Show Pennsylvania’s
Support for the Fightback!
From Steffi Domike, USW
Dear Pennsylvania USW Friends and Associates:
The billionaire backed Governor of Wisconsin, Scott Walker, has declared all-out war on workers’ freedoms. He’s slashing taxes for the richest residents of his state, and wants to eliminate the rights of workers to organize a union, bargain for fair wages or advocate for decent pay and benefits.
In response, more than 25,000 protesters have converged on the state house in Madison to stage a sit-in that blocks the halls, bars the doors of the Senate and fills the state house lawn with tens of thousand of workers. They’re fighting for their livelihoods and they’re fighting for ours as well because if workers lose in Wisconsin, the wave to take away our job rights and wages will spread across the country.
Pennsylvania is joining the Fight Back!
PLEASE JOIN US as we rally in support of American working families and the American Dream.
Today, Wednesday, 2/23, Pennsylvanians will be standing up in solidarity with Wisconsin workers in SCRANTON
WHAT: Solidarity Rally for Wisconsin Workers
WHEN: 12:00 Noon to 12:30, Today, Wednesday, 2/23
WHERE: Labor Leader John Mitchell Statue, Lackawanna Courthouse (Adams Avenue Side) Scranton, PA
On Thursday, 2/24, working Pennsylvanians will be rallying in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
WHAT: Solidarity Rally for the Wisconsin Workers
WHEN: 11:30am, Thursday, 2/24
WHERE: Municipal Services Bldg PlazaAcross from City Hall PHILADELPHIA
WHAT: Solidarity Rally for the Wisconsin Workers (Lunch will be provided)
WHEN: 12:00 pm Noon, Thursday, 2/24
WHERE: United Steelworkers Headquarters, 5 Gateway Center, 60 Blvd of the Allies PITTSBURGH
On Saturday, 2/26, working Pennsylvanians will be rallying to save the American Dream in Harrisburg.
SATURDAY, 2/26 IN HARRISBURG
WHAT: Rally to Save the American Dream
WHEN: Saturday, 2/26 at NOON
WHERE: Capitol Steps, Harrisburg
Please do you best to attend these rallies and please spread the word about them.
YOUR VOICE MATTERS!
Cheers erupted every time someone in the hearing voiced opposition to the governor’s bill, aimed at erasing a $137 million deficit in the current budget. Unveiled Friday, Walker’s plan would remove collective bargaining rights for most of the 175,000 state and local government employees, allowing most workers to negotiate only over salary.
“We want everyone to work at a green job in a green and clean economy,” declared David Foster, executive director of the sponsor, the Blue-Green Alliance, opening the first plenary. “But what stands in our way?” The answer was a new Congress stalemated by neoliberal resurgence centered in a bloc of the GOP and the far right. “It’s not going to be easy. We’re going to have to fight for it the old-fashioned way, from the bottom up, brick by brick, and floor by floor.”

