Solidarity Day 1981: 250,000 March on Washington
We are willing to bet that a larger proportion of Labor Notes readers marched on Solidarity On the way into town Friday evening, you saw hard hats with local union numbers displayed The tone of the march was not so much militant as excited, even joyous….The comment Several people who carried Labor Notes’ “Honor Patco’s Picket Lines” signs told us that Give $10 a month or more and get our "Fight the Boss, Build the Union" T-shirt. The PATCO contingent was noticeable for the involvement of wives and children… But the march certainly carried a message to the halls of Congress and the White House. But the more important message might have been the one the labor movement sent to
Day than of any other publication in America. But for those of you who couldn’t go, here’s an
idea of what it was like.
on the back shelves of cars. Everywhere you looked there were blue caps, union Tshirts
and jackets. In a country which prides itself on lacking class distinctions, for once the
pride was in being workers and opposing the rich.
over and over was, “Can you believe this?” Nobody was disappointed…
well-wishers, mistaking them for air traffic controllers, kept coming up to shake their hands.SUPPORT LABOR NOTES
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The march was in sharp contrast with the AFL-CIO’s traditional lobbying presence in
Washington. Whether George Meany turned over in his grave we can’t say.
We don’t think Reagan really believes, as he claims, that Simon and Garfunkel have more clout
than the labor movement.
itself. We may have been asleep, it said, but we can wake up.