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From Seattle to Washington After last fall's anti-WTO protests rocked Seattle and the world, activists asked, "What next?" The answer is a week of teach-ins, lobbying, ma

John Nichols

April 5, 2000

From Seattle to Washington After last fall’s anti-WTO protests rocked Seattle and the world, activists asked, “What next?” The answer is a week of teach-ins, lobbying, marches, rallies and nonviolent civil disobedience leading up to the April 16-17 spring meeting of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

Direct Action Network

, Global Exchange

,

50 Years Is Enough

, the Alliance for Democracy

and the Rainforest Action Network

took the lead in coordinating efforts by more than 400 organizations ranging from the Progressive Librarians Guild

to DC Lesbian Avengers

to Anabaptists for Community Transformation

. After initial hesitation, the AFL-CIO endorsed the A16 action…. “We’re going to participate in every teach-in, every rally, every action we can be a part of,” says Steph Sherer

, a 24-year-old San Diego college student, who is active in the local anti-WTO group. With other activists, she raised money from churches and peace organizations to help fly fifteen local people of modest means to DC, convinced a documentary filmmaker to follow the group, arranged to update a website (activistsandiego.org) daily, set up press conferences and organized an April 24 forum at San Diego’s City College. “We’re determined to get our message out–not just in Washington but at home,” she says. “We want people to know that the demonstrators in Washington are their friends and neighbors.”

Pastors and Plumber The April 9 Jubilee 2000

rally to cancel debts owed by poor nations will have an international flavor, with speeches by Archbishop Oscar Rodriguez

of Honduras, AFL-CIO vice president Linda Chavez-Thompson

, Sojourners editor Jim Wallis

and Friends of the Earth

international president Ricardo Navarro

. Singer Dar Williams

and the African band Waza Bakula

will perform before the crowd forms a human chain on the National Mall to symbolize the chains of debt. Monday morning citizen lobbyists will deliver handmade “chains” of paper and cloth to Congressional offices. On Tuesday the Religious Working Group on the World Bank and the IMF

will mark the biblical “Stations of the Cross” with dramatizations of economic oppression at downtown DC locations.

No Blank Check for China Union buses roll into DC April 12 for the labor movement’s rally on Capitol steps against Bill Clinton’s plan to grant permanent most-favored-nation status to China. Expect major contingents from Teamsters

, Steelworkers

and UNITE

. The rally will accompany a day of lobbying on the Hill, where there is already support from the Congressional Progressive Caucus

, which says that permanent MFN for China would be “a serious defeat for the cause of worker rights.”

Don’t Leave Home Without It The booklet “False Profits: Who wins, who loses, when the IMF, World Bank and WTO come to town” is packed with info, contacts and a glossary. Get it from Campaign for Labor Rights:

(541) 344-5410…. Check out the Washington mobilization website (www.a16.org) and a new website from Representative Bernie Sanders

(http://bernie.house.gov/legislation/economy) that has useful policy information. Also on the site is a transcript of Sanders’s clashes with Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers. Sanders told him during a Congressional appearance in late March that “the IMF as an institution is in desperate need of some structural adjustment of its own.”

Bad Bonds Neil Watkins

of the Center for Economic and Policy Research

has a DC souvenir for activists: Sample legislation that commits local governments, universities and other institutions to stop buying World Bank bonds. “The bank tells developing countries: Change or we’ll stop giving you money,” he says. “We want municipalities to tell the Bank: Change or we’ll stop giving you money.” Berkeley’s City Council passed the model legislation on March 28.

Grounds Against Starbucks Starbucks stockholders booed Global Exchange

‘s Medea Benjamin

when she accused the chain of purveying sweatshop coffee and urged the chain to buy Fair Trade coffee beans, for which farmers earn living-wage pay. Now Global Exchange is organizing April 13 “Roast Starbucks” demonstrations in LA, San Francisco, Buffalo and two dozen other cities. In Washington activists will march to the Starbucks nearest the World Bank HQ. “Starbucks will be known as the purveyors of sweatshop coffee,” says Benjamin.

Speaking of Sweatshops Fresh from college sit-ins and a hunger strike at Purdue, student activists will join the “Sweatshops: Globalizing the Resistance” teach-in April 14 at DC’s St. Stephen’s Church, featuring speeches by Berta Lujan

of Mexico, Marina Rios

of El Salvador and Chie Abad

, who worked in a Gap sweatshop in Saipan. “We want to give antisweatshop activists a chance to meet people they’re working in solidarity with,” says Melinda St. Louis

of Campaign for Labor Rights

.

Carnival Against Capital “Some people call it a Festival of Resistance. Some call it a Carnival Against Capital,” says Direct Action Network

‘s Alli Starr

of the April 16-17 World Bank/IMF protests. The streets will be filled with art and revolution–everything from Palm Sunday services to lockdowns. There’s going to be dancing and singing, puppets and props. And the sea turtles are coming back, just as in Seattle. TV Nation‘s Michael Moore

will emcee Sunday’s rally, but most action will be offstage. Trained at the convergence headquarters on Florida Avenue, activists will step out with “mass movements for mass movements” dance steps. The Harmonic Intervention

chorus will sing a June Jordan

poem that goes, “We have come too far/We won’t turn around/We’ll flood the streets with justice/We are freedom bound.”

John NicholsTwitterJohn Nichols is a national affairs correspondent for The Nation. He has written, cowritten, or edited over a dozen books on topics ranging from histories of American socialism and the Democratic Party to analyses of US and global media systems. His latest, cowritten with Senator Bernie Sanders, is the New York Times bestseller It's OK to Be Angry About Capitalism.


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