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Watch clip of AFL-CIO President Trumka's address at the National Press Club on jobs and the economy.
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Get a Glimpse of International Human Rights Day Actions Around the Nation
Throughout the week leading up to Dec. 10, International Human Rights Day, U.S. workers took part in rallies, teach-ins and other events as part of a worldwide effort to support workers’ freedom to form unions. In the United States, thousands of activists in more than 100 cities called lawmakers to restore the freedom of workers to form unions.
| San Antonio, Texas | |  |  | | San Antonio union and community members highlighting the need to restore workers' freedom to form unions included (from left to right): Terri Ramos, AFL-CIO labor liasion; Ethel Minor, president of the San Antonio NAACP; and Stephanie Collier, Educational Chairperson, CWA Local 6143.
|  |  | | San Antonio Mayor Pro-Tem Elena Guajardo and Bexar County Commissioner Tommy Adkisson presented union members and their allies with city and county proclamations for International Human Rights Day. |  | | |
| | Washington, D.C. | | More than 2,000 union members and allies such as the National Education Association (NEA) gathered at the AFL-CIO building in Washington, D.C., Dec. 8 for a rally and march to the White House. Clyde Rucker, a Maryland Verizon worker fired for seeking to form a union was among the speakers, who also included AFSCME President Gerald McEntee, AFGE President John Gage, Air Line Pilots President Duane Woerth, AFT Executive Vice President Antonia Cortese, AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Linda Chavez-Thompson and NEA President Reg Weaver. As workers marched in a massive picket line in front of the White House chanting, "Union busting is disgusting," a delegation of union leaders delivered to the White House gates the petition signed by 100,000 workers calling on the president to honor federal workers' freedom to form a union. |  |  | | Leading the Dec. 8 march to the White House in Washington D.C. (from left): Former Verizon worker Clyde Rucker, ALPA President Duane Woerth, AFGE Local 1647 Keith Hill, CWA President Larry Cohen, AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Linda Chavez-Thompson, AFSCME President Gerald McEntee, AFT Executive Vice President Antonia Cortese, NEA Vice President Dennis Van Roekel and AFGE President John Gage.
|  |  | | Members of the Bricklayers were among more than 2,000 workers and community allies marching in Washington, D.C., Dec. 8 for the freedom to form unions.
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