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An Evening with Dolores Huerta
Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers Union, talks about organizing, politics and winning political power in Fresno and the Central Valley. Huerta was the speaker at the Central Valley Progressive PAC fund-raiser on September 27, 2015. Photo below by Howard Watkins.
Dolores Huerta Joins the Central Valley Progressive PAC
By Mike Rhodes
“Whose got the power? We have the power!” That chant rang out loud and clear from the 200+ attendees of the CVPPAC Evening with Dolores Huerta. “What kind of power? People power!” Huerta, who led the chant, declared the night a “historic moment” and part of an “electoral revolution” in Fresno and the Central Valley.
Pam Whalen, president of the CVPPAC, said, “This was by far the largest and most exciting event our group has ever held. It shows that we are building momentum and that there is optimism about the future. As Huerta said, “Si Se Puede” (Yes we Can!)”
In her speech, Huerta said, “We’ve got to learn how to do this work at the grassroots level so we can get (progressives) on those school boards, get on the City Councils, get good people elected to the state legislature and Congress.” She continued, “Some people used to say, back in the 60s and 70s, that if you want to get ahead you have to leave the Central Valley. Well, you know what? Some of us have to stay here and fight for social justice. You know, this is not a poor area. Our people are poor because all of the money is on the top, and none of that money gets down to the working people and the people who really create the wealth in the Central Valley.”
The purpose of the CVPPAC is to develop an electoral strategy that will get progressives elected to local offices. Right now, the group is gearing up for the 2016 elections and has a close eye on several races, including the Fresno Unified School District trustees, City Council, the mayoral race and the Board of Supervisors. Whalen says that “events like this show that we can build a labor/community alliance and get the support needed that will succeed in shifting the balance of power in this town.”
Huerta, speaking at the Sept. 27 event, said that by focusing on electoral politics in the Bakersfield area they have won 11 elections. “We now have a majority of progressives on the Arvin City Council; three of them are under the age of 25. We have taken over the water board, we have taken over the recreation board and we have our people on four different school boards.”
She said that there were only 40 farmworkers who traveled throughout the country when the United Farm Workers union started the grape boycott, which brought the grape industry to the bargaining table. Observing the large crowd at the event, Huerta said she believed that it would be possible for progressives here to rise up and win political power.
Winning political power in Fresno requires progressives to not only talk the talk, but walk the walk. Huerta did just that when she handed Whalen a check for her membership in the CVPPAC and encouraged others to do the same.
The next Central Valley Progressive PAC meeting will take place on Saturday, Nov. 14, at 3:30 p.m. at the Fresno Center for Nonviolence, 1584 N. Van Ness Ave. For more information, contact Pam Whalen at 559-994-9390 or pamwhalen [at] comcast.net or visit http://www.cvppac.org.
By Mike Rhodes
“Whose got the power? We have the power!” That chant rang out loud and clear from the 200+ attendees of the CVPPAC Evening with Dolores Huerta. “What kind of power? People power!” Huerta, who led the chant, declared the night a “historic moment” and part of an “electoral revolution” in Fresno and the Central Valley.
Pam Whalen, president of the CVPPAC, said, “This was by far the largest and most exciting event our group has ever held. It shows that we are building momentum and that there is optimism about the future. As Huerta said, “Si Se Puede” (Yes we Can!)”
In her speech, Huerta said, “We’ve got to learn how to do this work at the grassroots level so we can get (progressives) on those school boards, get on the City Councils, get good people elected to the state legislature and Congress.” She continued, “Some people used to say, back in the 60s and 70s, that if you want to get ahead you have to leave the Central Valley. Well, you know what? Some of us have to stay here and fight for social justice. You know, this is not a poor area. Our people are poor because all of the money is on the top, and none of that money gets down to the working people and the people who really create the wealth in the Central Valley.”
The purpose of the CVPPAC is to develop an electoral strategy that will get progressives elected to local offices. Right now, the group is gearing up for the 2016 elections and has a close eye on several races, including the Fresno Unified School District trustees, City Council, the mayoral race and the Board of Supervisors. Whalen says that “events like this show that we can build a labor/community alliance and get the support needed that will succeed in shifting the balance of power in this town.”
Huerta, speaking at the Sept. 27 event, said that by focusing on electoral politics in the Bakersfield area they have won 11 elections. “We now have a majority of progressives on the Arvin City Council; three of them are under the age of 25. We have taken over the water board, we have taken over the recreation board and we have our people on four different school boards.”
She said that there were only 40 farmworkers who traveled throughout the country when the United Farm Workers union started the grape boycott, which brought the grape industry to the bargaining table. Observing the large crowd at the event, Huerta said she believed that it would be possible for progressives here to rise up and win political power.
Winning political power in Fresno requires progressives to not only talk the talk, but walk the walk. Huerta did just that when she handed Whalen a check for her membership in the CVPPAC and encouraged others to do the same.
The next Central Valley Progressive PAC meeting will take place on Saturday, Nov. 14, at 3:30 p.m. at the Fresno Center for Nonviolence, 1584 N. Van Ness Ave. For more information, contact Pam Whalen at 559-994-9390 or pamwhalen [at] comcast.net or visit http://www.cvppac.org.
For more information:
http://www.cvppac.org
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