Release: Jan 27: National Peace March to Flood DC Streets
PROTESTERS WILL URGE CONGRESS TO STAND
UP TO BUSH
Peace March Expected to be Among
Largest Since War Began MoveOn.org,
National Organization for Women, Labor Unions Mobilize Members Buses
and vans coming from 30 states and 111 Cities
Salt
Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson, Reverend Jesse Jackson, Jr., Members of
Congress, Military Families, and Soldiers to Speak
NEW YORK, NY -- Americans angered by Bush's plans to
escalate the Iraq war will flood the streets of Washington on Saturday, January 27, in a massive national
peace march organized by United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ). Marchers will call on Congress
to listen to the voters, not Bush, by using its power to end Bush's war and
bring the troops home. The last three national marches organized by UFPJ each
attracted between 300,000 and 500,000 people.
MoveOn.org has called upon its 3.2 million members to join
UFPJ, describing the march as
potentially a "turning point for the war" comparable to how "Martin Luther King
Jr.'s March on Washington in 1963
was a turning point in the fight for equality and civil rights." The National
Organization for Women (N.O.W.) is mobilizing its chapters to participate.
Local antiwar groups in cities and towns across the nation are mobilizing.
On Monday, United for Peace and Justice's website received
more than 700,000 hits. District Council 37 in NYC, A.F.S.C.M.E.'s largest
district council, and New York's
United Federation of Teachers, the largest teachers union local in the country,
are sending busloads of their members to Washington. Car
caravans and peace trains are heading to Washington, DC, from
all over the East Coast, Midwest and Southeast. Buses and vans are coming from more than 30 states and 111 cities, including
from as far away as Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.
Judith LeBlanc, UFPJ
Co-Chairperson, said, "Bush's announcement of plans to escalate the war has
backfired. Every day people call or send email to say they will be marching in Washington with
United for Peace and Justice on January 27th to call for an end to this war. They
are demanding that Congress stand up to Bush. There is no doubt: This is the
right action at the right time."
Among those slated to speak at the pre-march rally are
Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson, who last year led an antiwar march of
thousands, the largest protest in Salt Lake City history; Reverend Jesse
Jackson, Jr.; Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH); Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA); Bob Watada,
father of Lt. Watada, the first military officer to refuse deployment to Iraq and
currently facing court-martial; and active-duty service people.
On Monday, January 29th, UFPJ is
sponsoring a Grassroots Lobby Day, in which hundreds will press the case for
withdrawal from Iraq
directly with their Congressional Representatives and Senators. The weekend's
activities will include a Saturday morning interfaith peace service and
organizing workshops on Sunday.
On Thursday, January 11, United for Peace and Justice
member groups and allies staged more than 1,000 local protests of Bush's
escalation of the Iraq war. UFPJ's March
on Washington is the
next step in the antiwar movement's national surge of opposition to Bush's
escalation of the war.
For more information on the January 27th march on Washington and the
January 29th Congressional Lobby Day, visit www.unitedforpeace.org. For
interviews with United for Peace and Justice spokespeople or local or national
organizations mobilizing for the march, contact Hany Khalil at 212-868-5545 or
718-637-7351, press@unitedforpeace.org
WHAT: Massive
peace march in Washington, D.C.
WHEN: Saturday, January 27, 2007. Rally begins
at 11:00 am. March to kick off 1:00 pm.
WHERE: Rally on
National Mall at 3rd Street. UFPJ has
applied for a permit for a march route that goes east on Constitution, south on
1st, west on Independence and
returning to the Mall to end.
Media professionals planning to cover the march should
register for press credentials at www.unitedforpeace.org.
With more
than 1,400 member groups under its umbrella, United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) is the nation's largest
grassroots peace and justice coalition. Since its founding in October 2002, UFPJ has spurred hundreds of protests
and rallies around the country, including the two largest marches against the Iraq war. http://www.unitedforpeace.org
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