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In the US, Progressive National Baptists, AFL-CIO reunite for mid-terms voter initiative

United States
RNS

A predominantly Black denomination and prominent union in the US have joined forces in a new voter mobilisation initiative ahead of the mid-term elections.

Reviving a partnership they had in the 1960s, the Progressive National Baptist Convention and the AFL-CIO are launching a faith and labour alliance focused on battleground states, where they expect to feature summits with other religious and union organisations as well as door-to-door canvassing to get out the vote.

US logos AFL CIO and Progressive National Baptist Convention

The AFL-CIO and Progressive National Baptist Convention are partnering on a voter mobilisation effort. PICTURE: Courtesy images

“We ought to make sure that people have equal access to vote, people are registered to make their voice heard,” Rev David Peoples, PNBC president, told Religion News Service ahead of the announcement on Thursday at the denomination’s Annual Session in Orlando, Florida. “Not telling anyone who to vote for, but just trying to empower people to understand that each vote and each voice counts.”

He said the PNBC, which was the denominational home of Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, has more than 1.5 million members, with more than a million in the United States. About 2,000 were expected to attend the meeting that is set to conclude on Friday.

The PNBC worked with the AFL-CIO to lobby for the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed discrimination on the basis of sex and on the basis of race in hiring, firing and promotions, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibited discriminatory voting practices that had limited African American voters.

“We share a mission of justice, fairness and opportunity for all people, especially those in underserved communities,” said AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Fred Redmond in a statement. “Our movements are uniquely connected. And now more than ever we need to strengthen that connection, come back together and rebuild the bond between faith and labour.”



According to its website, the AFL-CIO is a federation of 57 international and national unions that represent 12.5 million workers.

PNBC leaders said their joint plans with the AFL-CIO come in the wake of dozens of state laws, such as voter identification bills, that have been enacted since 2021 and have been found to disproportionately restrict people of colour. They also have been lobbying for national voting rights legislation, such as the John R Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act that has passed in the House but not in the Senate.

US Darryl Gray

Rev Darryl Gray. PICTURE: Courtesy of Gray

Rev Darryl Gray, a national social justice commissioner for the PNBC, noted that speakers representing religious organisations and organised labour groups took turns at the microphone at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 where King gave his “I Have a Dream” speech.

Now, Gray said, the voter registration, education and mobilisation initiative will focus on 11 “consequential states”: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

“These are consequential elections, either gubernatorial races or US Senate races that could affect the landscape of American politics,” said Gray, a Democrat who served in the Kansas Senate in the 1980s and ran an unsuccessful 2020 campaign for Missouri state representative. “It could determine the US Senate” majority party.

History professor Dennis Dickerson said the new juncture is significant given the history of joint lobbying for civil rights legislation and the recent “resurgence of labour activism” that has prompted greater interest in organising workers.

“This is a natural outgrowth of this earlier forging of a much closer alliance between the civil rights movement and labour,” said the former historiographer for the African Methodist Episcopal Church who teaches at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

“Just as the civil rights movement found that having labour allies was important for the advancement of civil rights,” he said, “I think that is correspondingly true now that the labour movement sees a great need to have the alliance of these Black religious communities.”


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The PNBC and AFL-CIO worked together most recently, along with many other religious and labour groups, in a partnership seeking to improve conditions for US Postal Service workers. Peoples called President Joe Biden’s April signing of the Postal Service Reform Act of 2022 an example of “building blocks” as groups like these continue to seek better pay and health benefits for employees of various organisations and companies across the country.

Gray said the newest plans will involve meeting in gathering places with which church attenders and union members are familiar.

“Some of our training, some of our rallying, some of our organising will be split between faith venues or houses of worship and labour halls,” he said. “We want to make that connection between the two and we want these two entities to feel comfortable again as they did in the ’60s.”

At the conclusion of a “Protecting Democracy” town hall on Thursday, Redmond told PNBC members meeting in Orlando that, in the wake of the overturning of Roe v Wade, they should explain to fellow churchgoers that voting in November is crucial because legislation like the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act could be in danger.

“These things could be wiped out with a stroke of a pen from a Supreme Court who has no respect for us,” the AFL-CIO leader said in the livestreamed event. “So we need to constantly remind our members that freedom is not free. Democracy has not been won. And everything is at stake at this election.”

 

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