Rev. Barber: ‘Our deadline is victory’

The Poor People’s Campaign and progressive members of Congress vow to continue the fight for the Build Back Better Act.

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SOURCEInequality.org
Demonstrators gather for the Moral March on Manchin and McConnell, a rally held by the Poor People's Campaign, outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. on June 23, 2021. (Photo: Caroline Brehman/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

In a defiant Christmas Eve press rally, the Poor People’s Campaign and other progressive leaders vowed to continue to fight for the Build Back Better Act, despite opposition from West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin.

“Senator Manchin is playing a Caesar or at least a King Herod in today’s Christmas story,” said Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, a co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign. “He’s saying there’s no room in this democracy for the 140 million poor and low-income Americans, including the 700,000 West Virginians who’ve been locked into poverty and low wages under his watch. He wants to limit poor children’s lives just so he can hold on to his power and wealth. On Christmas Eve, doesn’t this indeed sound like Herod?”

The Poor People’s Campaign has held numerous rallies and acts of civil disobedience over the past year in support of the Build Back Better Act, while acknowledging that the legislation would be just a first step towards a moral economy.

Campaign co-chair Rev. Dr. William Barber II zoomed into the Christmas Eve press event from a church in Charleston, the capital of Manchin’s state. He introduced several local affected people and community leaders who lambasted their senator and others who’ve stood in the way of the landmark public investment bill.

“We don’t have a scarcity of resources,” said Alexandra Gallo, a community activist from Charleston. “We have a scarcity of will to address inequality.”

Barber also introduced two members of Congress, Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who were instrumental in getting the Build Back Better Act through the House. Jayapal took particularly intense heat over the past several months as she used her caucus’s power to prevent her own party’s leadership from holding scheduled votes on the bill until progressives won certain concessions.

With support from every Democrat in the Senate needed for passage, Manchin’s recent announcement that he won’t vote for the bill is a major setback. But Jayapal, who has a history in the immigrant rights movement, remains positive.

“If the things we’re fighting for were easy,” she said at the press event, “we would’ve gotten them a long time ago. And because we’re organizers, we don’t give up. Our strength comes in these moments. Our job as progressives is to push on the borders of what others think is possible.”

Barber, who’s relentlessly criticized Manchin for blocking the bill, brought up recent news reports that the senator has privately told colleagues that parents would spend Child Tax Credit money on drugs. “Doesn’t he understand that opioid use is connected to poverty?” he asked.

A year-long extension of this tax credit, which has slashed U.S. child poverty by an estimated 40 percent, is a key component of the legislation, along with other major investments in child care, home care for the elderly, public housing, universal pre-K, expansion of Medicare to cover dental services, clean energy jobs, and more.

Rep. Lee shared that she finds a lot of hope in Christmas. “It reminds me that Jesus Christ was born homeless, born in a manger. But it also reminds me that his life was about fighting for the most vulnerable, fighting for justice.”

“Senator Manchin’s comments in opposition to Build Back Better were incredibly disappointing,” she continued. “But we’re not giving up. Because when we fight, we win.”

The Poor People’s Campaign is planning to mobilize a surge of calls to Manchin’s office in early January and, while not giving details, Barber hinted that the day after the country marks the 1st anniversary of the January 6 “insurrection,” the Campaign will be organizing a “resurrection.”

“We would’ve loved to have gotten Build Back Better and voting rights passed earlier this year,” Barber said. “But our deadline is victory.”

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IPS Global Economy Project Director Sarah Anderson’s current work includes research, writing, and networking on issues related to the impact of international trade, finance, and investment policies on inequality, sustainability, and human rights. Sarah is also a well-known expert on executive compensation, as the lead author of 16 annual “Executive Excess” reports that have received extensive media coverage. In 2009, she served on an advisory committee to the Obama administration on bilateral investment treaties. In 2000, she served on the staff of the bipartisan International Financial Institutions Advisory Commission (“Meltzer Commission”), commissioned by the U.S. Congress to evaluate the World Bank and IMF. Sarah is also a board member of Jubilee USA Network and a co-author of the books Field Guide to the Global Economy (New Press, 2nd edition, 2005) and Alternatives to Economic Globalization (Berrett-Koehler, 2nd edition, 2004). Prior to coming to IPS in 1992, Sarah was a consultant to the U.S. Agency for International Development (1989-1992) and an editor for the Deutsche Presse-Agentur (1988). She holds a Masters in International Affairs from The American University and a BA in Journalism from Northwestern University.

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