FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
New England Million Worker March Committee
c/o USWA L. 8751 Boston School Bus Drivers & Monitors
25 Colgate Rd., Roslindale, MA 02131
617-524-3507 • mwm@bostonschoolbusunion.org • www.bostonschoolbusunion.org
MILLION WORKER MARCH ON WASHINGTON
www.MillionWorkerMarch.org
Media Contacts:
Steve Gillis, Pres. USWA L. 8751 - 617-524-3507
Peter Cook 617-522-6626
Coretta Scott King And Martin Luther King III
Endorse Million Worker March Set For Oct.17
MLK III To Speak at Workers’ Rights and Antiwar Rally
at the Lincoln Monument Where His Father Stood in 1963
Coretta Scott King and Martin Luther King III have endorsed the Million Worker March
on Washington on October 17. Plans are underway for Martin Luther King III to stand
in the footsteps of his father at the Lincoln Memorial on October 17 and address the
mass mobilization. He is making every effort to attend and the declaration of support
by Coretta Scott King will be presented.
The Million Worker March will also feature presentations by Reverend E. Rendall Osburn,
Executive Vice President of the Southern Christian Leadership Foundation, and a close
collaborator of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and by Dick Gregory, the noted
social activist and associate of Dr. King.
The call for the Million Worker March was initiated by International Longshore Workers
Union Local 10. The presence of the family of Dr. King is a fitting moral and political
expression of historical continuity.
On September 21, 1967, Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. made a moving presentation at
the hall of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 10. The ILWU Dispatcher
reported on September 29, 1967, “Referring to labor history, King noted that the civil
rights sit-in movement was actually invented by the labor movement, … and we have to keep on
sitting-in at factory gates, at the steps of Congress and even in front of the White House.”
Dr. King was made an honorary member of the ILWU Local 10. At the presentation, Dr. King
appeared with William “Bill” Chester, who had become the first major African-American
official of the ILWU as International Vice President, a direct consequence of the civil
rights movement’s infusion within the labor movement itself.
On October 15, 1967, Dr. King spoke at the Oakland ‘Coliseum to be followed by performances
of Harry Belafonte and Joan Baez in launching a seven-city concert tour in support of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference.
The linkage of the struggle for civil rights with that of the labor movement and of
opposition to the devastating war on Vietnam led Dr. King to march and mobilize on behalf
of the sanitation workers on strike in Memphis, Tennessee.
Dr. King announced a Poor People’s Campaign that would culminate in Poor People’s March on
Washington with demands for an Economic Bill of Rights guaranteeing employment and a living
wage, national economic support for those unable to work, and decent housing for all.
He was assassinated on April 4, 1968 as he prepared a march in support of sanitation and other
municipal employees.
The Mission Statement of the Million Worker March declares:
“Thirty-six years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. summoned working people across America to a
Poor People’s March on Washington to inaugurate ‘a war on poverty at home.’ ‘The United States
government,’ he proclaimed, ‘is one of the greatest purveyors of violence in the world. …America
is at a crossroads in history and it is critically important for us as a nation and society to
choose a new path and to move on it with resolution and courage.’”
Working people are under siege while new wars of devastation are launched at the expense of the
poor everywhere. The Million Worker March will revive and expand a great struggle for fundamental
change, as we forge together a social, economic and political movement that will transform America.
Buses from the Boston area will depart at 10:30 pm on Saturday, Oct. 16 from the parking lot at
Roxbury Community College.
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