
New momentum in the continuing march toward a more equitable society.

By Anoa Changa
Independent Journalist

By Zenobia Jeffries Warfield
Senior Editor
YES! Magazine
Introduction
In 2011, Venus Colley-Mims found a lump in her breast. Unemployed, Colley-Mims didnโt have health insurance, so she went to the Baptist Health Center emergency room in her hometown of Montgomery, Alabama.
Over a two-year period, she visited the ER as a form of health care for pain and complications from the lump, only to be sent home undiagnosed and with medicines that proved useless. Her condition had become so bad that on her last visit to the ER, the attending physician, noticing an odor in the room, asked, โWhatโs that smell in here?โ
Colley-Mimsโ breast had become โrotten,โ her mother, Callie Greer, recalls. The physician recommended Colley-Mims for treatment at a local cancer center, where she was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer, and immediately scheduled for surgery and chemo. But it was too late.
Greerโs daughter passed away in February 2013, shortly after the pair had become involved in the fight to expand Medicaid in Alabama. The previous summer, they had attended the Saving OurSelves (SOS): A Movement for Justice and Democracy rally, as part of the effort to get Alabamaโs then-Governor Robert Bentley to accept federal funding to expand Medicaid in the state. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, around 137,000 Alabama residents are still without insurance. Other sources, such as the Kaiser Family Foundation and HealthInsurance.org, put that number much higher, at more than 200,000. Those residents would be eligible if the state expanded Medicaid. Such a change in policy would provide health care that could have saved Colley-Mimsโ lifeโand the lives of so many others like her.
โVenus should be here with us,โ says Greer, who is now an Alabama-based organizer with the Poor Peopleโs Campaign, which was revived in 2017 by Rev. Dr. William Barber II, a North Carolina minister well-known for his Moral Mondays protests. โVenus didnโt have health care, so she went to the emergency room, โcause thatโs what Black people do here in our community. Thatโs our doctor: the emergency room.โ

The original Poor Peopleโs Campaign was started in 1968 by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The Campaignโs focus and goal, then and now, is to gain economic justice for all poor people in the United States. When Dr. King was assassinated, Ralph Abernathy, his friend and mentor, carried on the efforts of the campaign, organizing thousands of poor people from diverse racial backgrounds in Washington, D.C., for the Poor Peopleโs March on Washington, where they presented a list of demands to Congress. The demonstration lasted six weeks.

The new Poor Peopleโs Campaign, called the Poor Peopleโs Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, and led by Rev. Barber and co-chair Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, is made up of 300-plus partners and 22,000 people of all racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds across 47 states.
By sharing her testimony often about her daughterโs health battle, Greer continues the fight for Medicaid expansion in Alabamaโand national health care for all.
The Third Reconstruction
In May 2020, Congresswomen Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) and Barbara Lee (D-CA), introduced the โThird Reconstructionโ resolution, H.R. 438, written in cooperation with Revs. Barber and Theoharis. The resolution aims to address poverty in its entirety, from its root causesโcapitalism and racismโto its systemic manifestations, like Colley-Mimsโ story, and to create a more equitable society.
Using research from both the Institute for Policy Studiesโ report โPoor Peopleโs Moral Budget: Everybody Has the Right to Liveโ and the U.S. Collaborative of Poverty Centers, the resolution states that there are more than 140 million poor and low-wealth people in the United States today, 87 million people without health care or who are underinsured, 25โ50 million people facing food insecurity, and 30โ40 million people at risk of homelessness. The Population Reference Bureau estimates the actual number of unhoused people is from 600,000 to more than 1.5 million.
Titled โThird Reconstruction: Fully Addressing Poverty and Low Wages from the Bottom Up,โ the comprehensive legislation has been years in the making, says Rep. Lee. It began with the Majority Leader Task Force on Poverty and Opportunity, which she co-chairs and helped to establish in 2013 with current House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-MD). In 2019, the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, which Lee also co-chairs, held a hearing with people who live in poverty and representatives from the Poor Peopleโs Campaign.
โThe people spoke to what should be included in this resolution,โ Rep. Lee says. Following the hearing, she and Rep. Jayapal, who chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus, formed an alliance between the Poor Peopleโs Campaign and the Progressive Caucus. So far, 41 of their colleagues in the House have signed on. โAnd itโs building,โ Rep. Lee adds.
โIt really speaks to the issues that will protect our democracy and prioritize [the peopleโs] needs,โ Rep. Lee explains. โIt โฆ really provides a lot of hope and dignity for people who have not been listened to.โ
The resolution is built on the premise that the moral authority for a third Reconstruction is within the nationโs founding values. It states: โThis country is founded on the moral commitment to establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty.โ
The Third Reconstruction resolution provides not just stopgap measures until the next major crisis occurs but also a pathway to building a better quality of life for the long haul. From housing and jobs, to mass incarceration and state violence, to immigration and land rights, to defunding the military, to education and health care, to climate and environmental justice, The Third Reconstruction resolution is all-encompassing and more timely than ever. Some of the legislation it proposes is new, and some is already in the works. โWhen you look at the resolution, weโve included [some] legislation thatโs already been introduced, like the $15 minimum wage, like the health care provisions,โ says Rep. Lee. โA lot of it is in motion right now. Making permanent, for example, the child tax creditโthatโs part of this.โ
Converging crises in the form of a global pandemic, economic downturn, and the escalating impact of white supremacy have raised fundamental considerations about how the nation should respond. And thereโs a growing movement of people who argue that it is time for the federal government to adopt a new values alignment at the core of its decision-making.

According to Rev. Theoharis, doing so is a priority of the current presidentโs administration.
โWhen President Biden was still a candidate, he had come to a candidate forum that the Poor Peopleโs Campaign held, and had spoken to how he was committed to bringing up issues of poverty and on all of these injustices,โ explains Rev. Theoharis. โHe joined [us] again, when he was still running โฆ and made this pledge that if he was elected that ending poverty would be more than an aspiration, but a theory of change.โ
The Poor Peopleโs Campaign is still trying to work with the administration to meet with more poor and low-income leaders, economists, and clergy, Rev. Theoharis adds, to make sure that the campaignโs agenda, and many of the things that are included in the resolution, are priorities for the administration.
Leading up to its scheduled June 2022 action in Washington, the Poor Peopleโs Campaign is planning to reach, engage, and inform 30,000 people per state through social media, its Moral Monday assemblies, and other avenues to put pressure on the administration and Congress.
โIf COVID had not hit [we] would be having a conversation about the mass Poor Peopleโs Assembly Moral March on Washington that happened June 20, 2020, when hundreds of thousands of people descended on D.C. to demand action,โ says Rev. Barber. โBecause you know, in America, public sentiment and putting a face on the problem is what drives action.โ
But due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the campaign held a virtual action.
โBecause poor and low-wealth people demanded it,โ Rev. Barber says. โAnd 2.4 million people showed up online for just the first showing, which showed us that there is a great hunger in this country for an intersectional moral movement that brings together people of all races, colors, creeds, and sexualities to deal with these five interlocking injustices.โ These are systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation, militarism and the war economy, and the false narrative of religious nationalism.
People are tired of the silos, left vs. right and liberal vs. conservative, says Barber, posing the question, โWhat about right vs. wrong?โ Moreover, he adds, โPeople are tired of [hearing] a moral agenda is not an economically sound agenda.โ
The economists the campaign has worked with have told the organizers that โthe moral agenda is the only way to have an economically sound agenda,โ Rev. Barber says.
And the people are โhungry for it.โ
The People

Itโs often said that the people closest to a problem should be a part of the solution. And yet, individuals in power spend a lot of time putting their ideas before the lived experience and testimony of people like Greer in Alabama and Pam Garrison, a West Virginia-based organizer with the Poor Peopleโs Campaign.
A self-described coal minerโs daughter, Garrison grew up in a West Virginia coal camp and worked as a cashier most her life. The mines have taken a toll on the health of many in her family, as well as the neighborhoods and communities where she lives. Her husband, who worked for years in the mines, suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Both her parents died of cancer.
Garrison says that corporate agendas and preferential treatment get in the way of real change, with health care, for example. โThatโs why we canโt have universal health care,โ she says. โWeโve got this patchwork here and there; that is not working.โ
But things changed for her when she heard Rev. Barber preaching on television.
Referring to studies from the Collaborative of Poverty Centers and the Institute for Policy Studies, Garrison says the resolution is supported by extensive research and data: โThis has been done by facts, by studies. This ainโt something we just threw together. This is real, actual solutions.โ
If one could find a sliver of promise in the COVID-19 pandemic, it is the clear case being made for massive investments in supporting workers like Greer and Garrison, and their families. The Third Reconstruction resolution is more than a realignment or a course correction. It is a fundamental change in how people are valued in the economy and in the creation of capital itself.
โIf we put people first in defining the economy, then we would have to consider metrics around how well-resourced people are in terms of income, in terms of their health,โ explains Darrick Hamilton, a professor of economics and urban policy at The New School in New York. โAnytime you define an economy, it is values-based. What weโre talking about when we say a moral economy or an inclusive economy is values-based. But everything is values-based. Itโs just owning up to the value you set out in a more honest way. And in a way thatโs also centered on people as being the most important entity in our society.โ
As the founding director of the Institute for the Study of Race, Stratification, and Political Economy, Hamilton asserts that the governmentโs โfiduciary responsibility is to its people,โ supporting a framework of economic rights.
โIf we want people to have authentic agency, authentic freedom, it goes well beyond political and civil rights,โ Hamilton says. There needs to be a recognition of economic rights, he says, whereby the powers that be acknowledge that people entering transactions without any resources or economic power are vulnerable to the whims of others, including othersโ charity.
Exploring the ways in which different people and entities engage in the economy can break through barriers that prevent transformative policies from being developed. Accepting a new economic framework could open the door to lawmakers passing direct relief to alleviate the intersecting challenges of hospital closures, housing access, and lack of affordable health care and child care.
There is a lot the federal government can do to address economic inequality, Hamilton says, beginning with the tax codeโfor example, the recent monthly Child Tax Credit payments going directly to families.
โAmericaโs greatest fiscal tool is its tax code, and the concept of a tax subsidy or a tax deduction, as opposed to a refundable tax credit,โ Hamilton says. He argues that the existing system values tax cuts, while a properly directed refundable tax credit โcould promote a better society without [impacting] our federal spending.โ
Lessons From the Past

Rev. Billy Michael Honor, a Georgia-based faith organizer, says the important part of the first Reconstruction was a fusion coalition. โThese are whites and Blacks that came together, like multiracial abolitionist movements, as well as sharecroppers, as well as people who โฆ had a vested interest in restructuring society based upon more economic advantages for those who are disadvantaged.โ
The diverse movement-building that happened in the past is a vital lesson for the present, Rev. Honor says. At the core of fusion coalition-building, he adds, is the moral value proposition of committing to uplift people without regard to partisan considerations. He sees the first two reconstruction periods as having significant moral turning points, and that is also true for the third. Itโs clear that the tipping point has been the confluence of a global pandemic, racial justice uprisings, attacks on democracy and ballot access, and economic struggle.
But even if the current Congress cannot be compelled to act in the moral best interest of the country, Rev. Honor says, itโs still worth fighting for, which is the message of the Poor Peopleโs Campaign.
โFrom the empirical work weโve done to identify systemic poverty, systemic racism, ecological devastation, the denial of health care, the war economy, the false narrative of religious nationalismโthey all exist because of policy, which means we created them, which means they can be uncreated,โ says Rev. Barber. โNone of these disparities come as a part of creation, they are created because of us. So as James Baldwin said, if we did it, we can undo it.โ
To make these policy changes, there has to be a clear agenda. And for the Poor Peopleโs Campaign that agenda is threefold, says Rev. Barber:
1. Change the narrative: For too long, the narrative has simply been about โmiddle class, middle class, middle class,โ Rev. Barber says, which leaves 140 million people in this country not talked about. And that is a recipe for social and political depression.
2. Build and understand power: โNot only at the ballot box, but when you can bring white folk from the hollers of the mountains in Appalachia, together with Black folk from the hood, and maybe people on federal lands and Latinosโthat fusion coalition of poor and low-wealth, Black, Brown, Asian, Native, and white people is really the only power that can fundamentally shift the politics of this nation. Dr. King said that, and thatโs why they killed him. But that power is available to us. It just needs organizing.โ
3. Make the Third Reconstruction law: โEnding poverty and building power from the bottom up are the policy solutions and the empirical data-driven answers to addressing the five interlocking injustices. If we donโt do this, the issue is not whether or not the Republican Party will survive or the Democratic Party will survive, but whether America will survive.โ
Rep. Lee acknowledges that the resolution is aspirational and visionary. โBut we also have to be practical,โ she says. โNot everyoneโs going to agree on every part of the resolution, but where we find common ground, weโre gonna get this done.โ
Revs. Barber and Theoharis, Greer and Garrison, and the other tens of thousands of organizers with the Poor Peopleโs Campaign now have their sights set on June 18, 2022, when a mass of poor and low-wealth people, along with others in solidarity, will assemble in Washington, D.C.
โItโs not a march,โ Rev. Barber says. โItโs designed to be a statement of commitment, where poor and low-wealth and religious leaders and advocatesโ will come together to urge Congress to pass the resolution.
โA hundred years ago, all the things today we take for granted, were seen as impossible. And they werenโt won because of one action,โ says Rev. Barber. โThey were won because side-by-side in America, there will always exist, and has always existed, those who want to deconstruct, downplay, and disempower the promises of the Constitution, and those who want to ensure, engage, and enliven the promises of the Constitution. And that duality is always going to be there. And more often than not, the side of enlivening, and engaging, and empowering the Constitution wins!โ
Originally published by Yes! Magazine, 11.15.2021, under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license.



