 apprentice who was sent to El Salvador’s notorious prison complex; and United Auto Workers Local 2710 member Mahmoud Khalil, abducted by federal agents in front of his eight-months-pregnant wife.

The unions are also calling on employers, university administrators, and local governments to refuse to cooperate—and demanding that elected officials “find their spines.”
 

Trump is reprising tactics from other times in U.S. history when “the government was actively suppressing protest and dissent,” said Carl Rosen, president of the United Electrical Workers (UE).

In the Palmer Raids of 1919-1920, immigrant leftists and labor agitators were arrested and deported, mainly to Italy and Eastern Europe. In the McCarthy era of the late 1940s and ’50s, federal workers, Hollywood workers, academics, and labor leaders alleged to be communists were fired, blacklisted, hauled before Congress, and sometimes jailed.

“When a segment of the population is first targeted, it’s not going to stop there,” said Rosen. “Eventually it’s going to be used against the labor movement and any Americans who want to stand up for justice. So we were happy to join together with other unions in saying, ‘We are going to resist this.’”

PRELUDE TO ACTION?

Faced with Trump’s dizzying array of assaults on labor, immigrant workers, campus workers, and free speech, till now the organized working class, representing 14 million union members, has largely stayed quiet or focused on each union’s individual fights.

This joint declaration could be a prelude to more coordinated and direct action to resist the attacks.

“Hopefully this is a sign of, maybe if there were past issues with unions or organizations that maybe had differences, this could be the thing that brings everybody together, uniting for one cause,” said Edgar Franks, political director of independent farmworker union Familias Unidas por la Justicia, where Lelo Juarez is a leader. “Relationships will be established or amended, and from there we can have a united, fighting labor front.”

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“Right now, there are a lot of people doing a lot of good work to try to organize,” said Faye Guenther, president of Food and Commercial Workers Local 3000 in Washington, one of the initiators of the joint letter. “I think that we will be better served if we can set aside as many differences as we can and pull together in as broad of a table as possible.”

FIND CORPORATE TARGETS

For labor to face down these attacks, our movements will need to be prepared to disrupt business as usual. “Clearly, Tesla has struck a nerve,” Rosen said, referring to regular protests at dealerships around the country, which have helped send the company’s stock into a tailspin; Tesla’s mega-billionaire CEO Elon Musk is spearheading the attacks on federal workers.

“I think we need to be finding additional corporate targets,” Rosen said. “There are a lot of big businesses who are profiting off of their association with Donald Trump and their willingness to assist him in carrying out his agenda.”

He harks back to the explosive public reaction in 2008 when UE Local 1110 members in Chicago took a brave step: they occupied their factory. Republic Windows and Doors was shutting down, but on the last day of shifts, workers refused to leave. They held a sitdown strike until they reached a $1.75 million deal for severance and other benefits owed, and eventually they reopened the factory as a worker-run cooperative.

“It caught the attention of people across the country who were so angry about the banks getting all of this money while workers were getting laid off,” Rosen said. Supporters picketed Bank of America locations and even committed civil disobedience by holding sit-ins inside bank branches. “The amount of pressure that put on the bank was definitely very important in helping make sure that the workers won the settlement that they did.”

TALK IT UP

“The next step in this fightback requires us talking to our co-workers and neighbors about how the employers and billionaires benefit when workers are divided and afraid,” said Stephanie Luce, labor studies and sociology professor at the City University of New York and a member of the Teachers (AFT).

“We should look for spaces to have more conversations and get workers ready to take bigger actions,” she said, “because the attacks will keep coming.” She said unions are working together to build large actions on May 1 (find information at maydaystrong.org) and also recommended Labor Notes’ “Tactics to Build Power” training.

Unless members get involved, a resolution is just a piece of paper. “The petition is a tool that we need to use to unify people, but it will do us no good if the only people that sign onto it are organizations,” said Guenther. “Workers need to be in these deep conversations about what kind of world they want to have and what kind of country they want to live in.”

But Trump’s attacks have also made the case on the public stage for why workers need an institution that defends their rights: “A lot of people, not even just in the farmworker sector, have been reaching out to us about how to unionize,” said Franks. So have federal workers: AFGE reports record numbers joining.

“Strongmen and dictators feed on peoples’ fear and chaos,” Guenther said. “We have to take actions where we can show that we can win and that help overcome people’s fear.”

Unions can sign on to the petition here .

[Natascha Elena Uhlmann is a staff writer at Labor Notes.natascha@labornotes.org ]

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Labor Demands an End to the Assault on the Right to Organize and Protest

The labor movement holds one value above all others: solidarity. Labor demands an end to the Trump administration’s assaults on immigrant workers, freedom of speech, the right to organize and bargain, and federal government workers, their unions, and the services they provide.

We will not stand by as President Donald Trump terrorizes immigrant workers with abduction, detention, and confinement without due process in unmarked facilities, far-flung detention centers, and a notorious prison in El Salvador.

The attacks are ramping up, and we need to act fast. In Washington state, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents smashed a car window and detained farmworker Alfredo “Lelo” Juarez, a leader in the berry-pickers union Familias Unidas por la Justicia, on his way to drop off his partner at work. They locked up SEIU Local 925 member Lewelyn Dixon, a lab tech at the University of Washington, when she returned from a family trip. They raided a roofing company where workers recently went on a safety strike, and arrested 37 people.

In Massachusetts, federal immigration agents snatched Rumeysa Ozturk, a graduate student at Tufts University on a student visa and an SEIU Local 509 member, on her way to break her Ramadan fast. She had written an op-ed in the student newspaper in support of Palestine. 

In Baltimore, they arrested sheet metal worker Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a SMART Local 100 apprentice and father of a disabled child, and sent him to El Salvador’s nightmarish prison—then they called it an “administrative error” and said they could not get him back.

In New York, they abducted Mahmoud Khalil, a recent Columbia University graduate and United Auto Workers Local 2710 member, for protesting Israel’s assault on Gaza. They have also taken many others whose names aren’t public yet. 

This administration attacked these members of our communities on their way to work, on their way to worship, on their way home. They locked them up after speaking their minds. And they did that on purpose.

They have also threatened and intimidated university administrations in an effort to enlist them in suppressing dissent. Sadly, many have acquiesced to these demands, making a mockery of the concept of “academic freedom” and the free exchange of ideas. Students have been suspended and expelled. Faculty members have been disciplined and discharged.

Further, the mass firings of federal workers and the attempt to abolish their collective bargaining rights are attacks also on the services they provide and the very function of our government. Trump wants a government that only serves the interests of corporations and oligarchs. Rather than a government of, by, and for the people, he would create one by and for the privileged rich. He wants to create a culture of fear. 

We must not bow to any of it. 

  • We call on the Trump administration to immediately release our fellow workers and stop this campaign of terror.
  • We call on all employers and state and local governments to refuse to collaborate with these attacks, and to do everything they can to resist.
  • We call on university administrations to stand up to the threats and coercion, and to refuse any cooperation with federal immigration and law enforcement authorities seeking to unlawfully persecute foreign students and faculty and student dissenters.
  • We call on all elected officials to find their spines and stand up for these workers.
  • We call on all unions to organize rallies, demonstrations, and other actions to demand that the administration stop these attacks and free our fellow workers. The labor movement must act to stop Trump's deportation, censorship, and intimidation machine.When necessary, we must disrupt business as usual. 

We must not be passive or silent in the face of this authoritarian assault on our rights, the Constitution, and democracy itself. An injury to one is an injury to all!

Please sign this call and add your name
to a growing list standing up to Trump’s campaign of terror.

Click here to add your name or your organization's name