On May 1, 2014 the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee
Rights (ICIRR) and Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
organized a large number of trained volunteers and staff to act as
"parade marshals" of the traditional May Day march in Chicago. Marshals
were used to control the event: determining who could move, when and
where, and what messages would be be visible. Marshals surrounded
people, physically pushing or blocking movement, and pulled down several
banners. Marshals also visibly directed police officers to kettle in
and block specific groups of autonomous participants. During this
ongoing harassment, immigrant rights activist Jose "Zé" Garcia Puga was
physically blocked and verbally assaulted by groups of marshals from
ICIRR, SEIU and Fight For 15. Zé debated with the marshals and asked to
move freely within the space of the event. Zé also informed the marshals
of their status as a person under deportation proceedings. Marshals
restrained Zé and the police arrested them along with Ann-Meredith
Wootton.
Two groups were the main targets of police-marshal collaboration: an
autonomous group gathered around banners denouncing the militarization
of the border, and a contingent affiliated with the Industrial Workers
of the World (IWW) feeder march. Cynically, ICIRR, SEIU, & Fight For
15 coopted the anarchist history of May Day, parading pictures of Emma
Goldman and Lucy Parsons, both anarchists, and at the same time
creating fear and directing police attention towards "anarchist-looking"
participants. The appropriation and policing of the May Day movement
represents a serious injury, and perpetuates a history of violence that
we in Chicago know all too well.
ICIRR has a well-documented history of calling the police against
activists who are outspoken critics of their organization, with full
knowledge that some of these activists were under deportation
proceedings at the time. Three such well-documented attacks were
experienced by organizers from the Moratorium on Deportations Campaign
(MDC). On May Day, Zé was carrying flyers and a small banner accusing
ICIRR of deceiving public opinion about Comprehensive Immigration Reform
(CIR) legislation, and of promoting this project for their own
political and financial gain. Police collaboration of any kind cannot be
tolerated; in this case, it was also politically-motivated to silence
dissenting and critical voices.
This pattern illustrates a larger, systemic crisis provoked by an NGO
bureaucracy that has installed itself as the "leaders" of social
movements. On May Day we witnessed what ICIRR are officially defending
in their statement as "standard protocol" for coalition-building:
co-opting emancipatory movements, undermining the collective potential
for political expression, kettling our bodies and the social
imagination, and resorting to direct repression to ensure a
predetermined order. These organizations create specific types of
activists and scripts of social resistance. They prevent people from
organizing structures of existence and resistance beyond the logic of
corporate patronage and electoral politics.
We denounce the co-optation of people’s autonomous struggles.
Spontaneous, dynamic, unencumbered social interactions -- free from
paternalistic, supervised, and threatening “leaders” -- are the soul of
any genuine process that we can enact in order to create the conditions
that can transform our lives from a state of hopelessness to an arena of
empowerment. We denounce the policing of social movements.
We invite ICIRR member organizations, as well as rank and file
members in various branches of SEIU and Fight for 15, to reflect within
their communities and take action against their own leadership. We call
on communities everywhere to refuse to collaborate with either
organization, as a first step in establishing collective self-defense
against the police state within our movements. We invite communities to
take their own actions against sell-out, co-opting and top-down
organizations that restrict possibilities for political expression and
autonomous organizing.
This letter is formal notice that the "standard protocol" will not be tolerated by our communities. We invite any individual, group, or organization concerned to sign the petition. We make the following demands:
1. ICIRR and SEIU should assume responsibility for police collaboration against activists.
2. ICIRR and SEIU should issue a formal apology for co-opting the anarchist history of May Day.
3. SEIU and ICIRR should refrain from any future role in
coordinating or organizing within the May Day Movement, and should
refrain from marshalling political expression.
4. ICIRR should give full disclosure as to the ways they stand to
benefit financially and politically from promoting Comprehensive
Immigration Reform (CIR) proposals, and a full account of the ways they
have used police to silence outspoken critics of this legislation. We
demand an immediate end to the misinformation campaign around CIR.