Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

2000 - Immigrants Rights Rally at LA Sports Arena


Kent Wong on Miguel Contreras:

For decades, union organizing has been in decline nationally, but not in Los Angeles. Some of the largest organizing victories in recent labor history have been won in L.A., including victories for janitors, home-care workers, health care workers, hotel workers and the current campaign involving security guards. In a city of tremendous wealth and affluence, Contreras fought for low-wage workers, workers of color, and immigrants who are struggling to rise out of poverty.

Contreras organized one of the largest immigrant-rights rallies in U.S. history, when 20,000 immigrant workers of all colors filled the Sports Arena in June 2000. He helped to change the national policy of the American labor movement, successfully reversing its anti-immigrant position to one that now embraces immigrant rights. The labor-Latino coalition Contreras cultivated has worked well to increase both union membership and union political power.

Los Angeles has emerged as a major battleground for workers, and Contreras has been on the front lines of each and every struggle. The supermarket strike and lockout, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority strike, the port lockout, and the current hotel worker campaign all relied heavily on Contreras for advice, political support and labor mobilization. Contreras believed that unions are the key to preserving middle-class jobs, health benefits and pensions.

The vision that Miguel Contreras brought to the Los Angeles labor movement is desperately needed on a national level. This year, which marks the 50th anniversary of the merger of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations, the national labor movement is in crisis. Union membership is down, political power is diminishing, and all three branches of government are controlled by Republicans with an aggressive anti-labor agenda.

Contreras taught workers of Los Angeles that if they work together and fight together, they can win together. His work has improved the lives of millions of working people who are struggling for economic justice, and for dignity and respect on the job. Contreras never wavered in his commitment to working people, never gave up in the face of adversity, and always believed that the American dream belongs to us all.


https://community-wealth.org/sites/clone.community-wealth.org/files/downloads/paper-frank1.pdf:
In early 2000 ... labor led a coalition of immigrants’ rights organizations in an amnesty campaign that filled the L.A. Sports Arena with sixteen thousand supporters inside and over four thousand more cheering outside.

Miguel Contreras, along with María Elena Durazo and SEIU international vice president Eliseo Medina, set about to harness this power politically. They set up the Organization of Los Angeles Workers (OLAW) to develop a cadre of skilled union members who would be paid their regular salary Building Power in Los Angeles -8 - to work with the union on political campaigns (these are known as lost-timers).25 In addition to HERE Local 11, SEIU Local 1877 (Justice for Janitors), and UNITE members, full-time walkers came initially from the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), Hermandad Mexicana Nacional, Clinica Romero (a Salvadoran immigrant solidarity organization), and a number of Mexican and Guatemalan hometown associations.2

This page has paths:

This page has tags: