The
Poor People’s Campaign witnessed with heavy hearts the events of
January 6th, when a mob emboldened by hate, lies, and racism laid siege
to the US Capitol and other state capitols across the country in an
attempt to subvert our democracy. This
attack was carried out at the behest of a narcissistic President and
his enablers, who have followed a divisive political strategy that is as
old as the deconstructionists of the 1870s and the Southern strategy of
the 1960s. We know that the only antidote to this poison in our body
politic is a moral fusion coalition committed to reconstructing
democracy.
Our
intersectional movement has been met with arrest while engaged in
non-violent protest — praying, singing and peacefully marching. The
people who stormed the Capitol on January 6th were not protesting but
attempting to overthrow democratic government by mob rule. The fact that
these violent rioters were able to break into the Capitol should alarm
us all and cause us to question the deference they were given by law
enforcement and security forces. This is eerily reminiscent of how law
enforcement has often been used to protect violent and racist actors
defending the status quo while suppressing non-violent social justice
movements.
As
a state-based national movement that has nonviolently protested at
state capitols and the US Capitol, calling out policy violence and
pushing for a just moral agenda for and with poor and low-income people,
moral leaders, activists and organizers across race, geography, issue
area and other lines of division, we must point out that:
- This did
not just happen. For years extremist politicians who call themselves
Republicans have sown the winds of division and lies; now the country is
reaping the whirlwind of chaos. We call on our lawmakers and justice
system to hold President Trump, senators, Congress persons, and all
elected and appointed officials who had a role in these heinous attacks
accountable for their actions, swiftly and to the full extent of the
law.
- These
politicians found time and resources to plan, support, and continue an
attack on democracy (even after it turned deadly) but have not found
time and resources to expand health care, enact a just stimulus, raise
wages, or protect the people they are called to serve.
- They push the people into a rage rooted in racism but have refused to push efforts to address systemic racism.
- They are
responsible for the five deaths that occurred in the attack, but their
policy inaction is also in large part responsible for the inept response
to Covid that has caused nearly 400,000 deaths.
- They have spent more time lying to the people than lifting the people, especially the least of these of this nation.
Such
violence always erupts when there is the greatest possibility for
change. Throughout history, Native and Indigenous people have seen this
kind of mob violence. Black people have seen it. Women have seen it.
Asians have seen it. Latino farm workers have seen it. Workers standing
for labor rights have seen it. What we saw this week is not the dream of
America, but it has too often been the practice of America.
This
week’s violence is a reaction to record turnout of people of every
race, income, region, sexuality, creed and conviction who voted for
candidates that pledged to expand health care, raise wages, address
systemic racism and poverty, in the general election and the Georgia
run-off. It took place as we witnessed cracks in the Southern strategy,
which has kept people divided by race for decades. This was an assault
rooted in a refusal to believe the legitimacy of an election where
people of color and poor and low wealth people united to vote out an
extremist President and Senate majority.
Lastly,
we must not confuse a failed attempt to subvert democracy with popular
uprisings to reclaim government for the people. This riot exposes the
MAGA movement as a fake populism that serves elites. It is a mistake to
scapegoat poor people, especially poor white people for what happened on
January 6. Press reports of the rioters included business owners,
executives, and multi-millionaires.
At
a time when something new is breaking through the hate, we cannot let
this stop the growth of a moral fusion movement. The Poor People’s
Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival is committed to continuing
to build a fusion movement that brings the 140 million poor and
low-income people of this country together across race and other
historic divisions. This is what will protect our democracy and
democratic institutions and build a stronger nation.
Forward together, not one step back!
Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II
President, Repairers of the Breach
Co-Chair, Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival
Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis
Director, Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice
Co-Chair, Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival
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