Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn) addresses a rally protesting inequality. (photo: National People's Action/Flickr)
...and an end to corporate tax breaks
What do you bet Fox News didn't cover it?
What do you bet Fox News didn't cover it?
29 April 14
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Congress returned from a two-week recess, more than 1,500 people
gathered at the Capitol to protest the growing chasm between rich and
poor Americans, calling on Congress to stand with everyday people
instead of corporate special interest groups. Immediate demands included
a raise in the minimum wage and cuts to corporate tax breaks, both key
causes of rising economic inequality and the result of Congressional
lawmakers who cater to out of control corporate interests.
Today we came together and marched 1,500 strong to
take back the capitol by saying NO to poverty wages and NO to corporate
giveaways. Congress must put workers and their families before profits.
We're showing that our labor and our voices matter, and together we're
fighting for a new economy that will work for us all,” said Gilda
Blanco, a member of the National Domestic Workers Alliance (NDWA).
Together, members from a range of worker and economic
justice groups — including National People’s Action (NPA), Restaurant
Opportunities Centers (ROC) United, the National Domestic Workers
Alliance, and OurDC — came together as part of a broad and growing
movement to underscore the wide-spread damage big corporations do to
everyday, working people.
“All over America, families are suffering from budget
cuts while we give tax cuts to corporations that are already sitting on
trillions of dollars of idle wealth,” said Toby Chow, a member of NPA
and the Illinois-Indiana Regional Organizing Network (IIRON). “If
corporations paid their fair share in taxes, we could reverse cuts to
education, create a 21st century social safety net, and create hundreds
of thousands of jobs for teachers, health care providers, and other
workers.”
The rally coincided with the annual lobby days of the
National Restaurant Association, which has consistently blocked policies
that would enhance public health and improve the economic circumstances
of working families, including an increased minimum wage for tipped and
regular workers.
“It’s time that Congress holds corporations
accountable for paying fair wages and puts people before corporate
lobbies like the National Restaurant Association,” said Catherine
Bryant, member of ROC-DC. “Congress needs to stand up to the National
Restaurant Association and stop accepting their corporate cash!”
Rep. Keith Ellison joined the protesters to address
rampant income inequality and demand an economy and a Congress that work
for the American people instead of for corporations.
"It's time the world's biggest corporations stop
pushing for bigger tax breaks and start raising wages for the working
Americans who make profits possible," Rep. Ellison said. "Congress
should raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 and increase the tipped
minimum wage from the current hourly rate of $2.13. We can start with
the planned vote in the Senate this week."
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