‘We Won’t Be Silent or Unseen Anymore’: Poor People’s Campaign to Lead DC Assembly
The Poor People’s Campaign plans to hold a “generationally transformative and disruptive gathering of poor and low-wealth people, state leaders, faith communities, moral allies, unions, and partnering organizations” in the U.S. capital on Saturday, June 18.
The Mass Poor People’s and Low-Wage Workers’ Assembly and Moral March on Washington is scheduled to begin at 9:30 am local time. The campaign has put together an online FAQ page for participants.
Contrasting the planned event with a right-wing mob’s attack on the U.S. Capitol last year, Bishop William Barber, the campaign’s co-chair, said on Democracy Now! Friday that poor people and allies from across the country “are coming nonviolently to Washington, D.C.”
Their key messages for those in power, Barber said, include: “We won’t be silent or unseen anymore.”
“The time has come for us to have a Third Reconstruction,” Barber continued. “We had one in the 1800s, one in the 1960s. We need one now, that’s about policy, reconstructing a moral framework, political framework in this country, because to have this level of poverty, that’s un-talked-about too often and unseen and unheard, is actually morally indefensible, constitutionally inconsistent, politically insensitive, and economically insane.”
“So people are coming,” he said, “but poor people are coming to say not only do we need a moral reset—and low-wage workers are saying it—we represent 32% of the electorate now, poor people do, and 45% of the electorate in battleground states. And it’s time for that power to be organized, mobilized, and felt in every election throughout this country.”
Discussing the June 18 gathering and related events preceding it, Barber emphasized earlier this year that the D.C. assembly “is not just a day of action,” but a “declaration of an ongoing, committed, nonviolent, truth-telling, multiracial, interfaith moral movement.”
An organizing manual for Saturday’s event also notes the connections and declares that “we must do more to make America live up to her possibilities.” Specifically, the document calls for doing more:
- to fully address the interlocking injustices of systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation and the denial of healthcare, militarism and the false narrative of Christian nationalism;
- to change the narrative and build the power of those most impacted by these injustices; and
- to realize a Third Reconstruction agenda that can build this country from the bottom up and realize the nation we have yet to be.
Lamenting that “corporations are treated like people and people are treated like things,” Barber asked, “Why don’t poor people get meetings in the Oval Office instead of corporations?”
“It is time for the president to act on his pre-election promise to address poverty,” he said, noting that “labor unions are joining our call to the president to use his power to lift the voices of impacted people and to act now.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jessica Corbett.