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The role of Latinos in a new left




http://www.commondreams.org/views/040300-104.htm
Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community

Published on Monday, April 3, 2000 in the Manchester (UK) Guardian

An Emerging Latino-Led Radicalism In The US
by Duncan Campbell

Several thousand of the mainly Latino men and women who clean the most
valuable properties in the United States are threatening to walk off the
job in Los Angeles today. Their action comes as politicians hurry to pass
legislation that would honour Cesar Chavez, the late labour leader
described as the Latino Martin Luther King, with a state holiday.

The strike and the holiday are both signs of an emerging Latino-led
radicalism in the US. A book to be published in May suggests that such
moves could redraw the political map of the country.

The planned strike by 8,500 caretakers in Los Angeles is the latest sign of
the power of Latino-dominated unions covering those who carry out many of
the lowest paid and dirtiest jobs in the US.

Ten years ago, the Justice for Janitors campaign first drew attention to
the pay and conditions of the people who cleaned the toilets of corporate
America. Since then the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) has
been trying to fight the corner for these workers.

The Los Angeles strike is the first of several planned actions this month
in Chicago, New York, Portland and San Diego.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of mainly Latino activists were yesterday
celebrating the birthday of Cesar Chavez, who as the United Farm Workers
leader helped to organise immigrant fruit-pickers in the 60s and 70s. The
movement gained support well beyond its California core, with western
boycotts of non-union produce.

Chavez, a modest man who asked not to be proposed for a Nobel Peace Prize,
died in 1993. Though vilified by the authorities in his lifetime as a
left-wing agitator, he has folk hero status in the Latino community, making
politicians anxious to pay homage with a bill proposing an official holiday
in his name. California's state assemly votes on the bill this month. There
is also pressure for his life story to become part of the official
curriculum in schools. "The long history of political marginality is
finally coming to an end," writes Mike Davis in his new book Magical
Urbanism: Latinos Reinvent the US City. "Latinos, all political pundits
agree, are the sleeping dragon of US politics."

Mr Davis, who is best known for his acclaimed history of Los Angeles, City
of Quartz, said yesterday that politicians were now aware that they had to
court the Latino vote because of this community's growing numbers. The
Spanish-surname population in the US is increasing by 1m annually- 10 times
faster than the Anglo population. In Texas, where the Republicans'
presidential hopeful, George W Bush, is governor, one in five voters this
year will be Latino.

In 1997, 235,000 Mexican immigrants became US citizens, smashing the
previous record of one-nation immigration held by the Italians in 1944.

Mr Davis argues that many immigrants from south of the Mexican border "as
well as transporting their local saints and madonnas northward have also
transplanted their traditional village governments en bloc to specific
inner-city Catholic parishes".

He adds: "What is most striking is the cultural unity and blue-collar
solidity of Mexican Los Angeles. The Anglo conquest of California in the
late 1840s has proven to be a very transient fact indeed."

The growth of the radical movement has been hidden from much of mainstream
America, argues Davis.

"When more than 75,000 young Latinos, protesting anti-immigrant Proposition
187 [which banned children of undocumented immigrants from attending school
and excluded them from health care benefits] marched out of their high
schools throughout California in 1994 - the largest student protest in that
state's history - it was virtually ignored by the media networks, although
a comparable uprising by black or white students would have become a
national sensation."

Mr Davis believes that chambers of commerce now recognise that they have to
negotiate with the low-paid workers as "union activists have hammered home
the message that labour militancy is the only viable moral alternative to
poverty-driven explosions of rage" in the form of riots.

Speaking from New York, where he now lives, Mr Davis suggested that the
energy of the new Latino activists has also allowed them to take control of
previously conservative, white labour federations. These unions can no
longer afford to be exclusive white bastions, because their memberships are
falling.

© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2000


Louis Proyect

(The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)





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