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An Un-Permitted, Almost Completely
Peaceful March
Kensington Welfare Rights Union Takes to NYC During RNC
by Sahm
Contractor
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photo, KWRU |
Cheri Honkala was the last orator of the rally. One wouldn't expect a
throaty, booming oration from her. Honkala is a short, slender woman in
her early forties. She spent most of the bouncing her baby in her arms.
But when it finally came her turn to speak, she put her child and her
tender appearance aside and delivered a thundering little address. She
leaned into the podium and delivered her lines in a quick succession of
soft shouts. "Today we march past the U.N. for intervention for our
brothers and sisters in all parts of the world… 18,000 dead from no
health care! More than died in Iraq! More than died on 9/11!"
Honkala is the national coordinator of the Poor People's Economic
Human Rights Campaign, a collection of poverty advocacy groups that
demonstrated in midtown Manhattan on a balmy afternoon, August 31. The
coalition of over 60 antipoverty organizations spans the nation. But the
hub of this alliance is located in the gritty North Philadelphia
neighborhood of Kensington. Located just minutes north of the luxury
condos and fine dining of Old City, the neighborhood is a shell of what
was once a center for industry and shipping. According to the Census
Bureau, Kensington is in the poorest zip-code in Pennsylvania. It is a
place of rock-bottom property values and hopes.
In the midst of this decay, Honkala founded the Kensington Welfare
Rights Union (KWRU) in 1991 while living as a homeless mother.
"Every night my son and I would go into an abandoned
building," she said over the phone, "and there was no room in
the shelters so we would try to stay warm and hope that we wouldn't
freeze to death come the next morning. It's those memories, it's the
memories of having to figure out how to eat, of having to say 'no' to my
little boy when I couldn't [afford] to buy him things for his birthday
or the holidays. These are the kind of things that are the personal
reasons why I always stay involved in this fight."
Over the past 13 years, Honkala has run an organization that benefits
the poor through advocacy programs, support groups, lobbying, and public
demonstration. Her most publicized exploit was in 2000 during the
Republican National Convention (RNC) in Philadelphia. That year, she led
a march that drew national press attention. The "March for Economic
Human Rights" did not have a permit from the city, but thousands of
activists and union members nevertheless walked down Broad Street to the
convention's doorstep at the First Union Center. For this year's
Republican National Convention, Honkala was trying to duplicate that
feat, but she feared that New York would not be as kind to her and her
followers.
"We may be arrested, but God's on our side!" she says,
wrapping up her speech. She had warned over the phone that she would
march and, lacking a permit, would probably get arrested. Now, Honkala
and the coterie of older activists on stage begin to file off the
platform and through a gauntlet of policemen on the street. They are
presumably headed toward a nearby police van where they will be cuffed
and taken away. But, curiously, as they approach the van, it starts to
move ahead of the marchers. The group proceeds down 47th Street, with
Honkala standing front and center behind the lead banner.
The audience at the rally, meanwhile, doesn't know what to do. Only a
few wear the KWRU t-shirts and most don't seem to be there for poverty
at all. International A.N.S.W.E.R. is there with pamphlets on the war,
as is the National Organization for Women and the Party for Socialism
and Liberation, all looking to get in on the protest du jour. The
satirists, "Billionaires for Bush," are there in tuxedos and
top hats as are a group of women with red wigs wearing red bras outside
their shirts. A local CBS reporter found all of this ostentation stale,
and could be overheard saying with a shake of his head, "I've had
my fill of political speech."
Eventually, the crowd warily begins to file behind Honkala and the
leaders, spilling onto 47th Street. The police van never fills with
protestors, but instead continues to move in front of Honkala and the
leaders, threatening to scoop up anyone out of line. As the march starts
down Second Avenue, police wall the crowd away from one side of the
avenue, and the line of dissidents can be seen stretching back two
blocks. It is a healthy crowd of a couple thousand congregated, but it
is certainly not the 10,000 one KWRU organizer predicted would show up.
Throughout, the policemen are accommodating, but intimidating. Their
leader, Captain John Codiglia, can be seen joking with reporters and
checking in concernedly to see how the marchers in wheel chairs are
doing. But the van always remains, and a helicopter is constantly
buzzing by overhead. At one point, a man in a navy jacket with the
letters "NYPD" and "TARU" (Technical Assistance
Response Unit) emblazoned on the back can be seen photographing the
crowd, and he draws stares.
The KWRU marchers, bussed up from Philadelphia, are located toward
the front of the line forming a protective barrier around their children
and the disabled marchers. An older woman, Esther Ortiz, is there to
"let them know that I'm a woman with cancer and lung problems and
my cards don't cover my medications," adding, "My story needs
to be heard." Heather, a young social worker, echoes that same
refrain about visibility. "I need my family and the rest of the
world to know we're not going away."
The idea of visibility comes up repeatedly with Honkala and the other
marchers. Visibility is the inherent in most protests; communicating
with the public in a democracy can sway voters and get things done. But
visibility is a particularly poignant issue for the KWRU and the poor.
The politics of Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty," with
programs like Medicaid targeted directly at the indigent, is ancient
history. Anti-poverty policy and rhetoric have lost the spotlight amidst
the "Reagan Revolution" and the Clinton "Third Way"
presidency. Mainstream Democratic Party politics today reach out to the
poor, certainly. But the programs that benefit the poor are also
targeted at a broad swath of the middle class. On John Kerry's website
the page on poverty lists remedies such as job creation and expanded
health care coverage, proposals the impact a huge chunk of America.
Programs expressly targeted toward the poor are few and far between.
Honkala feels let down by the Democratic Party. "I don't think
Democrats are any better because it was under a Democratic president
that we produced welfare reform," she says. Still, the economic
policies of the Bush administration have her particularly irked.
"Four years ago, we organized a massive march in Philadelphia
because we weren't surviving what was happening in the country. Now the
situation is ten times worse." Indeed recent surveys have shown
that the poverty rate, descending for decades from around 20 percent to
11 percent has climbed to nearly 13 percent in recent years.
According to the Census Bureau, the number of Americans living in
poverty or lacking health insurance rose for the third straight year in
2003. The national poverty rate, measured by the bureau in August, is
12.5 percent, reflecting a job market that has failed to match otherwise
strong economic growth. The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (USBLS)
reports that as of September, the unemployment rate, although down from
its national ten-year high of 6.3 percent in June of 2003, is now at 5.4
percent, the decline occurring almost completely during the second half
of last year. There are still 35.9 million jobless people, says the
Census Bureau, which reports that the hardest hit by poverty have been
women, who for the first time since 1999, saw their earnings decline,
and children. By December of 2003, 12.9 million children lived in
poverty. As of August, the number of people without health insurance
grew during 2003, to 45 million, reflecting an increase to 15.6 percent
from 15.2 percent since 2002. While the median household income remained
stagnant at $43,318, the rate of poverty also rose .4 percent since that
time.
Amidst a campaign focused on Iraq and middle class job losses,
anti-poverty groups may have little choice but to hit the streets to get
their message out. In terms of visibility, the march was a partial
success. It got plenty of coverage in liberal media, including a
favorable profile in the online magazine Salon. But overall, the
march was drowned out by the convention speeches in Madison Square
Garden. Moreover, an incident at the end of the march largely blunted
the protest's message.
After the marchers had proceeded peacefully all the way down to 23rd
Street, and then back uptown toward the Garden at 34th Street, a scuffle
broke out at the end of the demonstration between a plain clothed cop on
a motorcycle and a protestor. Officer William Sample was knocked off his
scooter and beaten unconscious on camera. His attacker slipped away
unidentified, and the mystery of his identity dominated local news
coverage of the rally. The name of the alleged attacker is Jamal Holiday
of East Harlem. He was caught the next day, in the same clothes he had
worn the night before.
As the fight was breaking outside, inside the RNC the there was no
mention of poverty as John McCain and Rudolf Guliani harped on 9/11 and
Iraq. Nevertheless, Honkala marched, and she never betrayed a hint of
desperation. Near the end of her speech, standing in the shadow of the
Trump World Tower, she sounded bold. "We feel that it's up to us,
those being impacted in this country. We have to get in the fight for
our own survival. We need to begin a movement calling for an end to
unemployment hunger and homelessness. And then we're going to see some
changes in this country, when we have millions and millions of people
saying that they will no longer tolerate Democrats and Republicans
abandoning the majority of people that live in the country."
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