Poor People’s Campaign Demands Meeting With Biden as Millions Face Rising Costs, Stagnant Wages
Low-wage workers, union presidents, and progressive faith leaders on Monday urged President Joe Biden to meet with a handful of the millions of Americans living in poverty before the Poor People’s Campaign rallies in Washington, D.C. on June 18 to demand an economy and democracy that works for everyone, not just the wealthy few.
At the upcoming Mass Poor People’s and Low-Wage Workers’ Assembly and March on Washington and to the Polls, activists from around the United States plan to highlight “the urgent need to prioritize the 140 million poor and low-income people in our laws, policies, systems, and structures, so that we may heal this nation from the interlocking injustices of systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation, the denial of healthcare, militarism, and the war economy, and the false narrative of Christian nationalism.”
That’s how Bishop William J. Barber II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, co-chairs of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, recently put it in a letter asking Biden to listen to a delegation of poor and low-income people explain why prioritizing their interests is key to improving the nation’s economic well-being.
Amid reports that Biden plans to hit the road in the coming weeks to tout steps that his struggling administration is taking to address cascading challenges, economic justice advocates on Monday reiterated the campaign’s call for the president to hear directly from some of the low-wage workers from around the country who are preparing to demonstrate in D.C. in less than two weeks.
Speaking from the nation’s capital, Barber lamented how “corporations are treated like people and people are treated like things.”
David Williams, a low-wage worker at Dollar General and member of Step Up Louisiana, made similar points. So did Beth Schaffer, a low-wage worker and supporter of Fight for $15 in South Carolina. Even after working 62 hours per week at KFC and a gas station, Schaffer still struggles to pay rent and take care of her elderly father because her wages are so low.
The federal hourly wage floor of $7.25, which hasn’t been increased by Congress since 2009, is “sentencing us to poverty,” said Schaffer. “A lot of people work full-time and still end up homeless in this country.”
“The widespread worker-led actions we are witnessing in America today are alarm bells that should force the nation to pay attention to the economic emergency that includes everything from the lack of a federally mandated living wage to the devastating impact of Covid on poor and low-wealth communities,” said Barber.
“It is time for the president to act on his pre-election promise to address poverty,” he added. “More jobs alone, with a $7.25 per hour federal minimum wage, equal more poverty. This is why labor unions are joining our call to the president to use his power to lift the voices of impacted people and to act now.”
Theoharis, for her part, pointed out that the refusal of right-wing Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.) and Senate Republicans to extend the expanded Child Tax Credit has worsened hunger for millions of U.S. families.
“War and militarism remain enemies of the poor,” she said, “both here in the United States and across the world.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Kenny Stancil.