[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 47 (Monday, April 4, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2283-H2289]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL BLACK CAUCUS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands (Mrs.
Christensen) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the
minority leader.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I just wanted to start off by saying in response to some of what I've
just listened to--and I'm not going to take it point by point. I just
want to point out that what we passed last year is not ObamaCare. To
the people of this country it is your care. And if you allow it to be
repealed, defunded, or picked apart piece-by-piece, President Obama
will still have his health care insurance and so will many of the
people who are trying to take away yours, your care.
Just remember that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was
not to provide care for us. It was to provide care and access to
quality, affordable health care for you. It is not ObamaCare. It's your
care.
At this time I'd like to yield to my colleague from Maryland,
Congresswoman Donna Edwards.
Ms. EDWARDS. I would like to thank Congresswoman Christensen for the
time.
And just a reminder that today, April 4, is a sad remembrance in some
ways of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Memphis,
Tennessee, some 43 years ago. It is such an irony that we're here this
evening at this time because there are so many things for which Dr.
King fought and struggled that are ever-present today both in our
policy and our politics and in our national culture and through our
social fabric.
During this year also we commemorate the 40th anniversary of the
Congressional Black Caucus. It's important for us to remember that the
Congressional Black Caucus was founded to tackle the injustices that
Dr. King pointed to and to promote equity in the United States and with
and through our United States political process.
Dr. King dedicated his life to the then-uncomfortable conversations
on injustice faced by African Americans across the country. Dr. King
knew that tackling discrimination in the United States could not only
focus on knocking down social barriers but also economic barriers that
held African American workers, held low-wage workers from economic
wealth to sustain their families.
I want to thank Dr. Christensen and so many of my other colleagues
who've joined me in the introduction of House Resolution 198,
recognizing the coordinated struggle of workers during the 1968 Memphis
sanitation workers strike to voice their grievances and reach a
collective agreement for rights in the workplace. What an irony here in
2011 that the battles for which Dr. King fought so valiantly are
today's battles.
{time} 2020
House Resolution 198 has among it, today, 55 cosponsors. We recognize
that we may not be able to move this measure to the floor, but it is an
important remembrance, commemoration of the struggle of those
sanitation workers, those city workers, those municipal workers as they
tried to organize.
As Dr. King knew, organized labor is a cornerstone of our democracy,
and the organizations of organized labor have altered many facets of
our Nation. They've changed our Nation for the better. Organized
workers will forever change the labor debate in Memphis through their
collective will. That's what happened in Memphis on those days 43 years
ago.
Just 2 weeks ago, we recognized the 100-year anniversary of the
deadly Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, which
[[Page H2284]]
ushered in improved safety standards for workers. And decades later,
the deaths of two sanitation workers in Memphis resulted in a movement
to grant workers in Memphis, Tennessee, the basic rights in a
workplace. Dr. King believed that the struggle in Memphis for workers'
rights was akin to the civil rights movement. It was a partner to the
civil rights movement.
The motto of the sanitation workers strike was, ``I am a man,''
signifying the demeaning way in which African American men had been
treated and referred to as boys. ``I am a man.'' What powerful words
urging the city to grant them the full rights to equality and justice
guaranteed under the principles of our Nation. Dr. King stood in
solidarity with the strikers in the fight for justice and the basic
human rights for all men and women in the workplace and in society.
Indeed, there are many of us in this Congress who stand in solidarity
with the strikers and workers across this country, municipal workers,
private sector workers, public sector workers who are fighting every
day for justice in their workplaces. Indeed, 43 years ago is the
struggle of today. And thanks very much to the legacy of those strikers
in Memphis and to Dr. King, we actually live in a Nation where workers
all over the United States can indeed demand justice and fair working
conditions.
These basic rights allow men and women to pursue economic wealth and
pursue the American Dream. But in recent days, we face a virtual
assault on basic workers' rights, things that we have known for
generations in this country. And even though those events are unfolding
in Wisconsin, the outcome of whether the unions have the right to
collective bargaining in that State will affect union members across
this country. Indeed, that was the fight and the struggle for justice
of sanitation workers.
I want to refer to Dr. King's speech in Memphis at a rally on behalf
of sanitation workers. He said, ``We've got to give ourselves to this
struggle until the end. Nothing would be more tragic than to stop at
this point in Memphis. We've got to see it through.''
We face the same challenge today. We have to push through in States
like Wisconsin and Indiana and Ohio and across this country to help
public employees and, indeed, all employees fight against the
injustices that they face in their workplace.
In Dr. King's last speech, he highlighted the perils at which he
sought equality and justice for all men and women. In his words, I
quote, ``I may not get there with you, but I want you to know tonight
that we as a people will get to the promised land.'' And for workers,
what is that promised land? It is the promised land of a workplace that
is safe. It is the promised land in which one makes wages that allow
one to take care of one's family and contribute to the community. It is
a workplace that actually respects workers as partners in the success
of a company and a workplace.
Dr. King at this time, when he addressed workers in Memphis, had
already faced threats against his life, including a stab wound that he
had suffered at a book signing in New York. In his speech, Dr. King
recalled the doctors saying that had he sneezed following the attack he
would have died, but noted he was glad that he did not or else he would
have missed the progress in the civil rights movement.
Today is a day of remembrance for so many of us. On the point of
injustice, Dr. King said so poignantly the issue is injustice. The
issue is the refusal of Memphis to be fair and honest in its dealings
with its public servants, who happened to be sanitation workers. Now we
have got to keep attention on that. And just as he reminded us 43 years
ago, we have to keep the attention on our workers, who struggle every
day.
Dr. King was determined to be in Memphis with those workers. And
let's think about where we are here 43 years from that fated day in
April. Our country is moving out of recession. We continue to stand
with workers and stand with job creation, some of us do, to reverse the
effects of the recession on our most vulnerable communities, and to
empower all Americans, empower workers.
The unemployment rate among the African American population remains
far too high, at 16.6 percent in March of this year. Now, the overall
unemployment rate has fallen. We are grateful for that. But I think
were Dr. King alive today, he would probably acknowledge the struggle
of those who are working and those who want to work, the many who are
chronically unemployed in their communities across this country.
The unemployment rate among African American men was 20.2 percent in
March of this year, just last month. The unemployment rate among
African American women was 11.7 percent in March. Put these numbers up
against national numbers of unemployment of 8.8 percent. While those
numbers again, thanks to the brilliant efforts of the President of the
United States, of the Democrats in Congress during the 111th Congress,
who actually brought us to a point where we put in some policies that
could bring down the unemployment rate, those numbers are still
troubling among minority groups.
But I will say, Mr. Speaker, that one of the challenges that we have
is that in this country, where workers struggle every day, we look at
stagnant wages that have really crippled the American workforce, the
public sector workforce, the private sector workforce in this country,
that we still have a lot to do when it comes to creating jobs. And yet
here we are again this week--I don't know what day we are on--89 days
not having created any jobs to address those very concerns that Dr.
King had just 43 years ago.
Just a reminder to us all that according to Dr. King, he said so
profoundly about the American labor movement, and I quote again Dr.
King, and I wish that I could do it with his eloquence, but I think it
is important for us to be reminded of his words. ``The labor movement
was the principal force that transformed misery and despair into hope
and progress. Out of its bold struggles, economic and social reform
gave birth to unemployment insurance, old age pensions, government
relief for the destitute, and above all, new wage levels that meant not
mere survival, but a tolerable life.'' He continued, ``The captains of
industry did not lead this transformation; they resisted it until they
were overcome. When in the thirties the wave of union organization
crested over our Nation, it carried to secure shores not only itself
but the whole society.''
Dr. King recognized so profoundly the connection between the struggle
of workers, the struggle of the sanitation workers in Memphis to the
struggles of the American labor movement, and, in fact, to its
foundation.
With that, I recognize that my colleague from New York, Paul Tonko,
has joined us on the floor. Perhaps he would care to join in this
discussion.
Mr. TONKO. Thank you, Representative Edwards, for bringing us
together this evening on what I think is a very timely discussion.
You know, it seems as though 43-year-old history resonates profoundly
today. The same battles for which Martin Luther King had fought, the
eloquence with which he raised America's consciousness is needed today,
not only in the halls of government but across America, to understand
that there is an attack, I believe, on workers.
{time} 2030
There is a diminution of the impact of our middle class, our working
families in this country, when we look at the fact that the top 10
percent of Americans now own or earn around 50 percent of our national
income.
We look at stats from 1950 that has the executive salaries somewhere
in a 30-to-1 ratio compared to the American worker. By the year 2000,
that had changed drastically to some 300-to-1 to 500-to-1. So it's
obvious that the gap between those who are drawing large paychecks and
the workers, the masses that make things work, that have the need to
have purchasing power so as to enable our economy to function and
function well, have been threatened. They have been at risk.
And I think the whole moral fabric that Martin Luther King embraced,
the entire mission to raise America's people as one by providing for
the dignity of the American workers, was a tremendously strong
statement in defense of all people, not just people of color, people of
every demographic, people of every racial persuasion that could provide
for a stronger America. It was that vision that he had and he shared it
[[Page H2285]]
so eloquently, and his climb to the mountaintop was bringing all of
America's children and people along.
He knew that the empowerment of the individual meant the empowerment
of the society. As we weave the strands of diversity into the fabric of
America, our mosaic growing stronger and brighter and more vibrant
enables us to be a Nation that really, truly is unique if we could just
empower the American worker.
I see the raid now on this middle class in these Chambers, in the
congressional Chambers, both the House and the Senate being so focused
on a dismantling of the power of the working families, of the true
middle class of our society. That is a wrong move. That is one that
will devastate our economy and one that is not utilizing, embracing the
intellectual capacity of this great Nation.
Cuts to our children through Head Start or in classroom experience is
the worst cut of any because it's our future that we are playing with.
We are not allowing for the dignity, again, of which Martin Luther King
spoke, to be felt in the classroom; and that magic of learning is
dulled, is dulled, by these painful cuts.
So we have got to respond, respond with compassion and with our eyes
wide open knowing that that message of 43 years ago and that powerful
statement made about the dignity of labor, the evening before he was
brought down, still speaks to every one of us, or at least ought to, so
that we can provide for the sorts of policy and the resource advocacy,
the distribution of income across this country in a way that really
empowers the individual and families.
That, I think, is the mission that is still there for each and every
one of us. So many of us were inspired by the words of John F. Kennedy,
Martin Luther King, Robert F. Kennedy. It drew people to the public
arena. They wanted to be involved; they saw government as a noble
mission. And that tarnished atmosphere that's prevailing today has
allowed for misrepresentation of facts or denial of data that really
should guide our process here, as Martin often called for fairness, for
equitable treatment, for justice.
Those are the factors that drive the dignity. So it is a challenge to
us, but I think we are up for that challenge, and I remain optimistic.
If we just provide the boost to our Nation's working families, to our
middle class, then we are all empowered. I think that tide would lift
all boats.
So, thank you, Representative Edwards, for bringing us together on a
very important discussion.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. I would like to thank my colleague from Maryland
for helping to organize this hour and our colleague from New York for
joining us. I was in medical school here in Washington D.C. on the day
that Dr. King was assassinated, and it was obviously a very dark day
and weekend that followed.
But I recalled, and I think it would have had to have been the Sunday
of the following week, was a Sunday dedicated to Dr. Martin Luther
King. On that day, as you went to church or were out and about D.C.,
there was such a feeling of fellowship and brotherhood and respect for
each other, and even, I would say, love for each other as neighbors in
this country and on this planet.
It would be wonderful to see the spirit of that day revived in this
Congress and across our Nation as we remember not only the day but,
more importantly, the words and the legacy of Dr. King and as we
remember all that he was fighting for. Specifically tonight we remember
the sanitation workers whose strike he went out to Nashville to support
on that fateful evening.
And in his speech he mentioned a few things that he said in that
speech the night before he was killed. He called also for his listeners
to develop a ``dangerous unselfishness'' and said that the question
before them, and I would say the question before us today, is ``not if
I stop to help the sanitation workers,'' and I am going to add in here,
as we would say today, not if we stopped to help the sanitation
workers, the teachers, the firefighters, the policemen and all workers
whose rights are under attack in our country today, what will happen to
my job?
But he said the question is: ``If I do not stop to help the
sanitation workers what will happen to them?'' And as our colleague
from New York said, his concern went beyond that. It was also what
would happen to our Nation.
He also then said right after that: ``Let us rise up tonight with a
greater readiness. Let us stand with a greater determination. And let
us move in these powerful days, these days of challenge to make America
what it ought to be. We have an opportunity to make America a better
Nation.''
These words are an urgent call to us today as well, as both of my
colleagues have said, to stand with a greater determination on behalf
of the working men and women in this country; to stand with a greater
determination for help for the poor; to stand with a greater
determination for clean air and clean energy for us and our children,
clean air for our children and us to breathe, and clean energy and
responding to this threat of climate change; to stand with greater
determination for jobs and economic opportunity, especially for the
most distressed parts of our country; to stand with greater
determination for a quality education for every child and to stand with
greater determination for equal access to quality health care and
wellness for everyone in this country regardless of race, ethnicity,
gender identity or geography.
Another quote from Dr. King that I use often as we talk about health
disparities is this quote. He said:--Of all the forms of inequality,
injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.''
I want to focus on that for a moment because among the many
challenges that we face today is that of eliminating the injustice in
health care. We Democrats took a major step forward in this effort with
the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in the
111th Congress. Not only does it expand coverage to millions of
Americans and families who have never had insurance before, but it also
includes provisions that would end the travesty which Dr. Martin Luther
King called the most shocking and inhumane.
Now that the health care door is finally being opened to all; now
that we have furthered the effort to end the discrimination that exists
in our health system; now that we have a chance to end the tens of
thousands of premature, preventable deaths in people of color, and the
poor, and those who live in our rural areas and our territories; now
that we have done all of that, the Republican majority is doing
everything they can think of to try and slam that door shut again.
{time} 2040
In this 40th anniversary year, the Congressional Black Caucus is
committed to building upon the legacy of our founders. In the area of
health, we are particularly committed to specifically building on the
legacy of Congressman Louis Stokes to not let that door or any door be
closed to African Americans or to anyone anywhere in this country. We
will not let those doors be closed.
And we know that our Democrats will stand with us with greater
determination to protect the Affordable Care law and the lives of
countless Americans who would continue to be in jeopardy without that
law. And it's time for the good people of this country to stand with
us.
Let us not have to repent, as Dr. King said, not for actions of bad
people, but for the appalling silence of good people.
This country should no longer tolerate that African Americans,
Latinos and Native Americans have a much higher infant mortality than
our white counterparts; that diabetes and its complications should be
so much higher in those same populations as well as in Native Hawaiians
and other Pacific Islanders; or that African Americans should have
higher death rates from cancer and diabetes than all of the other
population groups; or that Native Americans should have higher deaths
from sudden infant death syndrome and chronic liver disease than all of
the other population groups combined; or that Asian Americans should
have such high incidences of tuberculosis, about 24 times the average
national rate, and higher incidences of hepatitis B; and no longer
should this country tolerate that in 2010, after 8 years, that the
Department of Health and Human Services would still be reporting in the
national health disparities report that
[[Page H2286]]
fewer than 20 percent of disparities faced by African Americans,
American Indians, Alaska Natives and Hispanics showed any evidence of
narrowing. Fewer than 20 percent showed any evidence of narrowing.
It is time for all of us to rise to our better nature, as Dr. King
would call us to do, and to begin to work together to close gaps faced
in many different areas by large segments of our population. We must
stand in stronger determination to build that better nation and to
realize the beloved community that Dr. King envisioned.
In our 40th year, the Congressional Black Caucus remains more
committed, more determined than ever to realizing his dream, a dream
that still burns brightly in the hearts of all of us who honor Dr.
Martin Luther King and the life that he gave to ensure freedom and
justice on behalf of all of us.
With that, I yield to the gentlewoman from Maryland.
Ms. EDWARDS. Thank you, Dr. Christensen.
I just want to take a moment to yield to my colleague, vice chairman
of the Congressional Black Caucus from the great State, my original
home State of North Carolina, G.K. Butterfield.
Mr. BUTTERFIELD. Let me thank the gentlelady for yielding the time
this evening and thank her for her leadership in the Congress. The
Congressional Black Caucus goes out of its way each week to try to
present to the Nation issues that are critically important to African
Americans residing in this country, and Congresswoman Donna Edwards and
Congresswoman Christensen have been in the forefront of making that
happen. And so I want to thank them so very much for their leadership.
I especially want to thank them for their willingness to come to the
floor tonight to commemorate the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. April 4 always brings back memories of a very tragic day in
the life of our country. It is a day that I shall never, ever forget.
The civil rights movement and the voting rights movement took place
during my years in high school. Those were very precious moments in my
history, and I remember so well the work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
The world must remember, our country must remember, we must understand
that Martin Luther King's leadership was very profound, but it only
lasted for about 13 years. So many people don't recognize that.
Dr. King started his leadership at age 26, and it tragically ended at
age 39. It was on December 1 of 1955 that Dr. King was drafted, at age
26, to lead the Montgomery bus boycott. That was the day in Alabama
history when the black citizens of Montgomery decided that they would
boycott city buses until they could sit anywhere they wanted instead of
being relegated to the back when a white citizen boarded the bus. A
black seamstress named Rosa Parks was denied a seat of her choice
because of the color of her skin, and Dr. King at the age of 26 took
the leadership of that movement and focused the attention of the world
on this injustice. And the Supreme Court of this country, the following
year, agreed with his position.
Then several years later, in April of 1963, it was on a Friday
evening, it was Good Friday, Dr. King again led a march in Birmingham,
Alabama, to end segregation in public accommodations. Dr. King was
arrested and spent the next 11 days confined in jail. During that time,
Mr. Speaker, he wrote that great document called ``Letter from
Birmingham Jail.'' I would only wish that our citizens would look up
that letter on the Internet and read for themselves ``Letter from
Birmingham Jail.'' And several weeks later, the Birmingham leaders
announced that local accommodations would be integrated.
After that great victory in Birmingham, and after Dr. King wrote his
letter, Dr. King and other civil rights leaders planned and then they
executed the 1963 March on Washington. So many of us have heard of and
some of us participated in that march. It was a hot summer day here in
the Nation's capital on August 28, 1963. I was there as a young 16-
year-old high school student.
That march was a demand. It was a demand for civil rights
legislation. President John F. Kennedy had agreed with the movement and
had made a historic speech on June 11, 1963, calling on this Nation to
end segregation in public accommodations. And on June 20, 1963, a bill
was introduced into this House of Representatives here on Capitol Hill,
and that bill was fiercely debated to provide civil rights for all
citizens. But then the march took place in August of 1963. It was a
great day; 250,000 people descended on the Nation's capital demanding
civil rights. And less than 90 days later, President Kennedy was
tragically assassinated in Dallas, Texas.
As a result of his assassination, President Johnson, becoming the
President of our country, promised the Nation that the civil rights
bill that was pending in the Congress would continue to be debated, and
it would be signed into law, and it was, on July 2, 1964.
And so after that civil rights bill was passed, Dr. King received the
coveted Nobel Peace Prize. And we honor and we celebrate that great
history.
Finally, Mr. Speaker, the Civil Rights Act was not enough. There had
to be a voting rights bill that was debated and passed by this
Congress. Finally, in 1965, Congress passed the 1965 Voting Rights Act
because of the work of Dr. King.
Because of the Voting Rights Act, there has now been a
transformation, a political transformation in the southern part of our
country where I am from. I represent eastern North Carolina, which is a
community in my State that suffered from years of discrimination and
electoral discrimination. But I'm proud to say that in my congressional
district alone, there are more than 300 African American elected
officials elected to office, and we attribute much of this success to
the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I want to thank the gentlelady for recognizing this great American on
this day. My home town of Wilson, North Carolina, was supposed to have
been the visit of Dr. King on this day in 1968. But because of the
events in Memphis, Tennessee, he diverted and went to Memphis to aid
with the garbage strike and to help those who could not help
themselves. And so we celebrate this great legacy tonight.
Ms. EDWARDS. Thank you, Congressman Butterfield, for your leadership
as vice chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, but also for your
reminder of our so important history that is linked both to the
struggle of African Americans in this country, to the struggle of
labor, and for a reminder also historically of the fact that Dr. King
was supposed to have had a next place to be when his life was ended on
April 4, 43 years ago today.
{time} 2050
I would like to take just this moment, if I could, to recount for us
the history of the 1968 American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees Memphis sanitation workers' strike, the chronology.
Beginning on Sunday, January 31 of that year, the rain sent workers
home. Then beginning on Tuesday, February 1 of that year, two
sanitation workers were killed in an accident on a city truck.
Then just days later on Monday, February 12, Memphis sanitation and
public employees went on strike after last-minute attempts to resolve
their grievances had failed. While the newspapers claimed that 200
workers of the 1,300 remained on the job, really only 38 of 180 trucks
moved. The mayor of the city said the strike is illegal, but that his
office stood ready to talk to anyone about legitimate questions of the
time.
Little did these workers know that through the month of February, as
black leaders and ministers gathered from city-wide organizations in
support of the strike, through the days of March when the ministers and
the city announced that Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., would come to
Memphis, 116 strikers and supporters were arrested for sitting at city
hall. And then through the month of March, the newspapers claimed that
the strike was failing as scabs were operating 90 garbage trucks. But
17,000 Memphians attended a rally where Dr. King called for a citywide
march on March 22.
Then as Dr. King returned to Memphis on April 3, and he addressed the
rally, delivering his famous ``I've Been to the Mountaintop'' address,
then that
[[Page H2287]]
day, on April 4, on April 4, 1968, as he prepared to march with the
workers, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated on the balcony
of his hotel in Memphis, Tennessee.
In the days following his assassination, the workers continued their
strike in honor of Dr. King and with renewed courage and resolve to
demand safe working conditions. It is this simple phrase ``I am a man''
that drove him, a simple phrase, one that acknowledged their humanhood,
one that acknowledged them as workers: I am a man.
And then finally on April 16, some 3 months after the start of their
strike, the sanitation workers of the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees, AFSCME, agreed and reached an agreement
with the city officials, granting an increase in pay, a grievance
procedure, and overtime pay.
This is the history of the sanitation workers of Memphis. It is the
history of workers throughout this country, and it is the history of
workers today.
With that, I would like to yield to the gentleman from New York (Mr.
Tonko).
Mr. TONKO. You know, the dignity that was addressed, the respect
factor of ``I am a man,'' that rhetoric that speaks to the working
individual, that speaks to humanity, the man, the woman, the child, the
dignity of the individual, the respect shown, was all that was embraced
in that message, that struck all of America, touched all Americans.
I am of the age that I remember that tragic day. It came so
clustered. In a short 5 years, we lost three great leaders to bullets.
It is just really a tragic outcome that you can't help but find
yourself questioning what if their march continued, how different would
America be?
I find it so interesting that his last major appearance and effort
was for workers, fighting for workers, for the dignity of work and the
dignity of workers.
The assault on workers' rights that he was addressing we see today in
the news. We see it in Wisconsin. We see it in Michigan. We see it in
Ohio. And it is like the same battles are here to be fought and won.
So the spirit of Martin encourages, I think, builds our determination
and our resilience to make a difference. The efforts that America needs
to associate with the overall cause and concern for job creation and
job retention is so vitally important. Many would choose to have us
believe that it is a high rate of firings that is occurring out there,
but it is really a low rate of hirings, which is a different sort of
saga. We need to invest now in worker opportunities, in training,
retraining, in education, and in job creation.
I am a firm believer, and I know many are, that unemployment is
driving our deficit and that if we invest in jobs, if we invest in the
worker, we will see a corresponding benefit on the flip side of a
reduced deficit for this Nation.
I think the stats tell it all. The bottom 50 percent of income
earners in the United States now collectively own less than 1 percent
of the Nation's wealth. That is a startling fact. And we need to make
certain that there is more justice that is produced out there. As I
said earlier, I really do believe that the purchasing power that we can
enhance for America's working families, for our middle class, for the
mainstream worker out there is an empowerment for all of us. Someone
needs to purchase the products that those perched on the top may
produce by their ownership. But the worker to build that product and
the worker to buy that product is an important key, perhaps the most
important ingredient in the equation.
When we look at the fact that some five people are lined up for every
job opportunity in this country, and when we look at the fact that
workers' rights are under assault today in many areas across this
country, there is a great amount of unfinished business.
And on this anniversary commemoration of a great leader's death, it
is important for us to recommit our energies and our spirit to speaking
to the needs of America's workers. Nothing could honor Dr. Martin
Luther King's legacy and the man more vibrantly than speaking to job
creation, job retention, workers' rights and prevention of what we are
seeing where there is an assault on those rights across this country.
Thank you, Representative Edwards, for bringing this solemn
opportunity together on this floor where so many issues were addressed
in favorable measure, that were driven by the courage and the boldness
and the noble vision of Dr. Martin Luther King and other great leaders,
like JFK and RFK, who traveled that same era in history.
Ms. EDWARDS. I thank the gentleman from New York and appreciate your
leadership and your being here this evening to mark this day with us
for workers.
With that, I yield to the gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands (Mrs.
Christensen).
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. It should give all of the workers who are fighting
for their rights today extra incentive, some extra inspiration as we
commemorate this day and all that Dr. Martin Luther King fought for as
they continue that fight and we continue to support them in that fight.
I am reminded that on April 7 in the capital of Illinois, in
Springfield, I was out there a week ago, they will be having a major
rally on behalf of working people in this country. I want to salute the
folks in Springfield on that march.
In addition to fighting for workers' rights, when Dr. King died, he
was planning the Poor People's Campaign in Washington. I was here
studying for my boards. I went over to volunteer in the medical tent.
It rained and it poured; but people came in from all over this country,
particularly the South, to the Poor People's Campaign to call attention
to the plight of the poor in this country.
As we are celebrating as a Congressional Black Caucus our 40th
anniversary, we are still carrying on that fight. Our main agenda,
theme, is ``Creating Pathways Out of Poverty.'' We have had that as our
agenda for the last 2 years, and we continue with that for this
Congress as well.
That was a remarkable time as well. I think it did a lot to change my
life in the middle of my medical studies and the course of my career.
It probably has something to do with why I am here today. I wanted to
also just remind everyone that as we fight for the workers, and
remember Dr. King's fight for working men and women, he also was
steadfastly working to help define pathways out of poverty for those
who were poor then; and we continue in our 40th year to fight for the
poor and help them find ways to lift them up and lift their families
out of poverty.
Ms. EDWARDS. I thank the gentlewoman for her leadership and in
bringing us together in these important hours on the floor of the House
of Representatives to discuss the issues that are of the deepest
concern to communities of color, to working families across this
country, and a reminder of the reason why many of us have chosen to
serve.
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Dr. King knew so deeply that the middle class is, indeed, the
backbone of the American economy and that by strengthening the middle
class we move our Nation forward. He would understand today that, by
giving tax breaks to oil companies and special privileges to the
wealthy, we forget our allegiance to the most populous among us--the
middle class. He understood the importance of the struggle of
sanitation workers, of organizing workers, of making sure that workers
were able to take care of themselves and their families as a way of
moving workers into the middle class. He understood, like so many of us
do, particularly for African American people, that our connection to
organized labor is so important because it is through the ability to
organize and to fight for our rights against injustice that we are able
to move our families into the middle class.
Dr. King knew so tremendously the connection between the plight of
Negroes and working people. He said at the AFL-CIO convention in
December 1961: ``Negroes are almost entirely a working people. There
are pitifully few Negro millionaires and few Negro employers. Our needs
are identical with labor's needs--decent wages, fair working
conditions, livable housing, old age security, health and welfare
measures, conditions in which families can grow,
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have education for their children and respect in the community.'' Dr.
King spoke those words in December 1961. Those words could be spoken
today.
Dr. King reminded the workers of the United Auto Workers at the
District 65 convention in September 1962 that in the area of politics
that labor and African Americans, Negroes, have identical interests. He
said: ``Labor has grave problems today of employment, shorter hours,
old age security, housing, and retraining against the impact of
automation. The Congress and the administration are almost as
indifferent to labor's program as they are toward that of the Negro.
Toward both, they offer vastly less than adequate remedies for the
problems which are a torment to us day after day.''
Those words spoken today speak to the plight of the workforce, to
minority communities and to working families across this country. Those
words spoken in 1962 could be spoken today in 2011, some 40 some years
later.
One of the things that I continue to be touched by is that I was just
a young girl when Dr. King died on April 4, but I always remember that
day. I remember that day in my family. I remember the sadness and the
tragedy, but I also remember the struggle. I think generations since my
own and up until now recall that struggle and, I think, today, for the
sanitation workers and remembering their struggle of some 3 months to
gain the respect and dignity in the workplace: I am a man.
Now, if we had to create this placard today, we might write ``I am a
woman; I am a man; I am a human being''; but it still speaks to the
same value, to the value of humanity and justice in the workplace.
That's the value that Dr. King spoke to. It is a value for which he
died. It is a value that lives in his legacy.
So, again, I am just pleased that my colleagues have been able to
join with us today, not on a day of sadness, April 4, but on a day of
remembrance, on a day of reinvigoration and recommitment to those
ideals that have guided us and that continue to guide us in our
struggle with and for the workers across this country.
With that, I would like to yield again, just very briefly, to my
colleague from New York, Paul Tonko.
Mr. TONKO. Thank you, Representative Edwards.
I would have to say that I truly believe that, if Dr. King were in
our presence today, he would remind us that a budget is a series of
priorities. What we place high, what we place most precious in that
budget, we would see as a document that speaks to a family. Just like a
household will balance its needs, its concerns with its ability to pay
and put together the balancing, so too does the family of America
require that sort of tender balancing.
He would remind us, whether they are employed, critically unemployed
or marginally underemployed, whatever the situation might be, that
today America's middle class families are living paycheck to paycheck.
That's becoming more and more the scenario. He would have suggested,
look, we need to take that concern for mortgages, that concern for
college tuition, that concern for just pay, that concern for utility
bills, that concern for food costs and energy costs, and we need to
invest in the American working families.
Contrast that with what the other scenario might look like: handouts
to oil companies, corporate loopholes that are not shut, tax breaks for
the most comfortable in society. That is the contrast he would
challenge us to face head on and to understand it's about social and
economic justice. It's about bringing more balance, more fairness into
the equation.
As a clergyman, he embraced the faith and brought it into the
community; he brought it into America; he challenged us to respond in
compassionate measure. We have it within our means to do this in a fair
and just way, and that's why we are at a tipping point in this Nation's
history where we need to look at revitalizing the middle class.
I represent many modest annual income households. They have told me
their fear is about maintaining their homes; their fear is about
educating their children; their fear is about tomorrow having the
opportunity. I'm optimistic that we can do it because we have the
skills here within the Congress to make it happen and to make it work
in a progressive fashion. Do we have the will? That would be the
challenge. That would be the challenge from Dr. King this very evening:
Do we have the will to move forward in a progressive fashion?
So thank you, Representative Edwards, for bringing us together
tonight in tribute to a giant of an individual, an icon in our midst.
Ms. EDWARDS. Thank you, Mr. Tonko.
With that, I'd like to yield to Congresswoman Christensen.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you.
Just briefly, I want to again thank you for helping us to commemorate
not only the sanitation workers' strike but the life and legacy of Dr.
King.
It is unfortunate, as we are here tonight, remembering the day that
the assassination took place of this great American and great human
being, that the day after, we expect a budget that is going to do just
the opposite of what Dr. King would have wanted us to do.
In the last Congress, we were able to strengthen Medicare, to expand
its solvency 12 years. We were able to pass the Affordable Care Act,
which would expand Medicaid and make sure that, even though you were
poor, you would have the ability to have quality health care. Tomorrow,
we expect a budget that's going to talk about privatizing Medicare,
ending it as we know it--sacrificing the health care for seniors and
children--making an enormous cut in Medicaid, and really taking away
the hope that people had when we passed the Affordable Care Act that
they could not only have health care but that they could really aspire
to improving their health--their own well-being as well as that of
their families and their communities.
So we meet here this evening to talk about Dr. King, to talk about
the challenges that our working men and women have, and to talk about
the challenges of health care for those who are poor--those of all
races and ethnicities--and to recommit ourselves in the memory of Dr.
King to fight for working men and women and for those who need that
extra hand to lift themselves and their families out of poverty.
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I just want to say that the Congressional Black Caucus has been doing
this for 40 years now.
I want to again recognize our founding members for their perspicacity
and their perseverance--we still have two of those members serving with
us, Congressman Charles Rangel and Congressman John Conyers--and to let
the American people know that we will continue to fight on their behalf
tomorrow and every day as long as it is necessary.
Ms. EDWARDS. Thank you very much, Congresswoman Christensen.
I am so proud to be a member of the Congressional Black Caucus with a
40-year history and legacy of fighting for justice and looking out for
the most vulnerable and giving voice to people who would not have a
voice in this United States Congress.
We are about ready to close, and I would like to end the evening and
the hour by pointing those at home, those in this Chamber to an op-ed
in today's paper that actually brings together the two forces that Dr.
King was bringing together even just before he was so tragically
assassinated, bringing together the civil rights movement and the labor
movement.
In an op-ed today in today's Washington Post entitled, ``The Middle
Class Dream That Cannot Die,'' Benjamin Todd Jealous, who is the
president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, the NAACP, and Mary K. Henry, who is the international
president of the Service Employees International Union, draw together
that middle class dream for the American people that's built on a
foundation of civil rights and social justice and partnered with labor
and working people.
``I Am a Man.'' I would like to close this evening by reminding
again, all of us, that April 4 and the years we remember in between are
years about building upon a tragedy to build a legacy. ``I Am a Man.''
Dr. King reminded us again about the fight for jobs and retirement
security and health care and care for the most vulnerable.
Those are still today's struggles: the workers that we've spoken
about in
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Wisconsin and Ohio and Indiana and all across this country who struggle
for that dignity. ``I Am a Man,'' Dr. King's words, in his famous
speech, ``I've Been to the Mountain Top'' that he spoke just before he
was assassinated. And I just want to read a portion of that that really
speaks to me as a Member of Congress, as a member of the Congressional
Black Caucus.
Dr. King said: ``Let us rise up tonight with a greater readiness. Let
us stand with a greater determination. And let us move on these
powerful days, these days of challenge, to make America what it ought
to be. We have an opportunity to make America a better Nation.''
With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
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