May Day marches mark International Workers Day

Wave Wire Services

LOS ANGELES — Rallies and marches were held in downtown Los Angeles, Little Tokyo and Boyle Heights to mark International Workers Day, also known as May Day, continuing a tradition dating back to the 19th century.

The day’s largest event was that began at Olympic Boulevard and Broadway in downtown Los Angeles and proceeded to Pershing Square and then Grand Park in front of City Hall.

The theme of the march was “Solidarity is Power: Right to Citizenship, Right to Unionize, Right to Strike, & Right to Housing.”

The march was organized by the Los Angeles May Day Coalition, which includes the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, United Teachers Los Angeles, the Service Employees International Union, IATSE Local 839, the National Union of Healthcare Workers, Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, Communist Party USA and Democratic Socialists of America-Los Angeles.

A demonstration at First Street and Central Avenue in Little Tokyo called for “No U.S. NATO war with Russia, stop U.S. threats against China and no World War 3,’” according to its organizer, Revolution Club LA.

The eighth annual May Day Boyle Heights began with a rally at the intersection of Mathews Street and Cesar Chavez Avenue followed by a march to the Mariachi Plaza at Boyle Avenue and First Street, which included a stop at the Hollenbeck Community Police Station where a protest of police shootings was held. Speakers included Josefina Rizo, whose 16-year-old son Jose Mendez was fatally shot by Los Angeles Police Department officers in 2016.

Police said Mendez was driving a stolen vehicle and pointed a shotgun at them. In 2017, the Police Commission ruled in the shooting was justified and the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office review of the shooting found that Officers Josue Merida and Jeremy Wagner used reasonable force in self-defense and the defense of others.

May Day Boyle Heights was organized by Centro CSO, whose May Day demands include legalization for everyone who has entered the United States without authorization, protecting public education and community control over the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Labor groups have conducted rallies and protests on May 1 since 1890, originally commemorating the anniversary of the Haymarket affair on May 4, 1886, when what began as a peaceful rally in Chicago’s Haymarket Square in support of workers striking for an eight-hour work day ended with an unknown person throwing a dynamite bomb at police as they acted to disperse the meeting, with the bomb blast and ensuing gunfire resulting in the deaths of seven police officers and at least four civilians.

Eight anarchists were convicted of conspiracy in a trial their supporters called unfair and a serious miscarriage of justice. Seven were sentenced to death and one to a term of 15 years in prison. Illinois Gov. Richard J. Oglesby commuted two of the sentences to terms of life in prison while another committed suicide in jail before his scheduled execution. 

The other four were hanged on Nov. 11, 1887.

Illinois Gov. John Peter Altgeld pardoned the remaining defendants in 1893 and criticized the trial.