Tell Biden “No” to genocide: Flyer for the Uncommitted vote in Maryland this weekend; TOPA is safe (for now); join Stomp Out Slumlords and others for a panel on its continued defense; The fight for renter protections in the Maryland General Assembly conti
Tell Biden “No” to genocide: Flyer for the Uncommitted vote in Maryland this weekend
This weekend, Maryland
socialists will be flyering to get out the Uncommitted vote in the
Maryland Democratic Primary. With only six weeks until the election,
socialists will be educating Maryland voters about the importance of
voting Uncommitted as a way to send a message for peace and justice for
Palestinians. The Uncommitted campaign aims to send a message to
President Biden that his voter base does not approve of the US arming
and funding a genocide against the Palestinian people. Maryland
residents and voters can take the pledge to vote Uncommitted by May 14.
Anyone
interested in challenging the current American government’s positioning
towards Israel and Palestine is encouraged to join these canvass
operations.
Saturday, April 6 from 9:30am until 2pm at the Silver Spring Farmers Market: RSVP here.
Canvassers will meet at the Fountain/Plaza in front of Dog Haus
Biergarten for a brief training before walking over to the market.
Accessible off the Red Line at the Silver Spring station as well as
several bus lines.
Sunday, April 7 from 9:30am until 1pm at the Takoma Park Farmers Market: RSVP here. Accessible off the Red Line’s Takoma Park station, with a social afterwards.
Sunday, April 7 from 2 until 5pm at the Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Congregation: RSVP here and get tickets here. Accessible from the Red Line’s Medical Center station.
Join phonebanking operations: The statewide coalition is also running consistent phonebanking operations. Sign up here.
TOPA is safe (for now); join Stomp Out Slumlords and others for a panel on its continued defense — Monday, April 8 at 6:30pm
Mayor Bowser has released her
budget WITHOUT the landlord lobby’s provocative proposals to repeal TOPA
(Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act). But DC tenants should not
celebrate this budget, which contains brutal cuts to rental assistance,
legal aid, and affordable housing programs. Meanwhile, key members of
the council continue to repeat the industry’s lie that strong tenants’
rights hurt the local economy. The fight to protect TOPA must continue
over the long haul, including a campaign of public education.
On
Monday, April 8, Stomp Out Slumlords and the George Washington
University Socialist Action Initiative will be hosting a panel
discussion on TOPA as a part of the citywide fight to defend it.
This panel will be held at 6:30pm at 1957 E St NW Room 113. Dinner and
iftar will be provided and all members of the community are invited — RSVP here. The panel will include:
Amanda Huron, Associate Professor at the University of the District of Columbia and author of Carving Out the Commons: Tenant Organizing and Housing Cooperatives in Washington, D.C
Silvia Ellis, a tenant leader from the Aspen Street Cooperative
Stomp Out Slumlords organizer Rob Wohl
The fight for renter protections in the Maryland General Assembly continues
Earlier this week, renters and
housing advocates rallied at Lawyer’s Mall in Annapolis in support of
two crucial pieces of legislation to protect renters — the Tenant Safety
Act and Good Cause Eviction. Tenant leaders from the Enclave Tenant
Association, CASA and Everyday Canvassing shared powerful stories
demonstrating the urgent need for safe housing conditions and protection
against retaliatory eviction. The rally and subsequent bill hearings received positive coverage in Maryland Matters,
and renters and allies have been flooding the phone lines and inboxes
of Maryland Senate leaders all week urging them to bring both bills up
for a vote. While the Tenant Safety Act was voted favorable with
amendments by the committee on Thursday and now heads to the full
Senate, Good Cause Eviction has not yet received a committee vote.
Maryland residents can use the script
created by the Renters United Maryland coalition to call Senate leaders
urging passage of a Good Cause Eviction and Tenant Safety Act by
Monday.
BRIEFS
Friday Socials on both sides of the Potomac — TODAY, April 5
Hosted by our new Community Builders team, local chapter members will convene at MetroBar
today at 5:30pm. Members of our Street Team will also be tabling to
speak with members and sign up interested attendees for DSA membership.
All members, as well as those interested in DSA, are invited to attend.
On the other side of the river, NoVA
Branch’s regular ‘First Friday’ Gamenite starts at 6:30pm at the Board
Room in Clarendon, VA, a five-minute walk from the Clarendon Metro
Station. Look for the DSA sign or check for the table number in the
#northern-virginia Slack channel. The Board Room provides games to check
out, and people are also welcome to bring their own board or table-top
games. Please RSVP here.
Sign-ups open: DC Labor History Walking Tour — May 11
Sign-ups are now open for the DC Labor History Walking Tour
on Saturday, May 11 at 1pm. The tour will meet at Union Station, then
visit several landmarks that pay tribute to the past and ongoing
struggle of the American working class with a broad range of union
organizers and labor experts as guides. Attendees will learn about the
early rise of labor power, the violent state suppression of workers and
corporate retaliation against unions that still impacts workers today,
how workers fought back and won critical concessions through the Great
Depression, how neoliberal international trade undercuts American labor
and much more. Sign up in advance to receive weather notices, volunteer for the tour, or take part in wheatpasting outreach opportunities beforehand.
Canvass to re-elect DSA-endorsed Janeese Lewis George to the DC Council
Last weekend, Metro DC DSA
members knocked over 2,000 doors for Councilmember Janeese Lewis
George’s campaign along with DC for Democracy. Earlier this week Mayor
Muriel Bowser proposed a budget that would slash programs
like the Pay Equity Fund for early childcare workers and the Emergency
Rental Assistance Program. This budget cycle shows the stark contrast
between what Mayor Bowser wants to provide and what communities need.
That’s why it’s important to defend Janeese, a socialist voice on the
council fighting for workers, renters, families, and communities of
color.
This weekend’s canvass will launch from Shepherd Park Community Center (1425 Jonquil St NW) at 1pm. Sign up here to join or to get updates on future canvasses, and help protect Councilmember Lewis George’s seat!
Arlington Medicare For All Coalition “Healing US” documentary screening and RIP Medical Debt fundraiser — Sunday, April 7
The Arlington M4A Resolution campaign kicks off tomorrow, April 7 at 2:00pm with a screening of the documentary Healing US at Arlington Central Library. Tickets are free but limited, so please RSVP to reserve your tickets. As part of the campaign kickoff, Arlington M4A is also launching a fundraiser for RIP Medical Debt,
a nonprofit organization that buys and cancels medical debt that would
ordinarily be sold to debt collection agencies. Please donate to help
meet their ambitious goal of $1,000 raised, which will help cancel tens
of thousands of dollars of outstanding medical debt in Northern
Virginia.
Come join Stomp Out Slumlords for their next anti-eviction canvass — meeting on April 11, canvass on April 14
Stomp Out Slumlords, Metro DC
DSA’s tenant organizing project, will be holding another meeting of its
anti-eviction program on April 11 at 6pm at MLK Library. RSVP here
to help plan the next several canvasses, solicit volunteers to help
with on-site coordination and administrative support and discuss the
future direction of anti-eviction canvassing. The next anti-eviction canvass
is scheduled for Sunday, April 14. Canvassers will speak with tenants
across the city to spread awareness about their rights as tenants.
Tenants that speak with SOS are twice as likely to go to court and fight
their eviction, so every volunteer makes a big impact. The canvassing
group will meet at the L’Enfant Plaza Metro for a quick training at
1:30pm, and then pair up to canvass followed by a debrief/social at
Sonny’s in Petworth. New members are always welcome and will be paired
with an experienced canvasser to learn the ropes. Get more details at the sign up link,
or email [email protected] to ask questions or find out more ways to
get involved. The canvassing group is always in need of cars, which can
help canvassers get to Metro-inaccessible areas.
Socialist Night School: Environmental Justice Amendment Act — Thursday, April 18
Black, Brown, immigrant and
working-class neighborhoods in DC, particularly those in Wards 5, 7, and
8, are forced to bear a disproportionate burden of pollution from
traffic, industry, waste facilities, freight trains, scrap yards and
countless other sources of harm. The Environmental Justice Amendment Act of 2023, co-written by We Power DC
and introduced by Ward 5 Councilmember Zachary Parker, would represent a
crucial step toward ending racist and dangerous zoning policies in the
District by making it much more difficult to permit or re-permit
polluting facilities in communities that face a disproportionately high
level of environmental and public health stressors. Join this DSA Night School
to hear more from the bill’s advocates about what the EJ Amendment Act
could do for DC residents, how it came to be and how you can help make
sure it becomes law. RSVP to join in person or online.
Montgomery County Branch Monthly Meeting — Sunday, April 7
The Montgomery County Branch
will gather for their monthly meeting this Sunday, April 7 from 2 to 4pm
at the Gaithersburg Regional Library. Those newer to organizing within
the branch are invited to join at 1:45pm for a brief new member
orientation. At the meeting, branch leaders will share updates on their
campaigns for renter protections, funding for restorative justice
coaches in public schools and Palestine solidarity, followed by a
presentation and discussion on the branch’s vision, goals and budget for
2024. After the official meeting, there will be a happy hour at Saint’s
Row Brewing starting at 4:30pm. RSVP here.
NoVA Branch Monthly Organizing Meeting — Thursday, April 11
This month’s NoVA Branch
organizing and planning meeting is scheduled for Thursday, April 11 at
6:30pm at the Sterling Library in Loudoun County and on Zoom. This
month’s theme is the 2024 election. New, old, and prospective members
are invited and encouraged to discuss our current actions and campaigns
as well as any current issues from our communities and allied
organizations. Please RSVP
to this event to access the agenda and the Zoom link. You must be
vaccinated to join all in-person events, and extra hand sanitizer and
face masks are provided at all branch meetings.
Metro DC DSA Street Team monthly meeting — Saturday, April 13
Build power in the DMV and join the
Metro DC DSA Street Team by attending our monthly meeting at the Martin
Luther King Jr. Memorial Library on Saturday, April 13 at 3:30pm. This
event is for anyone interested in getting active in the chapter’s newly
formed Street Team. The Street Team will be hosting and attending
community events to connect Metro DC DSA and its campaigns with the
community in the DMV in order to expand the chapter’s base and build a
more democratic society. Socialists interested in talking to DMV
residents are invited to attend this meeting to help create our mission
statement and develop our team’s culture. All are encouraged to attend
in person on the fourth floor of the MLK Memorial Library, 901 G St NW,
Washington, DC, room 401-D. Contact @Julie (she/her) on the chapter’s
Slack for more information.
Metro DC DSA joins the “All In For DC” Tax Justice campaign
The chapter has signed onto The People’s Tax Plan, an
initiative by the All in For DC campaign to raise taxes on concentrated
wealth, high incomes and corporations while creating a child tax credit
and property tax credit that benefits low and middle-income people. Tax
Justice is more important than ever since Mayor Bowser’s recent budget
proposal that guts essential social programs like the Emergency Rental Assistance Program and the Pay Equity Fund that gives raises to early childhood educators. Sign the petition to tell DC lawmakers we want a tax system by and for the people.
MDC DSA Publications Schedule:Washington Socialist
is on a quarterly schedule. Updates to the current number will be
published on a rolling basis over the next month. Get on record about
your socialism! Contributors to the Washington Socialist can email submissions or questions to [email protected]. Weekly Updates
are scheduled for Fridays — April 12, 19 and 26 this coming month. Want
more INFO ACCESS? Submit your Update suggestions to the tip line, including nominating articles for ESSENTIAL PERSPECTIVES.
Or even better, participate in MDC DSA’s Publications
effort. We write, we edit, we design, we do the tech — there are so
many ways your hand could lighten the load in 2024 and beyond. Check us
out on #publications and let us know what you would like to write, or write about.
COMMUNITY BULLETIN
DC Urban Grower Crash Course | DUG Network
Learn
everything you need to know to not only start a garden, but to grow a
lot of veggies this growing season. The DUG Network — an all-volunteer
local cooperative supporting food justice, urban agriculture and
environmental sustainability — is launching the DC Urban Grower Crash
Course, a two-week long series of eight online classes starting April 8.
All class recordings and slides will be shared with participants. The
series costs $80, with proceeds going to DUG Network’s newsletters and
new website. Learn more and sign up here.
6th Annual Cooperative Jumpstart | Baltimore Roundtable for Economic Democracy
The
Baltimore Roundtable for Economic Democracy (BRED) is hosting its 6th
annual Cooperative Jumpstart at Impact Hub Baltimore on April 13. This
jam-packed day of workshops is for all cooperatively-minded workers
interested in learning about the basics of cooperative structure and
economics, get ideas on how to start or structure their own cooperative
and speak with other experienced worker-owners. Childcare is available.
Register for free here.
Help Rhizome DC Buy a Forever Home
Community
arts space Rhizome DC is financing its forever home. Though they plan
to be at their current Maple Street location indefinitely, it is a
rental situation that does not offer as much permanence and control as
the building they are looking to purchase. Having received a large
building purchase grant from The DC Arts Commission, they are now
fundraising the remaining $400,000 they need. You can donate or learn more
about their soon-to-come community financing model, which is an
alternative way to purchase land without using banking institutions by
accepting loans from community members.
Oral History at the DC History Conference | HumanitiesDC
This
Saturday, April 6, from 1:15 to 3:15pm at the DC History Conference,
HumanitiesDC’s Oral History Collaborative will host a listening and
discussion experience from three recent oral history projects. Join them
at the MLK Library (People’s Archive on the 4th Floor) for deep
listening to Amanda Huron’s oral history project on Federal City
College, Dominique Hazzard’s project on Oxon Run Park, and John A.
Johnson’s interviews with Arnehl Lyon. See the lineup at the DC History
Conference here.
“As
Maryland governor, current GOP senate candidate Larry Hogan flouted
safety warnings and sought to attract massive cargo vessels to
Baltimore’s port — vessels just like the one that crashed into the Key
Bridge last week. His administration’s major public-private partnership
to attract such mega-ships promised that it “reduces the occurrences of crashes, fatalities and injuries among transportation users.” Jacobin
As
Uber and Lyft leave Minneapolis following a vote on minimum wages for
drivers, a driver-owned collective is ready to step into the void. “A
rideshare co-op is launching services in Minneapolis in the coming
weeks. The Drivers Cooperative,
founded in New York City in 2021, touts itself as the world’s first
driver-owned rideshare platform. More than 12,000 drivers have joined
since then, providing more than 300,000 trips in both the Big Apple and
Denver. The co-op’s move into the Minneapolis market is in response to Uber’s and Lyft’s threats to end services on May 1 following a new ordinance passed by the City Council that would boost driver pay.” (CBS News) via Streetsblog
“Over 20 Prince George’s County elected officials, both current and former, have signed onto a resolution calling for a cease-fire in Gaza.
Their intent is for the County Council to vote on the resolution,
adding more pressure for President Joe Biden (D) and Congress to change
their stance.” Del.
Gabriel Acevero (D-District 39) introduced the state Assembly
resolution calling for a cease-fire; it is struggling but may benefit
from the possible extension of the Assembly session. Washington Examiner via Maryland Reporter
“You
opened the door to the rise of democracy, equality, and freedom,”
Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoğlu said following his re-election. “You
ignited hope at the ballot box.” Common Dreams
Billionaire Predicts Four-Day Work Week Coming A
hedge fund billionaire opines that AI will bring a four-day work week,
sooner rather than later — in part because, he says, not much work gets
done on Fridays anyway. He adds, though, that if the markets stay open
Friday he won’t give his traders that extra day off. Humanitarianism is
on the march. From CNBC.
Shouldn’t Every American Enjoy the Luxury of a Roof? A
frightening share of our richest don’t necessarily think so, Sam
Pizzigati recounts. ‘For America’s poorest, meanwhile, “luxury” has come
to mean keeping a roof over your head. The number of Americans
chronically homeless… has been climbing since 2016 — in what Jeff
Olivet, the director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, likens
to a “game of really vicious musical chairs.” The United States, he
explains, has “an incredible deficit of affordable housing units,” with
only one unit available for every three extremely low-income renters.’
From Inequality.org via Portside.
ESSENTIAL PERSPECTIVES are articles and opinion pieces of
interest to DMV leftists but not, generally, appearing in local media.
They should have links without paywalls. Readers are invited to submit
candidates at our tip line.
The flame of thought, the magnificence of art, the wonder of discovery, and the audacity of invention all belong to revolutionary periods when humanity, tired of its chains, shatters them and stops inebriated to breathe the breeze of a vast and free horizon.
- Virgilia D'Andrea
Sent via ActionNetwork.org.
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