Whereas, the ILWU and the militant wing of the American labor movement, the Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO) grew out of the class struggles in the 1920’s and 1930’s mobilizing against anti-worker
and racist oppression, notably the cases of San Francisco labor organizer Tom Mooney and the 9 black
Scottsboro Boys of Alabama, falsely accused of rape, and
Whereas, police, courts and laws have historically been used against working people in our struggle to
organize unions and fight back against racist oppression, and
Whereas, the ILWU has a long-standing principle of opposition to racism and to the death penalty, a vestige of
slavery, which is the ultimate form of government oppression, and
Whereas, African Americans, Latin Americans and other people of color are disproportionately imprisoned on
death row across the country facing execution, and
Whereas, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Troy Anthony Davis, Kevin Cooper, Leonard Peltier and the San Francisco 8 are
some of the most prominent victims of these government frame-ups, Jamal and Davis accused of killing police
and Peltier of FBI agents on an Indian reservation, and
Whereas, the U.S. Supreme Court recently denied the appeal of Jamal, while Davis and Cooper lost before
federal appeals courts, and
Whereas, Martina Correia, sister of Troy Davis, spoke passionately this year at ILWU Local 10’s Black History
month rally against racist repression and has now initiated a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of
executing an innocent person,
Therefore Be It Resolved that the ILWU reaffirms our opposition to the death penalty, supports Martina
Correia’s lawsuit and demands freedom for these victims of government repression, just as we did for Tom
Mooney and the Scottsboro Boys in the wake of the Big Strike of ’34, on this the 75th anniversary of that
momentous struggle.