Working Women, Unite and Fight Back!

By Tiffany McCulley

When we look at the world around us, it is so easy to feel despair. Open fascism is on the rise, the right to bodily autonomy is being ripped from the folks it affects the most. These attacks are led by members of both major parties and funded by the super-rich who profit off our oppression. Our trans community’s rights are constantly under attack, and Black trans women are being murdered at alarming rates without consequence. Social programs are being defunded to increase funding for imperialist war. Our school system is held ransom by charter school companies only interested in profits instead of nurturing the brilliance of our children.

Women everywhere are disproportionately affected by the oppression and violence of capitalist society. Capitalism is a boot on our backs, demanding every ounce of our time, our energy, our resources, and our unquestioning obedience to its illegitimate authority. Working women are pushed to the edge. We are feeling the pressure all around us.

We need to know what is at the root of these oppressions and injustices. We need to say its name: capitalism. The capitalist class has always imposed the policy of “divide and rule” on grounds of race, sexual orientation, gender, nationality, and whatever else they can find in order to exploit the working class. Capitalism lays the foundation for the unequal economic and social relationship between the labor of men and women. We once lived in societies where all genders and sexualities were equal. Only when societies became about power and control, about private property, did this change. The ruling class began dividing us and controlling us because they knew we outnumbered them. Today, capitalism is the great divider, and our greatest weapon against capitalism is revolutionary unity.

There are women all over the globe fighting back: working women in Palestine, Puerto Rico, Spain, Pakistan, India, Philippines, Uganda, South Africa, just to name a few. Our sisters across the globe are engaging in militant fights against gender-based violence, unequal pay, discrimination in the workplace, criminalization of sex workers, education access, reproductive rights, and more. In India, women formed a human chain hundreds of miles long with millions of women coming together in resistance. In Puerto Rico, women led the protests that brought the resignation of their governor. Closer to home, indigenous women and Two Spirit people have been at the heart of the struggle against the oil pipelines. Chicago teachers and school staff are striking. Working women are not taking the bullshit anymore. We’re uniting to say, “Hands Off! Hands off our bodies, our paychecks, our lands!”

We are building a working women’s movement. We are clear who our enemy is, and we know that the only way forward is together, united in revolutionary struggle. We are not free while any other woman is unfree. There is strength in numbers and a mass movement of revolutionary working-class women would be a force to be reckoned with.

Are you ready to demand the world we deserve? Then come fight with us; come build with us. In March of 2020, we will be honoring International Working Women’s Day with militant protest and action, and we need you to be a part of it.

Hospitality Workers Shutdown Decatur Street

In commemoration of International Working Women’s Day, over 150 workers and supporters sat down in the middle of crowded Decatur St. in the French Quarter. For half an hour, the workers showed the city a taste of their power, shutting down the street in solidarity with the hospitality workers being forced to work for almost no wages, without healthcare, sick leave, or reliable public transportation. Other workers nearby cheered them on, including bus drivers and truckers who paused in their routes. Many hospitality workers came out of their workplaces raising their fists in solidarity.

The New Orleans Hospitality Workers Alliance and the New Orleans Peoples’ Assembly led a coalition of working women to demand the city and the Tourism Board return $180 million in taxes that currently line the pockets of the rich ruling class instead of serving the people. Hospitality and workers from other industries spoke up in the streets, demanding childcare, maternity leave, sick pay, better schedules, pensions, an end to racist and sexual harassment, and healthcare. All these programs could be funded by the tax money currently hoarded by the city’s greedy capitalists. Speakers included leaders from the New Orleans Hospitality Workers Alliance, Women With a Vision, the New Orleans Abortion Fund, the Amalgamated Transit Union (Bus Drivers) Local 1560, Erase the Board Coalition, New Orleans Workers Group, and others. The rally was conducted in English and Spanish.

As the workers marched out of the French Quarter, they chanted “We’ll be back,” promising to continue the fight.

International Working Women’s Day

Women in Bangladesh hold banner:”Ensure Health Protection of Women Workers”
Malaya Movement, International Women’s Alliance, Bayan USA, and IWWD Coalition mobilized people for International Working Women’s Day demonstrations in New York City.
Hundreds of women in Gaza celebrated International Working Women’s Day.
Spain: Women march with banner reading “Without Us, the World Stops.”

Bosses Beware: Women Are Organizing!

Honor International Working Women’s Day

Moira Casados Cassidy—teacher in Denver who is leading the local teachers’ union fight for better wages and against for-profit charter schools. Teachers in Denver went on strike during the week of February 11th to demand a livable wage.

Zenei Cortez—Registered Nurse and co-president of California Nurses Association. Cortez worked as a nurse for over 40 years, has been leading the CNA’s fight for Medicare for All, and has fought her entire life for the rights of working women of color.

Marie Jacob—United Airlines catering worker. Jacob was a key figure in unionizing 2,700 United Airlines catering workers in Denver, Houston, Newark, Honolulu, and Cleveland. Thanks to her relentless hard work, the union won a $15/hour base pay for herself and thousands of other DIA (Denver International Airport) workers.

Pamela Bourgeois—cafeteria worker and member of the New Orleans chapter of Service Employees International Union. Bourgeois played a key role in securing $15/hour minimum wage for 66 cafeteria workers in New Orleans. She showed up persistently at school board meetings and spoke up against the unjust working conditions that she and many other cafeteria workers face. Speaking at the September OPSB meeting, Bourgeois said: “We should not have to work two or more jobs to make ends meet. We should not have to max out our credit cards to provide for our families. We should not have to rely on our family members for assistance. We need to know that we are contributing to our households.”

Be Marston (left, with coworker)—union bartender active in UNITE HERE Local 8. Be helped win a contract at the Oregon Convention Center which expanded workers’ healthcare coverage. As local president of the Oregon chapter of Pride At Work, the AFL-CIO’s organization for LGBT union members, she focuses on advocacy for trans and gender non-conforming union members.