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<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Program Podcast: Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </title><link>http://www.radio4all.net/program/54156</link><description>Podcast for Program: Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </description><lastBuildDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2011 17:38:13 +0000</lastBuildDate><ttl>240</ttl><item><title>Building Bridges - Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </title><link>http://www.radio4all.net/program/54156</link><description>Newark Activists In Fifty-Fourth Day Of Protest Calling on U.S. Government To Institute Jobs Program
with 
Larry Hamm, Chairman, People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress, Newark, NJ

The U.S. economy is struggling, but in many black communities Americans are 
in the throes of a depression. With unemployment exacting an outsize toll on African-American men and women, a coalition of community groups sees it as a crucial civil rights issue emerging from the country&amp;#039;s economic woe. &amp;quot;We are more than a half-century away from the Montgomery bus boycott, but we are dealing with issues just as pressing,&amp;quot; said Larry Hamm, chairman of the People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress. Flanking a statue of Abraham Lincoln outside the Essex County Courthouse, Hamm and like-minded activists started a 381-day protest modeled after one of the most famous battles of the Civil Rights era the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955-56. They are calling on President Obama and Congress to institute 
a jobs program akin to the Works Progress Administration of the Great Depression, that employed millions of unskilled Americans in public works jobs. Unemployment is 16 percent among black Americans, a rate rivaling those of the 1930s. New Jersey&amp;#039;s jobless rate is 9.5 percent, while the national rate is 9.1 percent.
******************************
AFL-CIO Pres. Trumka: History Will Judge Pres. Obama If He &amp;#039;Nibbles&amp;#039; at the Jobs Crisis

At a recent forum sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor, AFL-CIO&amp;#039;s. Richard Trumka urged President Obama to &amp;quot;propose bold solutions on the jobs crisis,&amp;quot; and not nibble around the edge of the issue and that, &amp;quot;history will judge him and I think working people will judge him. on what he proposes on the jobs crisis. Trumka said that, in a conversation with Pres. Obama &amp;quot;I urged him to propose what was necessary to solve the problem&amp;quot; as opposed to what the president thought was politically 
possible given Republican control of the House of Representatives. Mr. Trumka added, &amp;quot;I said to him,&amp;#039;Do not look at what is possible, look at what is necessary. The American public wants solutions and just because [of] the Republicans, you think this is the only thing that is politically possible, that doesn&amp;#039;t mean you should propose that. That means they control the agenda.&amp;#039; &amp;quot;
</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Ken Nash and Mimi Rosenberg</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2011 17:38:13 +0000</pubDate><enclosure length="27MB" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://www.radio4all.net/files/knash@igc.org/123-1-hammntl.mp3"/></item><item><title>Building Bridges - Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </title><link>http://www.radio4all.net/program/54156</link><description>Newark Activists In Fifty-Fourth Day Of Protest Calling on U.S. Government To Institute Jobs Program
with 
Larry Hamm, Chairman, People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress, Newark, NJ

The U.S. economy is struggling, but in many black communities Americans are 
in the throes of a depression. With unemployment exacting an outsize toll on African-American men and women, a coalition of community groups sees it as a crucial civil rights issue emerging from the country&amp;#039;s economic woe. &amp;quot;We are more than a half-century away from the Montgomery bus boycott, but we are dealing with issues just as pressing,&amp;quot; said Larry Hamm, chairman of the People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress. Flanking a statue of Abraham Lincoln outside the Essex County Courthouse, Hamm and like-minded activists started a 381-day protest modeled after one of the most famous battles of the Civil Rights era the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955-56. They are calling on President Obama and Congress to institute 
a jobs program akin to the Works Progress Administration of the Great Depression, that employed millions of unskilled Americans in public works jobs. Unemployment is 16 percent among black Americans, a rate rivaling those of the 1930s. New Jersey&amp;#039;s jobless rate is 9.5 percent, while the national rate is 9.1 percent.
******************************
AFL-CIO Pres. Trumka: History Will Judge Pres. Obama If He &amp;#039;Nibbles&amp;#039; at the Jobs Crisis

At a recent forum sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor, AFL-CIO&amp;#039;s. Richard Trumka urged President Obama to &amp;quot;propose bold solutions on the jobs crisis,&amp;quot; and not nibble around the edge of the issue and that, &amp;quot;history will judge him and I think working people will judge him. on what he proposes on the jobs crisis. Trumka said that, in a conversation with Pres. Obama &amp;quot;I urged him to propose what was necessary to solve the problem&amp;quot; as opposed to what the president thought was politically 
possible given Republican control of the House of Representatives. Mr. Trumka added, &amp;quot;I said to him,&amp;#039;Do not look at what is possible, look at what is necessary. The American public wants solutions and just because [of] the Republicans, you think this is the only thing that is politically possible, that doesn&amp;#039;t mean you should propose that. That means they control the agenda.&amp;#039; &amp;quot;
</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Ken Nash and Mimi Rosenberg</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2011 17:38:13 +0000</pubDate><enclosure length="7MB" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://www.radio4all.net/files/knash@igc.org/123-1-hammntl32.mp3"/></item><item><title>Building Bridges - Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </title><link>http://www.radio4all.net/program/54156</link><description>Newark Activists In Fifty-Fourth Day Of Protest Calling on U.S. Government To Institute Jobs Program
with 
Larry Hamm, Chairman, People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress, Newark, NJ

The U.S. economy is struggling, but in many black communities Americans are 
in the throes of a depression. With unemployment exacting an outsize toll on African-American men and women, a coalition of community groups sees it as a crucial civil rights issue emerging from the country&amp;#039;s economic woe. &amp;quot;We are more than a half-century away from the Montgomery bus boycott, but we are dealing with issues just as pressing,&amp;quot; said Larry Hamm, chairman of the People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress. Flanking a statue of Abraham Lincoln outside the Essex County Courthouse, Hamm and like-minded activists started a 381-day protest modeled after one of the most famous battles of the Civil Rights era the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955-56. They are calling on President Obama and Congress to institute 
a jobs program akin to the Works Progress Administration of the Great Depression, that employed millions of unskilled Americans in public works jobs. Unemployment is 16 percent among black Americans, a rate rivaling those of the 1930s. New Jersey&amp;#039;s jobless rate is 9.5 percent, while the national rate is 9.1 percent.
******************************
AFL-CIO Pres. Trumka: History Will Judge Pres. Obama If He &amp;#039;Nibbles&amp;#039; at the Jobs Crisis

At a recent forum sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor, AFL-CIO&amp;#039;s. Richard Trumka urged President Obama to &amp;quot;propose bold solutions on the jobs crisis,&amp;quot; and not nibble around the edge of the issue and that, &amp;quot;history will judge him and I think working people will judge him. on what he proposes on the jobs crisis. Trumka said that, in a conversation with Pres. Obama &amp;quot;I urged him to propose what was necessary to solve the problem&amp;quot; as opposed to what the president thought was politically 
possible given Republican control of the House of Representatives. Mr. Trumka added, &amp;quot;I said to him,&amp;#039;Do not look at what is possible, look at what is necessary. The American public wants solutions and just because [of] the Republicans, you think this is the only thing that is politically possible, that doesn&amp;#039;t mean you should propose that. That means they control the agenda.&amp;#039; &amp;quot;
</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Ken Nash and Mimi Rosenberg</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2011 17:38:13 +0000</pubDate><enclosure length="27MB" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://www.radio4all.net/files/knash@igc.org/123-1-hammntl.mp3"/></item><item><title>Building Bridges - Newark Jobs Protest; AFLCIO&amp;#039;s Trumka Challenges Obama on Jobs Crisis </title><link>http://www.radio4all.net/program/54156</link><description>Newark Activists In Fifty-Fourth Day Of Protest Calling on U.S. Government To Institute Jobs Program
with 
Larry Hamm, Chairman, People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress, Newark, NJ

The U.S. economy is struggling, but in many black communities Americans are 
in the throes of a depression. With unemployment exacting an outsize toll on African-American men and women, a coalition of community groups sees it as a crucial civil rights issue emerging from the country&amp;#039;s economic woe. &amp;quot;We are more than a half-century away from the Montgomery bus boycott, but we are dealing with issues just as pressing,&amp;quot; said Larry Hamm, chairman of the People&amp;#039;s Organization for Progress. Flanking a statue of Abraham Lincoln outside the Essex County Courthouse, Hamm and like-minded activists started a 381-day protest modeled after one of the most famous battles of the Civil Rights era the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955-56. They are calling on President Obama and Congress to institute 
a jobs program akin to the Works Progress Administration of the Great Depression, that employed millions of unskilled Americans in public works jobs. Unemployment is 16 percent among black Americans, a rate rivaling those of the 1930s. New Jersey&amp;#039;s jobless rate is 9.5 percent, while the national rate is 9.1 percent.
******************************
AFL-CIO Pres. Trumka: History Will Judge Pres. Obama If He &amp;#039;Nibbles&amp;#039; at the Jobs Crisis

At a recent forum sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor, AFL-CIO&amp;#039;s. Richard Trumka urged President Obama to &amp;quot;propose bold solutions on the jobs crisis,&amp;quot; and not nibble around the edge of the issue and that, &amp;quot;history will judge him and I think working people will judge him. on what he proposes on the jobs crisis. Trumka said that, in a conversation with Pres. Obama &amp;quot;I urged him to propose what was necessary to solve the problem&amp;quot; as opposed to what the president thought was politically 
possible given Republican control of the House of Representatives. Mr. Trumka added, &amp;quot;I said to him,&amp;#039;Do not look at what is possible, look at what is necessary. The American public wants solutions and just because [of] the Republicans, you think this is the only thing that is politically possible, that doesn&amp;#039;t mean you should propose that. That means they control the agenda.&amp;#039; &amp;quot;
</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Ken Nash and Mimi Rosenberg</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2011 17:38:13 +0000</pubDate><enclosure length="7MB" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://www.radio4all.net/files/knash@igc.org/123-1-hammntl32.mp3"/></item></channel></rss>