Coalition sets demonstrations for Democratic National Convention
By Ben Carroll
Charlotte, N.C.
Jan 26, 2012
When the Democratic National Convention meets in Charlotte, N.C., in
September, there will be thousands of people from across the country in the
streets to raise demands for jobs and justice on the world stage.
That’s what the Coalition to Protest at the DNC announced at its first
press conference Jan. 19, held outside the Time Warner Cable Arena in
Charlotte, where the convention will be held Sept. 3-6. More than three dozen
labor, anti-war, civil rights, anti-foreclosure, immigrants rights, student and
youth organizations, and many prominent activists from across North Carolina,
the South and the U.S. have joined together to initiate this coalition.
They are united behind demands for “Good jobs for all! Economic
justice now – make the banks and corporations pay for their
crisis!” “Money for education, health care, housing and all human
needs, not for war and incarceration!” and “Justice for immigrants
and all oppressed peoples! Stop the raids and deportations!”
At the press conference, held during the week commemorating Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., representatives from many organizations explained why they
will be demonstrating.
“We’re here to demand an end to the war on Black people, here
and in Africa — from police brutality and mass incarceration, to AFRICOM
[the United States Africa Command] and proxy wars across the African
continent,” said Efia Nwangaza, founder and director of the Malcolm X
Center for Self-Determination.
Nwangaza continued, slamming the Democratic Party for their “silence
on the depression-level, African-American unemployment,” for taking no
action to stop racist predatory lending and home foreclosures, and for the
continued imprisonment of political prisoners.
Wall Street of the South
Coalition organizers call Charlotte “the Wall Street of the
South.” With the world headquarters of Bank of America and the eastern
headquarters of Wells Fargo, it has the second largest concentration of finance
capital in the U.S., behind New York City. Both banks are notorious for
foreclosing homes, holding huge amounts of student loans, bankrolling the
prison-industrial complex, and funding environmental destruction, among many
other crimes against our communities.
North Carolina is also the least unionized state in the U.S., with a Jim
Crow-era law still on the books that bans public workers from collectively
bargaining. Virginia is the only other state with this ban. In both cases,
Democrats enacted the bans and have done nothing about them since.
Donna Dewitt, president of the South Carolina AFL-CIO, raised that city
workers in Charlotte have been fighting for years just to win the basic right
of dues deduction. Dewitt spoke about why workers should be mobilizing to
protest at the DNC.
“Located in the Deep South of historical struggles for civil, worker,
immigrant and human rights, North Carolina, like other Southern states,
continues the competition to underbid other Southern states to attract
corporations that locate to the South for lower wages and exploitation of
workers. … Elected officials of both major parties have followed the
practices of the corporate world in their bid to protect the rich and deny the
working families of our country.”
Concluding the press conference, Ana Maria Reichenbach, with the University
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill chapter of Students for a Democratic Society,
gave a spirited talk calling on young people to come to Charlotte this
September. “Working-class youth of this country find our prospects of
attending higher education diminished as tuition continues to rise. We’re
forced to go deeper into debt with student loans.
“Unemployment rates are soaring and those jobs available fail to
provide us with living wages. … We are rising up because we have the
right to a dignified life and because we refuse to be a lost generation of
jobless, uneducated people. We are rising up because this two-party system has
failed to meet our needs.”
Following the example of other cities that have hosted political
conventions, Charlotte is preparing to pass restrictive new ordinances
regulating demonstrations. They have denied every request by the Coalition to
Protest at the DNC for permits to march, and have told organizers that the DNC
has reserved every park in the city the weeks prior to, during and after the
convention. Coalition organizers have vowed to fight the city for the right to
protest during the DNC.
Organizations including Occupy movements across the country are already
planning to mobilize to be in the streets of Charlotte during the DNC. For more
information on the Coalition to Protest at the DNC and to find out how your
organization can join, visit protestdnc.org.