Why the Poor People’s Campaign 2022 Matters

EDITOR’S NOTE:&nbspOn Saturday, June 18, tens of thousands of poor and low-income people gathered with allies on Pennsylvania Avenue to lift the voices of those most directly impacted by poverty, racism, militarism, ecological devastation, the denial of healthcare and the distorted moral narrative of religious nationalism. Bishop William J. Barber II, cochair of the Poor People’s Campaign, which organized the march and assembly, gave the following address to introduce those who shared their stories and plans to reconstruct American democracy.

Today, on this land where our First Nation brothers and sisters first lived free, we are gathered because there are unnecessarily 140 million poor and low wealth people in this country. That’s 43 percent of the nation, 52 percent of our children, 66 million white people, 26 million black people, 68 percent of Latinos and Natives, and more than 60 percent of Asians who are entangled in the unjust weeds of poverty and bound up by the interlocking realities of systemic racism, refusal to pay a living minimum wage, bad tax policy, ecological devastation, denial of health care, the war economy and the false moral narrative of religious nationalism and white supremacy. This level of poverty in this nation—the richest nation in the history of the world—constitutes a moral crisis and a fundamental failure of the polices of greed.

These numbers and interlocking injustices are not just about debates between the right, moderates, and the left. No, this language is too puny for what we face. They represent a crisis of democracy and a shared failure to center poor and low wealth people, the greatest moral leaders and survivors in our society and the bellwether of our well-being.

But there is something else that is even more grotesque: the regressive policies which produce 140 million poor and low wealth people are not benign. They are forms of policy murder. We know that prior to the pandemic, poor people died at a rate of 700 a day, 250,000 a year. Poor people have been 2 to 5 times more likely to die from Covid during this pandemic so far, and we know this can’t simply be explained by vaccination status. It’s related to the discrimination in our policies toward poor and low-wealth people.

On Monday of this week, the National Academy of Sciences said more than 330,000 lives could’ve been saved if we simply had a policy of universal healthcare for all people, which is a human right that should never be connected to your job but to your humanity.

Because the many of people you see here today know these realities, this pain, this injustice and this death from personal experience, we knew that we must gather here, we must have a moral meeting in the streets. We are not unlike our forerunners who sought to mend every flaw in this nation.

The abolitionists, those who fought against lynching, those who have stood for families, those who have stood for labor rights, those who have stood for civil rights and women’s rights and LGBTQ rights and the right for women to control their own bodies; those who have stood for peace in the time of war, those who have demanded that children be treated right, and those who have demanded just immigration policies have had to come to these same streets and openly expose moral crises throughout our history.

This sacred moral procession has been required to exorcise the demons of greed and hate and racism in our society. They’ve all had to recognize that there comes a time we must have a moral meeting. Such is this moment today.

This is why we are here, and we won’t be silent or unseen or unheard anymore.

We come to this Mass Poor People’s and Low Wage Worker’s Assembly and Moral March on Washington and to the Polls because we must meet this moment. We have to meet in the streets and at the ballot box and in the political suites of this nation. We have cry loud from the pulpits and in the public square.


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