The Bay Area Celebrates May Day

by: David Bacon, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

The Bay Area Celebrates May Day
Bay area residents march for workers' and immigrants' rights on May Day. (Photo: David Bacon)

    All around the country, unions and immigrant rights groups came together to celebrate the international workers' holiday with demonstrations supporting workers' rights, the Employee Free Choice Act and the rights of immigrants.

    In the City of Richmond, Mayor Gayle McLaughlin honored local labor leaders, recalling the 125-year history of May Day, which began in the struggle for the eight-hour day in Chicago. "On Saturday, May 1st, 1886 rallies were held throughout the United States demanding the implementation of the eight-hour work day," she said. "In Chicago 90,000 people participated. Labor leaders Albert Parsons and his wife Lucy Ella Gonzales Waller Parsons, a woman of mixed African-American, Native, Mexican and Caucasian heritage, and their seven children led working families down Michigan Avenue, as hundreds of thousands marched nationwide in the following days.

    "But then August Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fisher, George Engel and Louis Lingg, all champions of the eight-hour day, were falsely accused of responsibility for confrontations and casualties in Haymarket Square on May 4, and were executed. It took fifty years for the eight-hour day finally to became law in the Fair Labor Standards Act, passed in 1935 during the New Deal.

    "Today we salute those who carry in their hearts the fire that lit up the martyrs of Chicago, and the rank and file who continue the struggle we remember today. I encourage Richmond residents to follow in their footsteps."

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David Bacon is a writer and photographer. His new book, "Illegal People - How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants," was just published by Beacon Press. His photographs and stories can be found at http://dbacon.igc.org.


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David Bacon is an authority

David Bacon is an authority on working people in America, yet whenever TruthOut posts his articles, the Comments section goes all deer-in-the-headlights. It wasn't always so; before about two months ago, David's articles fomented lively and cogent debate. Now, we get frothing union-bashers betimes . . . where are you, Steve Newcomb? radline9, even Eilish, about whom I'm never quite sure but willing to exit my comfort zone because your posts are always authentic and from the heart.