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Rallies held throughout LA County set to mark Labor Day

Rallies will be held throughout Los Angeles County today as part of the nationwide Labor Day effort billed by organizers as a “stop the billionaire takeover.”

Additionally, the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor Labor Coalition 46th annual Solidarity Parade and Picnic Rally will take place in Wilmington.

The “stop the billionaire takeover” rallies are organized by May Day Strong, a partnership of various labor, political and environmental organizations which bills itself as “working people rising up to stop the billionaire takeover — not just through the ballot box or the courts, but through building a bigger and stronger movement.”

May Day Strong is calling for:

The events include The People’s Block Party, “a high-energy, community-centered event that’s equal parts festival and movement” from 4:30-7 p.m. at 1071 Elysian Park Drive, organizers said. The party will include amplified sound, celebrity guests, live DJs, local artists, public servant speakers, “mutual aid, local food, healing, joy, resistance, and rhythm,” according to organizers.

May Day Strong rallies are planned for:

Orange County locations include:

The Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor Labor Coalition 46th annual Solidarity Parade and Picnic Rally will have the theme “Labor Unions Fighting for a Better Tomorrow.”

What organizers bill as one of the nation’s largest Labor Day parades is set to begin at 10 a.m. at the intersection of Broad Avenue and E Street, go west on E Street to Avalon Boulevard, continue north on Avalon Boulevard to M Street, concluding at Banning Park.

A picnic and rally is set to begin at 11 a.m. at Banning Park. The rally program is set for 11:30 a.m. with labor guest speakers and an introduction of elected officials, organizers said.

A kids’ zone will include face painting, popcorn, cotton candy, a puppet show and book giveaway. There will be 40 vendor booths of various unions and labor organizations to distribute free informational materials.    

The picnic will also include music and dancing at the main stage. It is set to end at 4 p.m.

Organizers expect “a couple thousand participants,” Kristal Romero, the press secretary of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, told City News Service.

The participants will include former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who is running for governor. He will ride on the District Council of Ironworkers, according to his campaign.

Elected officials and candidates are not allowed to campaign, give speeches or distribute campaign materials at the parade or rally, according to the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor Labor Coalition, which organizes the parade and rally.

In his Labor Day proclamation, President Donald Trump wrote, “From the earliest days of our American story, our Nation’s future has been molded by the skill, determination, and unwavering resilience of the American worker.   

“From the earliest settlers, who laid the foundations of a new nation to the innovators who built our railroads, steel mills and skyscrapers, America’s greatness has always rested in the strength of its workforce. This Labor Day, we honor the proud legacy of America’s workforce — and we pay tribute to the unbreakable spirit that keeps it strong nearly 250 years later.”

Labor Day, the yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the nation’s strength, prosperity and well-being, was first celebrated on Sept. 5, 1882, in New York City.

In 1887, Oregon became the first state to formally recognize Labor Day. By 1894, 31 of the then-44 states had made Labor Day a holiday when Congress passed a bill designating the first Monday in September a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and territories.


Source: NBC Los Angeles

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