Jacobin - The history of working-class organizing in the United States is full
of examples of immigrant resistance to mass deportation, sweeps, and
other tactics. Time and again, immigrant worker activity has changed the
course of society. It has produced unions of workers ranging from
copper miners to janitors. It turned the politics of Los Angeles head.
And it is this tradition of worker resistance that is the real target of
immigration enforcement waves, both current and threatened by the
incoming administration. More
Organizers of the past fought deportation threats just as we do today, and their experiences offer valuable insights for our present situation. Not only did they show tremendous perseverance in the face of direct threats to migrants, but these organizers also envisioned a future of greater equality, working-class rights, and social solidarity — and proposed ways to get there. Increased immigration repression has a way of making the bones of the system easier to see and the reasons for changing it abundantly clear. These organizations and coalitions defending immigrant workers, their families, and their communities have often been building blocks for movements for deeper social change.
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