Reverend William Barber Is Reviving MLK's Poor People's Campaign. He Got Arrested the First Day...
Source: Mother Jones
Fifty years after the first Poor Peoples Campaign, organized by Martin Luther King Jr. shortly before his assassination and carried out after his death, activists have launched a new campaign for economic and social justice. Modeled after the original movement, in which thousands of people descended on the National Mall in Washington, DC, to protest poverty, the 2018 Poor Peoples Campaign is expected to last six weeks in 35 different states, where people plan to participate in nonviolent civil disobedience and teach-ins.
We know that in the richest country in the world, there is no reason for children to go hungry, for the sick to be denied health care and for citizens to have their votes suppressed, Reverend William Barber, the co-chair of the campaign, said in a statement. Both parties have to be challengedone for what it does and one for what it doesnt do. Barber is the founder of the Moral Monday movement, a coalition of faith leaders and activists who routinely protested poverty and discrimination in Raleigh, North Carolina.
The movements list of demands includes addressing poverty, voting rights, environmental stewardship, racism, and more. Each week protestors will focus on a different topic and hold nonviolent protests; the first week primarily focuses on children, women, and people with disabilities living in poverty. Our research revealed that the states with the highest overall poverty rates also had the worst voter suppression and the highest number of women and children in need, Liz Theoharis, the campaigns co-chair, said in a March interview with AlterNet.
The movement kicked off with protests across the country Monday. In DC, Barber was arrested with fellow protestors who were impeding the flow of traffic by standing in the middle of Independence Avenue, in front of the US Capitol building.
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https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2018/05/rev-william-barber-is-reviving-mlks-poor-peoples-campaign-he-got-arrested-the-first-day-of-protests/