Pennsylvania Could Become the First State to Pass Universal Parental Leave

The state just has to make one small tweak to their parental leave proposal — otherwise a large number of new Pennsylvania parents will be ineligible for the program and receive no financial support while they care for their newborns.

Pennsylvania doesn’t have to make the same mistake that other states have when crafting childcare policy. (Kristoffer Trolle / Wikimedia Commons)

A bill has been introduced in the Pennsylvania state legislature to create a paid leave program in the state. The bill is currently scheduled for a committee vote on June 6.

Unfortunately, the current draft of the legislation includes a work history test in section 303(b) that around one in three Pennsylvania women of childbearing age do not satisfy. This test excludes from eligibility all people who worked less than eighteen weeks or earned less than $2,718 in the year prior to seeking benefits. If this test remains in the bill, a large minority of new parents will be ineligible for the program and receive no financial support while they care for their newborns.

The legislation is in early enough stages that this problem could be fixed. All legislators need to do is add a paragraph to the legislation that creates a minimum benefit that all new parents are at least eligible for, even if they do not satisfy the work history test. New parents that are eligible for more than the minimum benefit would still get that higher amount, but no new parent would be eligible for less than the minimum.

Legislators across the country have made this same mistake over and over again, in part because they seem to be mindlessly copying one another without considering that prior states may have made some mistakes in the way that they designed their programs. Below is a table showing the work history tests in all twelve states that have paid leave programs and a graph, based on the American Community Survey, showing how many women of childbearing age fail that test.

With a slight tweak to the current paid leave bill, Pennsylvania could buck this trend and be the first state in the country to actually pass a universal parental leave program that includes all new parents. This is how parental leave benefits are structured in many of our peer nations and there is no reason why they cannot be structured that way here.

Isaias Afwerki Led Eritrea’s Freedom Struggle, But Turned His Country Into a Prison Camp

Eritrea spent decades fighting for independence against enormous odds. Its people finally achieved their goal in the 1990s, but Eritrean leader Isaias Afwerki has since created one of the world’s bleakest dictatorships, prompting countless Eritreans to flee.

Eritrean president Isaias Afwerki established a highly repressive political system that has caused many young people to flee the country. (Mikhail Metzel / SPUTNIK / AFP via Getty Images)

Eritrea’s long struggle for independence finally ended in victory three decades ago. It seemed like a fresh beginning for one of Africa’s smallest countries, after fighting against seemingly insurmountable odds.

However, the Eritrean leader Isaias Afwerki soon established a highly repressive political system that caused many young people to flee. Since 2020, Afwerki’s army has been a key protagonist in one of the world’s most destructive wars, fighting alongside Ethiopian government forces in Tigray.

Michela Wrong is a journalist and the author of several books about African politics, including an account of Eritrea’s modern history, I Didn’t Do It For You: How the World Used and Abused a Small African Nation. This is an edited transcript from Jacobin’s Long Reads podcast. You can listen to the interview here.

Daniel Finn

How did Eritrea become an Italian colony, and what were the main legacies of Italian colonial rule?

Michela Wrong

The story of Italian colonialism in Eritrea comes in two parts. When the Suez Canal was opened, there was a flurry of interest by European powers in the Red Sea because they thought it would open up markets in the Far East and the Middle East. Italy came quite late to this game, having only been unified as a nation-state itself quite recently. But it was very keen on developing a colony in Africa because it had a high rate of population growth. Its leaders thought that an African colony might be a good place in which to settle poor peasants who were in search of land to cultivate.

In 1869, an Italian priest who was acting on behalf of an Italian shipping company bought the port of Assab, a key Eritrean port, from a local chief. Italy didn’t really do much with Assab at first, but that changed in 1885. British officials were running Egypt and were therefore in control of the port of Massawa, which is an Eritrean port today but was then controlled by Egypt. They invited the Italians in to capture the port.

The Italians seized Massawa and then started sending troops up into the highlands. They were bent on taking the Abyssinian Highlands. The dry, rocky area down at the coast did not interest them — they wanted the fertile interior. They ended up building a settlement in Asmara, having fought against a local Abyssinian warlord called Ras Alula.

Eventually, an Italian politician called Ferdinando Martini became the first civilian governor of Eritrea and started setting up schools, hospitals, and a legal system. But it was a tiny colony that was militarily and strategically irrelevant.

When the Suez Canal was opened, there was a flurry of interest by European powers in the Red Sea.

The second phase came after Benito Mussolini took over in Italy as its fascist dictator. He was a nationalist who believed in the purifying quality of war. He launched the Abyssinian campaign in 1936, which had two main objectives. The first was to settle Italian peasants in the fertile interior, and the second was to avenge the battle of Adwa in 1896, when Italian troops had been defeated — the first major defeat of a European army by African troops, and a massive humiliation for Italy.

Mussolini wanted to avenge that humiliation and avenge it he did. He used Eritrea as a jumping-off point, building up his troops before invading Abyssinia, as the country was then known. He deployed chemical warfare as part of the campaign. Italy was soon in control of Abyssinia and the emperor Haile Selassie was forced to flee into exile in Britain.

As he left, he warned the world that fascism was a threat to everyone, not just his own country. At the time, however, European powers like Britain and France were preparing for WWII. They were rearming because they realized that Adolf Hitler and Mussolini were going to be a problem, but they didn’t want to take on Mussolini at that stage of the game.

That inaugurated the second great phase of Italian colonialism, which was very different from the first. There was a lot of investment in Eritrea. Asmara became one of the most beautiful modernist cities in Africa — it’s now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with all the cinemas and other public buildings. Italy’s best Fascist-era architects based themselves there, and it was dubbed “Little Italy.”

But it was also a place where, as fascism became more and more obnoxious, the racial segregation laws that were being enforced in Italy against Jews were also introduced in Eritrea. There had been a lot of mixed marriages between Italians and Eritrean women. Suddenly, it wasn’t possible for those Italians to give their children their surnames.

The two parts of the town were segregated, with poor slums where the Eritreans lived and nice white villas for the Italians. Cinemas were segregated and there were separate queues in shops. Eritreans were not welcome to have a drink in the cafés in the Italian district. If you were walking along the pavement and you met an Italian coming toward you, you were supposed to step off the pavement in respect for your white master.

The Italian colonial experience has left behind a legacy of anger and bitterness there. People get very upset about it, particularly the fact that, during the Italian era, they were only allowed to go to school for four years, so their education was truncated. But the irony is that Eritrea would never have existed as a country if Italy hadn’t colonized it.

Colonialism made this area that was carved out in the Horn of Africa much more connected to trade, and it industrialized at a much faster pace than Abyssinia, which later become Ethiopia. The influx of Europeans — not just Italians but also Greeks and other nationalities — brought technical know-how and skills for manufacturing. It was a much more cosmopolitan and heavily industrialized country as a result.

On the one hand, Eritreans are bitter about Italian colonialism, but they also know that it made them different. There is a sense of Eritrean superiority, and the legacy of Italian colonialism plays a strange role in that.

The racial segregation laws that were being enforced in Italy against Jews were also introduced in Eritrea.

Daniel Finn

How did Haile Selassie gain control over Eritrea after World War II, when he was restored to power in his own country? What was the nature of his rule over Eritrea?

Michela Wrong

Once World War II broke out, the Allies realized that they needed to get Italian forces out of Africa. That meant they were going to have to seize Eritrea, Italy’s primordial colony. There was a famous battle at Keren in 1941, where British troops took on the Italian Fascists and the Ascari, a mercenary force of Eritrean soldiers who had been trained by the Italians and were famed for their military prowess.

There was a very high death toll, but the British soldiers eventually broke through at Keren and rolled into Asmara. They were left in a caretaker capacity, not only in Asmara but also in Addis Ababa, where they put Haile Selassie back on the throne. The question then became, what to do with Eritrea? The British ran it for a while, but they were not really interested in it. They indulged in some flagrant asset-stripping, removing all the infrastructure that the Italians had put in place.

There was a debate about whether Eritrea should become a trusteeship under Italian rule. People didn’t like that idea because it seemed to be rewarding Italy. Ethiopia wanted Eritrea to become part of the Ethiopian state. The British favored carving the country in two and giving part of it to Sudan.

The population of Eritrea itself was divided. The biggest schism was between the lowlanders in the coastal areas, who tended to be Muslim, and the highlanders, who were Orthodox Christians and had much greater cultural affinities with Christian highlanders in Ethiopia, especially in neighboring Tigray.

Haile Selassie was obsessed with controlling Eritrea because he wanted access to the sea. His predecessors had shared this obsession. They thought that if Ethiopia was landlocked, it would never benefit from trade and interaction with the outside world and would never be able to obtain the modern weapons that European countries were producing. Haile Selassie believed that without a coastline, Ethiopia would be isolated and underdeveloped.

He also regarded Eritrea as an integral part of the Kingdom of Aksum, from which he saw his own state as being descended. Aksum was supposed to have been founded in semi-mythical times by the Queen of Sheba, who had a relationship with King Solomon in Jerusalem.

A party was set up in Eritrea by Christian highlanders called the Unionist Party. The Muslim community was not at all happy about that, and things became quite violent. There was a campaign going on in the countryside with lots of weapons doing the rounds.

Eventually, the UN set up a commission to decide what to do with Eritrea. It decided that Eritrea should be federated with Ethiopia but not under its direct control. It was supposed to be an autonomous unit with its own parliament, the Baito. The British left in 1952, and the Baito took over.

The federation between Ethiopia and Eritrea lasted for just ten years. The parliamentarians who belonged to the Baito were bought off by Ethiopia, which was absolutely determined that Eritrea was going to become part of Ethiopia. In 1962, there was a meeting of the Baito in which they voted themselves out of existence.

The Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie was obsessed with controlling Eritrea because he wanted access to the sea.

A lot of Eritreans still remember this episode and resent the role that the UN played in it. The UN was meant to have signed off on any change to the federal status of Eritrea, yet UN officials completely ignored what happened in 1962. The Eritreans petitioned them, but that book was closed so far as they were concerned.

Very quickly, all the promises that the Ethiopians had made to the parliamentarians of the Baito proved to be empty. They had pledged massive investment, with Ethiopian companies moving to Eritrea and taking on Eritrean staff. They had also promised that the local culture would be respected. Instead, you saw increasingly heavy-handed rule by Haile Selassie.

A lot of things that had been tolerated under the British — trade unions, freedom of the press — were crushed under Ethiopian rule. One of the most unpopular moves was to impose Amharic as the official language. They no longer displayed the Eritrean flag. It was very clear to Eritreans that their local culture was of no interest to the Ethiopians, and they were now going to have to learn Amharic in school.

It was no surprise that the first separatist movement, the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF), started up in 1961. It was launched from exile in Cairo by a group of Eritrean students and intellectuals. Many of them were from the Muslim lowlands, because it was the Muslim community that was most dismayed by the union with Ethiopia. They began attacking symbols of Ethiopian authority like police stations.

At the same time, however, Haile Selassie was being bolstered by the Americans. They had discovered a strange characteristic of the plateau in the Eritrean highlands: it receives radio signals from around the world with very little interference. There were spots where you could listen in on the whole world. They set up what they called Kagnew Station, which became a very important listening post for the United States during the Cold War.

Because of Kagnew, the Americans were always very keen to prop up Haile Selassie. They gave him technical assistance and helped fund and train his army because, in return, they would get free access to Kagnew Station so they could listen in on the Soviet Union. Ethiopia became a prime Cold War ally of the United States, while Eritrea was a pawn in that game.

Daniel Finn

What effect did the overthrow of Haile Selassie in the 1970s and the subsequent rise to power of the Derg, the military junta, have on Eritrea?

Michela Wrong

As Ethiopia’s ruler, Haile Selassie had centralized power in his own hands. There was a royal court clustered around him, but he was very much the one who micromanaged everything and knew where all the bodies were buried. Then he developed Alzheimer’s. At the same time, there were issues with various parts of Ethiopia threatening to break off and a lot of unhappiness in his own army — the same army that the United States had been training and building up.

The UN was meant to have signed off on any change to the federal status of Eritrea, yet UN officials completely ignored the annexation in 1962.

There was one attempted coup that failed and was brutally suppressed. In 1974, however, there was a second coup, which succeeded in overthrowing Haile Selassie. It was led by a group of idealistic young military officers who called themselves the Derg.

The Derg were left-leaning and Marxist in their thinking. They did away with the royal court and executed a bunch of former generals and ministers. They took over Ethiopia and said that it was necessary to modernize the country because it was stuck in the feudal age.

The Derg had a nationalist agenda — “Ethiopia Above All” was one of their mottos — and they were very keen to suppress dissent in Eritrea. They did what most armies do when they’re facing a guerrilla movement that is popular with local people. They hit back hard, razing villages, wiping out flocks, setting fire to crops, and carrying out massacres of civilians. This resulted in a massive departure of young people from Eritrea.

They fled abroad to start new lives, but also to join up with the liberation movements, the ELF and its rival, the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF). There was huge recruitment into these two movements, which were doing quite well in their struggle against the army. They had liberated many key towns in Eritrea by 1977, apart from Asmara, Massawa, and Barentu. It looked as if they were about to take control of the country.

At that point, however, the Derg leader, Mengistu Haile Mariam, grew tired of Ethiopia’s alliance with the Americans, who he felt were not giving him the weapons he needed to put down the Eritrean secessionists. He turned to Moscow for help. The USSR was actually supporting Somalia, Ethiopia’s rival in the region, but the Soviets decided that if they had to choose, they wanted to have Ethiopia as their key ally in the Horn of Africa.

They ditched Somalia and moved all their advisors to Ethiopia, along with heavy weaponry such as tanks, jet fighters, and artillery. That turned the tide of the war. The Eritrean liberation movements suddenly found themselves on the back foot and staged what they termed a “strategic withdrawal,” surrendering a lot of territory and retreating into a mountain stronghold in an area called Nakfa, where they sat things out for the next decade or so.

The Derg period was extremely brutal for Eritrea. It forged a national character based on dogged self-reliance and resistance to Ethiopian rule. The liberation movements that emerged were all left-leaning, but because the Soviet Union was supporting the Derg, they couldn’t look to Moscow for assistance as so many African separatist movements did. At the beginning, the ELF had relied on some Arab support, but as time went by, they were largely on their own.

They relied on contributions from Eritreans living and working abroad. There were many thousands of people in that position, and they had a well-established tithing system. But they also seized much of the weaponry that the Soviet Union sent to Ethiopia and taught themselves how to use it — how to drive Soviet tanks — and then turned it on the Ethiopian army.

Daniel Finn

The current ruling party in Eritrea is directly descended from that campaign of guerrilla warfare against Ethiopian rule in the 1970s and ’80s. What was the nature of that campaign and the political movement that led it?

Michela Wrong

Ethiopia became a prime Cold War ally of the United States, while Eritrea was a pawn in that game.

The Eritrean struggle became a favorite with left-wing intellectuals in the West. You would get members of the British Labour Party heading off to Nafka, the EPLF stronghold, which you had to reach via Sudan. It was a long, difficult trip, but a lot of left-wing activists and journalists did make that journey. They were blown away by what they found, because they came back with the story of a unified, focused, and disciplined left-wing movement fighting against oppressive rule by the Derg.

However, the Eritrean liberation movement had its own internal civil war. The first movement had been the ELF, which was largely Muslim and recruited from the lowlands. There was a breakaway movement within the ELF of Christian highlanders, many of whom were young students. One of them was Isaias Afwerki, the current president of Eritrea.

They disagreed with the ELF on various ideological points, accusing it of being small-minded, regionalist, and unambitious. They broke away to form the EPLF, and there were armed clashes between members of the ELF and its new rival. The EPLF eventually became the dominant liberation movement and chased members of the ELF out of the country into Sudan. By the early 1980s, most of them were outside Eritrea, and the EPLF was the main game in town, with its base in Nakfa.

I’ve spoken to people who went to Nakfa in those years. I’m not of the generation that went out there, although I’ve been to the area subsequently. They tell you that if you visited the EPLF in Nakfa, everything was done in the dark of night because there was constant bombardment by the Ethiopian Air Force. Everyone lived underground. There was an underground hospital, underground laboratories, and underground schools for the children of the fighters.

The fighters were both male and female. About 30 percent were women, who dressed and fought like the men. It was very egalitarian, and it was a highly sophisticated movement. They had their own newspaper and their own film unit, which captured lots of priceless footage. They had theaters and guest rooms for visiting journalists. They had underground offices and sports contests.

They even staged international conferences, all in this mountain stronghold under constant bombardment, which would be attended by left-wing politicians from Europe. One of the people I interviewed for my book was a cook who had taught himself how to cater for these conferences. He told me that, at one stage, he catered for a conference that attracted six thousand delegates.

They were very impassionate about education. They wanted to educate the people of Eritrea and went out to the villages to do it. The education was all rather left-wing and Marxist in its nature. They had barefoot doctors who would visit the villages too.

It was a very committed, impassioned, ideologically driven campaign. It’s a sort of golden era that people still look back on with a certain romantic glow attached to it. There was a sense of Eritrea as being sui generis — a sense of exceptionalism and a philosophy of self-reliance that came through that. However, I think that’s been as much of a curse as a blessing as time has gone by.

Daniel Finn

What role did the EPLF play in the final demise of Mengistu’s regime at the beginning of the 1990s?

Michela Wrong

The Derg period was extremely brutal for Eritrea.

It was crucial — I don’t think Mengistu would have been toppled had it not been for the EPLF. At a certain point, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) was born in the northern Ethiopian region of Tigray, led by Meles Zenawi. It teamed up with the EPLF. The Tigrayans were as hostile to the Derg and rule from Addis Ababa as the Eritreans were, so the two movements joined forces. The Eritreans were always the more experienced partner in that relationship.

The fact that the Derg was under such fierce attack in both Tigray and Eritrea meant that it had to concentrate much of its army in the north and it was fighting on several fronts. The army was highly demoralized. The war had gone on for much too long and didn’t seem to have much of an ideological content. The Amhara and Oromo groups in central and southern Ethiopia were contesting rule from Addis Ababa as well.

The Cold War was also coming to an end, so Moscow was no longer so keen to be sending huge amounts of expensive military equipment to Ethiopia. Mengistu was constantly asking for more and more deliveries, whereupon his demoralized officers would leave the equipment on the battlefield to be taken by the EPLF, along with thousands of prisoners. It wasn’t really serving any purpose.

In 1988, there was a turning point at the Battle of Afabet, where the Eritreans broke out of their mountain stronghold and gained the upper hand. There was an attempted military coup against Mengistu in the aftermath. He repressed the coup and executed some of his best officers, but there was a sense that the regime was on borrowed time.

There was a massive tank battle in Massawa on the coast — the biggest tank battle since World War II and another high point for the EPLF. Eventually the Ethiopian garrison in Asmara surrendered, and Eritrean fighters rolled in their trucks through the streets of the city, cheered on by the local population. Very soon afterward, the TPLF and the EPLF also sent their tanks into Addis Ababa.

Before that happened, Mengistu had nominally gone to inspect some troops in the south of the country, but he told the pilot to keep going. He fled the country and went into exile in Zimbabwe, where he lives to this day. That was the end of the Derg, because the TPLF took control of Ethiopia at the head of the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), a coalition of like-minded parties in which the TPLF was always dominant.

Everyone lived underground in Nakfa.

Looking back on the armed struggle, as it’s known in Eritrea, they had pulled off an amazing victory. A small rebel movement had fought one of the biggest and best-equipped armies in Africa, and it had won. But we have to remember that the victory came at a price.

It’s estimated that between 150,000 and 200,000 Eritreans lost their lives. One in every fifty Eritrean families lost a relative. If you visit households in Eritrea today, you’ll often see on the mantelpiece a martyr’s certificate, which is a blue certificate that the government gave out to people who lost someone at the front fighting the Ethiopians.

Daniel Finn

What was the relationship between the EPLF and the Tigrayan leaders, such as Meles Zenawi, who dominated Ethiopia’s government after 1991?

Michela Wrong

At the start, it was a very good relationship. Eritrea became independent in 1993, and there was a feeling here in the West at the time that these were two key countries in the Horn of Africa. Eritrea and Ethiopia were both run by movements that had been established by guerrilla forces. Those movements were both left-leaning and very much committed to developing their countries. They were in the game to combat poverty and famine.

Isaias Afwerki and Meles Zenawi were labeled as being part of an “African renaissance” of leaders that also included Yoweri Museveni in Uganda, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, and perhaps even Laurent Kabila in the Congo. They were all seen as progressively minded former rebel leaders who knew what they wanted.

But things didn’t work out as they were meant to, because relations between the TPLF in Addis Ababa and the EPLF in Asmara began to sour. The TPLF immediately granted Eritrea independence. In 1993, after a referendum, it stopped being the northernmost province of Ethiopia and became a country in its own right. There was investment pouring in and the diaspora was coming back to Eritrea.

This was when I started visiting the country. You saw Eritrean businessmen coming back and starting up factories. There were building works everywhere around town and an incredible energy — they were replanting all the trees that had been destroyed during the struggle and trying to repair the war damage. You saw former fighters becoming taxi drivers or setting up little businesses. It felt like a golden age.

But there had always been differences between the TPLF and the EPLF. There had been moments where they had been on very bad terms during the struggle. For example, the TPLF was very bitter about the fact that, at one stage, the Eritreans had closed off access via Sudan — access on which the TPLF relied to get not only military supplies but also famine relief.

A small rebel movement had fought one of the biggest and best-equipped armies in Africa, and it had won.

There were also ideological differences. One of the first things the TPLF did was to introduce the concept of ethnic federalism in Ethiopia. This gave the different parts of the country the right to secede from Ethiopia if that was what they wanted. Isaias Afwerki did not approve of ethnic federalism. He saw it as a form of sectarianism and suspected there was an agenda behind it: maybe the Tigrayans were planning to use it as a way of building up a “Greater Tigray,” which could then become a threat to its northern neighbor, Eritrea.

As well as that, there was a long-standing resentment between the EPLF and the TPLF because the EPLF was the older of the two rebel movements. It tended to adopt a rather patronizing attitude towards the TPLF, which had only seen the light of day in the 1970s. You would hear former Eritrean fighters saying, “We had to teach these people how to fight.”

Yet now the TPLF was running a huge country with a huge army, while Eritrea was just a small, dry, arid land to the north. The TPLF felt that it deserved rather more consideration than that. It resented the patronizing tone with which the Eritreans would address it.

In the late 1990s, some economic issues started to be a problem. Eritrea decided that it wanted to introduce its own currency, the nakfa. Ethiopia didn’t see any need for that. Its government said, “Let’s continue to use the birr,” which was printed in Addis Ababa. Things got to be very bad on that front — so bad that trade between the two countries ground to a halt.

There had been a series of border incidents along the colonially demarcated border. As with all such borders, there were always areas that were ambiguous. It wasn’t clear who ran which part; the maps said one thing, but the administrative record said another. In a little village called Badme, there was an incident in May 1998 with armed men on both sides, and the Eritreans sent in their tanks. Suddenly, the two countries were at war again over their border.

That really took the world by surprise. Everyone thought, “My goodness, how can this be happening?” There were so many similarities between the Tigrayan highlands and the Eritrean highlands where the people spoke Tigrinya. They had the same religion, and many of them were related to one another. They knew each other, they had fought alongside each other during the struggle — what on earth was going on? That was a decisive moment in Eritrean and Ethiopian history.

Eritrea’s Isaias Afwerki and Ethiopia’s Meles Zenawi were labeled as being part of an ‘African renaissance’ of leaders in the 1990s.

Daniel Finn

What were the outcomes of the war between Eritrea and Ethiopia? How did Isaias Afwerki go on to transform the Eritrean political system into one of the world’s most rigid dictatorships?

Michela Wrong

Eritrea lost the war. It lasted for two years, and by the time it ended with the Algiers agreement in 2000, Ethiopian troops were in possession of alarmingly large swathes of Eritrea. At that point, the two countries were persuaded by the international community to go to arbitration, and a boundary commission was appointed.

The war created a crisis within the regime in Eritrea because there was a feeling that this had been an unnecessary war. People felt that it should have been possible to sort out the issue of where the border lay and all the economic and financial issues through negotiation. They thought that Isaias had been pigheaded and had not wanted to listen. They also thought he had made a series of key military mistakes and that he had refused to listen to his generals, conducting the war strategy himself.

All of this was openly discussed. Eritrea was going through what has been described to me as its equivalent of the Prague Spring. Newspapers were discussing the failings of Isaias. There was a Berlin Manifesto, as it was called, signed by a group of Eritrean intellectuals who said that this experience showed the failings of one-man rule and who called for the implementation of Eritrea’s constitution, which allowed for multiparty democracy.

There was a group of cabinet ministers who went to see Isaias known as the G-15. They called for a meeting to discuss these issues. Instead of listening to them, he had them rounded up and jailed. They have never been seen since.

The fate of the G-15 is the great silence in Eritrean history. These were former comrades who had fought alongside Isaias and were immensely respected in the community. They disappeared into jails. We know that some of them have since died. They’re all aging now — it’s been twenty-two years since they were arrested.

In a stroke, Eritrea became a dictatorship. I think the signs of autocratic tendencies on the part of Isaias were always there if you look back. We know that, during the independence struggle, there were various challenges launched against his leadership of the EPLF, and they were brutally suppressed. People were executed at the war front, which is quite extraordinary when you think that these people were fighting the Ethiopian army at the time.

In 1991, the EPLF took on a new name, the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ). It was the only party in Eritrea. There was a multiparty constitution that was widely debated, and everyone was waiting for it to be ratified and implemented, but it never was. That was the first moment where people were thinking, “Why isn’t the constitution being implemented?”

Afterward, with the Badme War and the rounding up of the G-15, was effectively the end of Eritrean democracy. Various parts of the Eritrean system that might have stood up to Isaias were silenced one by one. The press was closed down, and so was Asmara University. The Orthodox Church was silenced, and the same thing happened with the Grand Mosque. Parliament became a total shadow of itself, with no serious decisions being taken there.

The war over Badme created a crisis within the regime in Eritrea because there was a feeling that this had been an unnecessary war.

You ended up with a situation where Isaias and a very small group of aides who had been with him for many, many years were taking all the key decisions in Eritrea. The biggest change instituted after the Badme War was conscription. Up to that point, the men who came back from the armed struggle were being gradually demobilized and given civilian jobs. That all stopped with the war against Ethiopia. Open-ended military service was now decreed as the duty of every citizen, male or female, within certain age limits.

Youngsters in Eritrea were all being told that they would have to go off to the middle of the Sahel and train because the country was on a war footing. Despite the boundary ruling that came out of international arbitration, the border remained un-demarcated. Eritreans were told by the government that they were in a “no war, no peace” situation: “We have to be constantly on the alert, we could be invaded at any time by Ethiopia — you have to do your national duty.”

Most people who look at Eritrea think that this was really Isaias Afwerki’s way of averting an Arab Spring–type uprising. If you keep young people endlessly drilling in the middle of the desert, they’re not going to represent a challenge to your rule. This became a key story in Eritrea because, of course, so many young people didn’t want to do open-ended military service. It meant they couldn’t get married, have children, pursue their education, or set up their own businesses. They started leaving the country in droves.

For fifteen years, we’ve seen a flood of people out of the country. At one stage, a couple of years ago, there were five thousand departures every month, even though it’s illegal to leave Eritrea. The UN has estimated that one-tenth of the country’s population — half a million people — are now living abroad. That’s a terrible indictment of the PFDJ and of the EPLF. The idea that young people would be desperate to leave the country that the EPLF fought so hard to establish is desperately sad.

Eritrea also became very isolated. It was routine to describe it as a pariah state. It began supporting Ethiopian rebel movements that were challenging the regime in Addis Ababa as well as supporting al-Shabab in Somalia. The United States and other Western states slapped sanctions on Eritrea for that. There was increasingly a feeling among Western diplomats and policymakers that Eritrea was a problem. They saw it as a nasty regime that was oppressing its own young people, supporting jihadism in Somalia, making trouble, and proving very difficult to deal with.

In Ethiopia, on the other hand, Meles Zenawi was a very articulate, well-educated prime minister who sat on Tony Blair’s Africa commission. He was seen as a great partner who had lots of projects running with the World Bank and the IMF, winning plaudits around the world for his development work and pro-poor policies. A feeling developed that giant Ethiopia was the player to deal with, while Eritrea was just a difficult pariah state in the north.

Various parts of the Eritrean system that might have stood up to Isaias Afwerki were silenced one by one.

I get quite annoyed with that characterization. While there was a huge prickliness about Eritrea during this period, they did have cause for complaint. The boundary commission came up with a ruling about the disputed areas. It found that some of the places that had been fought over during the Badme War did indeed belong to Ethiopia, but Badme itself, where it had all started, actually belonged to Eritrea. On that particular point, the Eritreans were right, but Ethiopia was in occupation of that area.

At that point, the international community, which was guaranteeing the arbitration process, should have said to Ethiopia, “You need to pull out of Badme and demarcate the border.” But even though it was supplying millions of dollars in aid to Ethiopia, which gave it enormous leverage, the international community never applied any real pressure on the Ethiopians to do so.

The Eritreans were very much aware of that and felt that Ethiopia was being treated one way while Eritrea was being treated differently because it was small and didn’t seem very important to the West. That built up a sense of grievance. You can draw a straight line between the failure to implement the boundary commission ruling on Badme and what has been happening over the past couple of years in Tigray.

Daniel Finn

How did the thawing of relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea in recent years influence the outbreak of war in Tigray? What role did the Eritrean army played in the fighting?

Michela Wrong

One of the turning points was the death of Meles Zenawi, the enlightened, highly intelligent prime minister of Ethiopia in 2012. He died very young, aged 57, of leukemia. It removed a key actor from the game. His successor didn’t hang around very long, and the influence of the TPLF started waning, having always been the dominant player in the EPRDF coalition running Ethiopia.

The idea that young people would be desperate to leave the country that the EPLF fought so hard to establish is desperately sad.

The TPLF was now on the back foot. It had lost its charismatic leader and had been in power for too long in most people’s judgment. It was increasingly unpopular. Its ideas about ethnic federalism were being challenged and were seen by many as a sham. Abiy Ahmed took over as prime minister. He comes from the Oromo community, which had particular issues with the TPLF and the way in which Ethiopia was being run at that stage.

Abi Ahmed was a former intelligence officer. He was a young, charismatic, Pentecostal figure, talking the talk about political reform as well as saying that ethnic federalism hadn’t worked and Ethiopia needed to unite as a nation. He appeared to be doing a lot of very important things.

At that stage, Ethiopia was in a near-permanent state of emergency. There were endless curfews and thousands of people had been rounded up and jailed. Abiy released thousands of political prisoners and exposed the track record of torture that had been practiced in detention centers under the TPLF and the EPRDF. He welcomed home exiled dissidents who were campaigning against the TPLF. He also prosecuted high-ranking TPLF insiders who had become pretty corrupt by that stage.

Most significantly, Abiy reached out to Isaias and said, “Okay, we’re going to deal with this border issue — you can have Badme. It’s ridiculous to have this ‘no war, no peace’ situation — we must cooperate.” There was a very important summit where the two men met in Asmara and Isaias was invited to Addis Ababa. It was the first time in two decades that there had been a summit between these two leaderships, and they reestablished diplomatic relations.

Because of that overture, Abiy was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019, which now looks like a very ironic award, given how much war he has presided over since then. There have certainly been calls for it to be rescinded. After the summit, what remained of the TPLF was increasingly at odds with Abiy. The hard-liners within that movement, who had been sacked, disgraced, and humiliated in public, retired to Tigray in the north.

Abiy started work on centralizing his Prosperity Party. Then there was a spat with the Tigrayan leaders over the staging of elections. Abiy said that they couldn’t stage elections because Ethiopia had been hit by COVID-19. In Tigray, the TPLF went ahead and staged elections without him. That was already a very autonomous gesture.

In November 2020, as relations between the TPLF and the central power in Addis Ababa were getting worse and worse, the TPLF attacked the northern command in Tigray. There were mass arrests and lots of Ethiopian commanders were killed in the attack. The Tigrayans said that Abiy’s government was bolstering the northern command because it was planning to attack them, so they had just carried out a preemptive strike. People in Addis Ababa, on the other hand, saw this as a stab in the back — as if you had invited people to a dinner party and then slaughtered them.

That marked the beginning of the Tigray War, which Abiy has always been reluctant to call a war. He called it a “law enforcement operation” — he’s a bit like Vladimir Putin in that respect. Eritrea’s involvement in that war was pivotal. Abiy was also facing a challenge in the south from the Oromo Liberation Army, so his forces were stretched, but the Eritreans were there to give him a helping hand in Tigray by sending in their troops. Ethiopian troops also went in via Eritrea to attack the TPLF, which found itself the subject of a pincer movement.

Eritrea’s involvement in the Tigray War was pivotal.

A lot of people, myself included, assumed at the start that the TPLF would be defeated very quickly. In fact, they staged an extraordinary military campaign at the beginning. Having lost territory, they regained it. They knew the terrain in their region, and they had a track record of military efficiency, whereas the Ethiopian government was sending in people who didn’t know the terrain, relying on sheer manpower, and seeing a lot of its soldiers killed.

There was a point when it even looked as if the TPLF might start advancing on Addis Abba, and Abiy ended up ordering a mass mobilization. But eventually the tide of the war turned, probably because the Ethiopian army started using drones that it had purchased abroad. They seem to have made all the difference.

One of the most shocking things for people like me who’ve been watching this war from afar is the behavior of the Eritrean army in Tigray. Isaias repeatedly used the phrase “game over” when talking about the TPLF. He gave the impression that he wants to crush the TPLF and totally eradicate it from the landscape. If that involves killing thousands and thousands of Tigrayans, that doesn’t bother him in the slightest.

There have been atrocities on all sides — everyone agrees on that. But you have seen the Eritrean soldiers accused of taking part in massacres and of using gang rape as an instrument of war. They have been accused of engaging in systematic pillaging, looting hospitals, and burning crops so that Tigrayan farmers won’t be able to feed their people. Tigray is a country that is always hungry and in need of famine relief.

This scorched-earth approach was very shocking to someone like me, who knows from history that the EPLF prided itself on the way it treated civilians and prisoners of war. The impression it gives is that these youngsters who spent years drilling in the Sahel were let off the leash. They’ve been brainwashed into hatred of Tigrayans, who are seen as the traditional enemies despite the fact that so many of them are distantly related to Eritreans and they have the same religion and cultural references. They’ve just been let off the leash by their commanders and told, “Do as you will.” That was very depressing and shocking.

We now have a peace deal that was signed in Pretoria last autumn. One of the problems with that deal is that it doesn’t seem to include any reference to Eritrean forces on the ground in Tigray. Until that issue is addressed, we don’t know if the Eritreans are going to be withdrawing or staying put.

The Ethiopian government was using humanitarian aid and food aid as a weapon, cutting off access as a way of bringing Tigray to its knees.

It has been a very costly war. We know that people have starved inside Tigray. We don’t know in what numbers because the press hasn’t been given access to that area. The Ethiopian government was using humanitarian aid and food aid as a weapon, cutting off access as a way of bringing that province to its knees. We may never know quite how many people have died in Tigray during the war.

Abiy Ahmed emerges as a victor, but he’s also been morally diminished by what has taken place over the last few years in Tigray. He’s definitely seen his international reputation trashed. Looking at Isaias, you have to say that he has played the long game. He was someone who, from what I understand, always thought that Eritrea should be the dominant, hegemonic player in the Horn of Africa, despite its tiny size. It appears that he has now gotten his way, because Eritrea emerges from this war as a kingmaker — the tail that’s wagging the enormous dog that is Ethiopia.

This tiny little country really seems to be able to make or break power in Ethiopia. Back in the 2000s, at the end of the Badme War, when Eritrea was being treated as a pariah state, I don’t think anyone imagined that it would emerge as such a key player in the Horn of Africa. It a very good and very sad example of that old proverb “Revenge is a dish best served cold.” That seems to be what Isaias has been doing over the last few years.

Right-Wing Dark Money Funded Kansas’s Failed Anti-Abortion Campaign

Leonard Leo’s massive conservative dark money network is quietly working behind the scenes to try to eliminate abortion protections at the state level.

Abortion rights protesters along 15th Street near Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington DC, on May 14, 2022. (Elvert Barnes Photography / Wikimedia Commons)

The dark money network led by conservative Supreme Court architect Leonard Leo financed the nonprofit that bankrolled a misleading text message campaign pretending a Kansas ballot measure would “give women a choice,” when it actually would have eliminated state abortion protections.

New tax documents hint at how Leo’s network has been quietly working to influence abortion policy in the states utilizing his historic $1.6 billion dark money fund, in the wake of the Supreme Court decision last year overturning Roe v. Wade and ending federal protections for abortion rights. As President Donald Trump’s judicial adviser, Leo helped select three of the six justices making up the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority.

Leo’s network donated $1.7 million to CatholicVote Civic Action, a conservative Catholic advocacy group, between July 2021 and June 2022, according to a newly obtained tax return.

The contribution was made around the time that CatholicVote Civic Action was funding a campaign supporting a Kansas ballot measure designed to eliminate protections for abortion rights in the state constitution. The ballot measure would have affirmed “there is no Kansas constitutional right to abortion” and given state lawmakers “the right to pass laws to regulate abortion.”

Do Right PAC, a political action committee funded by CatholicVote Civic Action, sent text messages to Kansas voters a day before the election last summer giving the false impression that a “yes” vote on the ballot measure would “give women a choice” and “protect women’s health,” when its passage would have ended state protections for abortion rights.

The PAC also paid for TV ads featuring Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker, in which he claimed that the amendment would “let Kansas decide what we do on abortion, not judges and not DC politicians.”

A spokesperson for Leo did not respond to submitted questions.

Former Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.), a senior political advisor to CatholicVote Civic Action, led Do Right PAC. CatholicVote Civic Action donated $500,000 of the $556,000 raised by the PAC last year. Huelskamp did not respond to a request for comment.

Despite these efforts, the Kansas initiative failed decisively, 41 to 59 percent — offering an early preview of how anti-abortion efforts would flounder in the 2022 state elections. While Kansas Republicans recently overrode Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s vetoes of some anti-abortion measures, abortion remains legal in the state up to twenty-two weeks.

The Leo network’s donation to CatholicVote Civic Action came via the Concord Fund, the conservative advocacy group that spent tens of millions to confirm the three Supreme Court nominees whom Leo helped select as former Trump’s judicial adviser.

Tax records show the Concord Fund raised $29 million between July 2021 and June 2022. All of that money appears to have come from Leo’s Marble Freedom Trust. As the Lever and ProPublica reported last year, this trust was the recipient of an unprecedented $1.6 billion cash infusion courtesy of Chicago surge protector magnate Barre Seid.

The new tax documents show how Leo is using the Concord Fund to imprint his conservative vision on both politics and policy.

The disclosure shows the Concord Fund donated $3 million to One Nation, the Senate GOP’s dark money arm. One Nation, which supports Republican Senate candidates, aired ads supporting Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation in 2018.

The Concord Fund separately donated nearly $1 million to the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion advocacy group that pressed the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade. The organization has actively backed voter suppression laws passed by Republican lawmakers around the country.

Records show the Concord Fund also donated $500,000 to Advancing American Freedom, a dark money group chaired by former Vice President Mike Pence that is serving as his “campaign-in-waiting” in advance of a potential 2024 presidential bid, according to Politico.

In 2021, Advancing American Freedom filed an amicus brief, or friend-of-the-court filing, pressing the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, warning that “unfettered access to abortion” has led to “declining formation of families with accompanying increases in family instability and single parent households (many living in poverty).”

This year, the organization filed a brief unsuccessfully urging the high court to approve a Texas district court ruling designed to ban a commonly-used abortion pill. The Supreme Court blocked the lower court’s decision in April, allowing an appeals court to consider the case first, though it’s widely expected that the case will eventually end up back at the high court.

The Concord Fund has long been the chief financier of the Republican Attorneys General Association, which elects GOP attorneys general and donated $6.5 million to the group last election cycle, according to data compiled by CQ Roll Call’s Political Moneyline.

Those attorneys general regularly bring cases and file briefs urging the Supreme Court to issue precedent-shattering decisions. Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch, for instance, led the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case at the Supreme Court, by which justices overturned federal protections for abortion rights.

The Concord Fund additionally reported donating $750,000 to the lobbying arm of the Foundation for Government Accountability, which has led the fight to institute new and expanded work requirements for a range of social safety net programs.

President Joe Biden’s recent debt ceiling deal with House Republicans includes some of those expanded work requirements, at the urging of Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

280 Killed in Deadliest Train Crash in Decades

On Saturday, rescuers toiled away to search through the wreckage and ruins caused by two derailed passenger trains in India. The accident, which occurred approximately 137 miles southwest of Kolkata on Friday night, resulted in a tragic loss of life with more than 280 killed and around 900 injured. It was one of the most devastating train collisions in the nation in decades.

Desperate to save lives, rescuers used cutting torches to open doors and windows in the more than a dozen crushed rail cars in the hope of freeing survivors trapped inside. During the night, 288 dead bodies were recovered and more than 800 injured passengers were taken to hospitals, many of whom were in critical condition. The search for more victims was still underway, and it was feared that the death toll would rise.

Sudhanshu Sarangi, the director of Odisha’s fire department, stated that it was unlikely that anyone still trapped in the wreckage would be alive. According to Amitabh Sharma, a spokesperson for the railroad ministry, ten to twelve coaches from one train derailed, and some of the debris from the mangled coaches fell onto a nearby track which was then struck by another passenger train that was travelling in the opposite direction, resulting in three more coaches derailing. Press Trust of India reported that a third train carrying freight was also involved, though there was no confirmation from railroad authorities.

Local villagers, along with rescuers and police, contributed to the relief effort by aiding in evacuating people from the site after they heard the loud sound of the train coaches going off the tracks. Rupam Banerjee, a survivor, praised the locals for their assistance, as they not only helped to extricate people but retrieved their luggage and provided them with water.

Vandana Kaleda, another survivor, recalled the chaos inside her coach during the derailment, saying that people were “falling on each other” as the coach shook violently and veered offthe tracks.

The train involved in the crash was the Coromandel Express, travelling from Howrah in West Bengal state to Chennai in Tamil Nadu state. India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his sympathies with the bereaved families and said that he had spoken to the railway minister and that all possible assistance was being given.

Regrettably, train accidents in India are all too common, often due to human error or out-of-date signaling equipment. In August 1995, two trains collided near New Delhi, leading to 358 deaths. Meanwhile, in 2016, a passenger train derailed between Indore and Patna, causing the loss of 146 lives. With an estimated 14,000 trains being ridden by 12 million people across India every day over 40,000 miles of track, the need for improved safety measures is clear.

Two Boys Shot and Killed While Playing with Their Kittens

Two boys were killed in a heartbreaking triple homicide on May 31, 2023, in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, leaving a community in shock and disbelief. Eight-year-old Jesus Perez-Salome and nine-year-old Sebastian Perez-Salome were fatally wounded while innocently playing with their kittens outside their home. The shooting also killed 19-year-old Joshua Lugo-Perez.

Two men, 22-year-old Alex Torres-Santos and 16-year-old James Fernandez-Reyes, were arrested in connection to the incident. A third suspect, a mystery man, is still being pursued by law enforcement. It is believed that the men and Lugo-Perez had a previous disagreement. Police believe that Lugo-Perez was the intended target.

Lebanon Mayor Sherry Capello said of the tragedy, “Truly heartbreaking.” Similarly, Lebanon County District Attorney Pier Hess Graf commented, “There are two children dead as a result of this incident. They were outside playing with their kittens; they had nothing to do with this.”

Authorities will investigate if the death penalty is applicable in the case.

The shooting of Jesus and Sebastian Perez-Salome is a tragedy that has left the residents of Lebanon in shock and filled the families of the victims with sorrow and grief. Just moments before they were struck down, the two boys were living life as two innocent children should, reveling in the joy of playing with their furry friends.

Australia Is Facing the Biggest Housing Crisis in Generations, and Labor’s Plan Will Make It Worse

Anthony Albanese’s Labor government is accusing Greens MPs of standing in the way of solutions to the housing crisis. But under Labor’s plan, the proportion of public housing will drop while rents keep rising.

A residential building and the Sydney Tower Eye in Sydney, Australia, on Monday, April 17, 2023. (Brendon Thorne / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In the middle of the worst housing crisis in Australia’s history, a major national debate has emerged over the Labor government’s proposed centerpiece housing policy, the Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF).

The Australian Labor Party (ALP) requires the support of Greens MPs to pass their housing plan through Parliament. However, in its current form, Labor’s plan will see the housing crisis worsen, while doing nothing to support renters. Instead, the Greens have launched a national campaign demanding that Labor directly invests billions in building public and genuinely affordable housing. The Greens are demanding as well that the Labor government coordinate a national two-year freeze on rent increases, followed by 2 percent cap every two years on future rent increases.

So far, Labor has refused and has instead attacked Greens MPs — myself included — for “standing in the way,” while its allies in the media have tried to argue that “something is better than nothing.” In a less-than-veiled threat, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he is willing to let the bill fail and instead take it to the next election.

So, with the PM digging in and with Labor refusing to offer any extra funding toward public housing or move on freezing rents, this begs the question: Why are the Greens holding firm? To explain why, it’s first important to break down exactly what Labor’s Housing Australia Future Fund is. Second, we need to understand it in light of the scale of the housing crisis.

A $10-Billion Gamble

Labor’s plan is to gamble $10 billion on the stock market via the government’s Future Fund — which lost money last year — and to spend a limited fraction of the returns on housing. According to Labor’s proposal, even when the fund does make a return, funding for housing would be capped at $500 million a year. By way of comparison, Labor will spend $30 billion per year on the Stage 3 tax cuts that give a tax break of $9,000 to everyone earning over $200,000. Worse, because the proposed fund will only be allowed to spend money after it has generated an adequate return, at a minimum, it will be 2025 before a single home is completed.

Labor claims the HAFF will finance the construction of 30,000 social and “affordable” homes over five years. So far, they have not defined “affordable,” and at any rate, it’s extremely unlikely their plan will achieve anything near that target. And even if it does, the current national shortage of social and affordable housing is 640,000. And this number is due to increase by another 75,000 homes in the next five years, in part because the ALP is withdrawing funding for 24,000 rentals subsidized under the National Rental Affordability Scheme.

In sum, even if the Greens do pass Labor’s plan, the proportion of social housing in Australia will actually decline to a historical low of 3.4 percent of total housing stock. In comparison, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average is 15 percent. In comparable countries like Austria, over 20 percent of housing is community or public.

If it wasn’t clear already, Labor’s plan won’t even touch the sides of the housing crisis, let alone provide relief for renters. In effect, it doesn’t even maintain the status quo.

Labor’s Neoliberal Housing System

The status quo is the product of a decades-long neoliberal effort by both Labor and the Coalition to transform housing into a major object of financial speculation. At the same time, they have almost entirely outsourced housing provision to property developers, banks, and other for-profit entities.

This neoliberal housing program had three key pillars. The first was the deliberate and chronic underfunding of public housing, both construction and maintenance. The second was large-scale financial deregulation. This included relaxed lending restrictions on banks and floating the Australian dollar. Neoliberal reforms also allowed financial institutions to trade and sell packages of mortgages, that is, allowed the creation of a secondary mortgage market and securitization, leading to a surge in credit and aggressive lending from banks and other mortgage brokers.

The status quo is the product of a decades-long neoliberal effort by both Labor and the Coalition to transform housing into a major object of financial speculation.

The third pillar of the bipartisan neoliberal housing policy is the potent combination of negative-gearing and capital-gains tax concessions. These measures provide massive incentives to property speculators and function as a key driver of housing financialization. Next year alone, they will cost the federal budget $12 billion.

Together, these factors have transformed housing into a lucrative financial asset. The attraction of easy cash and turbo-charged property prices has caused the number of property investors to surge. It is precisely this housing system — created by Labor and the Liberals — that is in crisis. And it is this housing system that both parties are working to protect.

This is why federal Labor and its state counterparts are trying to convince the public that it’s not possible for the government to do more to respond to the housing crisis. And this is the key to understanding the HAFF. It isn’t designed to tackle the housing crisis. It’s designed to make it look like Labor has done something. And once the government has done “something,” they hope it will reduce the social and political pressure on the federal government to actually do something.

Why the Greens Are Holding the Line

It’s important to understand that the government’s power extends beyond the ability to pass laws. Almost as important is the government’s power to frame what is and isn’t politically possible. Once Parliament passes a “plan,” it constrains civil society’s ability to demand more, even if the plan is worse than a Band-Aid.

Consequently, if the Greens were to wave through the HAFF bill, it would foreclose on the possibility of building the social and political pressure needed to force the government to take meaningful action. Partly, this is because Greens support would give tacit endorsement not only the HAFF, but to Labor’s broader argument that this is the best the government can do in the current circumstances. And that is just not true. The consequence would be abandoning millions of people to permanent housing stress, as they struggle to pay rent, wait for social housing, or are forced to sleep in their cars or on the streets. Allowing the HAFF to pass would demobilize the growing section of civil society that is justifiably angry about the degree of poverty and financial stress that exists in such a wealthy country.

By refusing to pass Labor’s housing plan without even a debate, the Greens forced a national discussion about large-scale investment in public housing and a rent freeze. This can help lay the political foundations needed to push Labor into making real, lasting concessions.

After only six months of campaigning, 60 percent of the country now supports a rent freeze, with only 17 percent opposed.

In practical terms, after only six months of campaigning, 60 percent of the country now supports a rent freeze, with only 17 percent opposed. Only a few months ago, the PM dismissed the idea of national renter standards and a rent freeze as “pixie dust.” Now it’s on the table at the National Cabinet. These are small victories given the scale of the crisis — but they are an important first step toward more transformative solutions.

In parliamentary terms, threatening to vote against the HAFF is the only immediate leverage the Greens have to force Labor to take serious action. And just as important, this parliamentary conflict helps create the space for a broader campaign in civil society. By disrupting Labor’s attempts to sandbag the rapidly deteriorating status quo, we are also disrupting their attempt to convince the public that nothing can really change.

Door Knocking for Housing

While Parliament has debated the HAFF, the Greens have also launched a national door-knocking campaign targeted at Labor-held federal electorates. Our aim is to apply pressure on the ground, in turn building a social basis that can strengthen the pressure applied in Parliament. In a basic sense, the purpose is to show Labor that if they don’t agree to invest billions in public housing and to freeze rents, they will lose seats to the Greens at the next federal election. At the same time, door knocking helps us accurately temperature-check the mood of these electorates. And this, in turn, ensures that the parliamentary wing of the Greens remains connected to the people we are meant to represent.

What we’ve found at the doors, unsurprisingly, is that the vast majority of people also want meaningful solutions. For instance, according to data gathered while door knocking, over 80 percent of people we have talked to nationwide agree that the Greens should refuse to support the HAFF until Labor agrees to coordinating a freeze on rent increases and invest billions per year in public housing.

This mobilization is underpinned by an emerging self-conscious renter class who form the core of our organizer and volunteer base, as well as our growing voter base. In other words, as rents skyrocket and house prices continue to surge ahead of wages, growing numbers of people are beginning to contemplate renting for life. In Australia, this means a lifetime of unlimited rent increases, short leases, and unfair evictions. Renters — in coalition with mortgage holders screwed over by increasing interest rates — are becoming a powerful social force capable of winning real and lasting reform on housing.

Labor Is the Party of Property Developers

Labor has largely tried to avoid engaging with Greens’ policy proposals or demands. Instead, they’ve operated on the implicit assumption that the government will never have to concede anything substantial. Consequently, much of the discussion has focused on whether or not the Greens will roll over and support Labor’s housing plan, largely unamended. A compliant media without the time or inclination to interrogate Labor’s plan has helped with this framing, with some notable exceptions.

At the same time, Labor has tried to discredit the Greens, attempting to paint the party as hypocritical for opposing particular private developments. According to Labor, nothing really matters except boosting the supply of private housing. But this assumption is revealing in itself. Instead of addressing the structural inequalities produced by for-profit housing, Labor is effectively campaigning on behalf of multibillion-dollar private developers.

In other words, for Labor — and property developers— the problem is that developers don’t have enough power to build as many homes as they want. They would have us believe that the housing crisis has been caused by NIMBYs and overly tight planning restrictions.

The facts belie this pro-developer narrative. From 1996 to 2018, supply of private dwellings exceeded demand by 500,000 homes. Indeed, from 2015 onward, there were more dwellings being constructed in comparison to the population than at any time in the last sixty years. Yet despite this increase in supply, housing prices have surged in recent years, as have rents. On the night of the 2021 census there were one million vacant dwellings — but this didn’t lower prices.

This is because developers will only “supply” housing if it doesn’t drive down property prices. This often means they will hold up construction if they think extra supply could lower prices. In Sydney, for example, authorities approved 94 percent of development applications over the last nine years. However, one hundred thousand dwellings with approval were never built.

Refusing to build can also be a source of profits for developers. Favorable planning approvals drive up the price of land, allowing developers to make a profit either selling to other developers or land banking.

People vs. Profits

But Labor’s arguments aren’t about facts — they’re about winning public consent to maintain property as a valuable financial asset for banks and property developers.

When you do consider the facts, there are no technical or economic barriers to a nationally coordinated freeze on rent increases. There are no barriers to building massive amounts of good-quality, genuinely affordable public housing. It could be funded by phasing out negative-gearing and capital-gains tax concessions for property investors.

Shortages also aren’t the problem. The ongoing decline of the private construction industry has freed up an excess of skills and construction materials that could be put to work building public and genuinely affordable housing.

And there are clear and successful precedents internationally that we could learn from. Some countries like Austria already run successful public housing systems with selection criteria so broad that 80 percent of people qualify for public housing. This means teachers, nurses, and professors live alongside cleaners and those on benefits, in turn creating a sustainable system where the rents collected can be reinvested in more housing and infrastructure like public parks.

Ultimately, the Greens are pushing hard because there are millions of people in desperate need of real solutions to the housing crisis. During the worst housing crisis in generations, we have a federal Labor government with a progressive majority in the Senate, and excess construction capacity thanks to declining private construction activity.

This means that we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to pressure Labor into delivering a national rent freeze and agreeing to invest billions in public and genuinely affordable housing. And a clear majority agrees. Now is the time to stand strong.

Chicago Socialist Elected Official Anthony Quezada: “We Cannot Demobilize”

Working-class reformer Brandon Johnson is now Chicago’s mayor. The next task, as socialist elected official Anthony Quezada argues in an interview, is to bring more ordinary people into the political process so Johnson can actually pass sweeping reforms.

Socialist Anthony Joel Quezada is the youngest-ever member of the Cook County Board of Commissioners. (People for Anthony)

A former public school teacher and union organizer, Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson’s stunning defeat of charter school magnate Paul Vallas is a bellwether of the city’s ascendant progressive, socialist, and working-class movements. Alongside Johnson, the democratic socialist bloc on the Chicago City Council not only protected their five seats but also made new gains: organizer Angela Clay won a runoff race in a Northside ward, each of the original socialist alders are chairs of important city council committees, and Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (the sole socialist on the council just years ago) is Johnson’s floor leader.

These victories come on the heels of another socialist win: in November, community organizer and former Ramirez-Rosa staffer Anthony Joel Quezada became the youngest-ever member of the Cook County Board of Commissioners, representing some three hundred thousand people. Quezada, the first openly gay Latino elected from the county’s eighth district, also serves as a cochair on Johnson’s transition team’s subcommittee on human rights, equity, and inclusion.

Over coffee at Kosciuszko Park in the Northside neighborhood of Logan Square, Quezada and I discussed how socialist elected officials like him are thinking about keeping people mobilized during the Johnson administration in the face of business attacks, how the Johnson administration and electeds could foster more bottom-up participation in city governance, and his approach as a pro-worker legislator.

Lillian Osborne

Could you say a bit about your role on Brandon Johnson’s transition team and what you’re advocating for?

Anthony Joel Quezada

Our organization on the northwest side, United Neighbors of the 35th Ward, as well as our coalition, worked hard to elect Mayor Johnson. I was asked to serve as a cochair on his subcommittee that is working to strategize and implement the goals he set throughout his campaign around LGBTQ rights, reproductive rights, women’s rights, and disability rights.

He has a transformative vision to make sure that Chicago is fully investing in services and programs, like expanding access to health care and housing opportunities to LGBTQ people, to persons with disabilities, working to make sure that we are protecting the rights of LGBTQ people and trans people, and making sure Chicago is a sanctuary for people who need reproductive care and gender-affirming care. And so now our subcommittee members are working to provide guidance on the implementation and the timeline of those goals.

Lillian Osborne

Historically, one goal of pro-worker elected officials has been to bring ordinary people into the political process so government isn’t just run by and for the wealthy. What kind of popular institutions can be built through your office and under the Johnson administration to ensure that working-class people are steering the course of Chicago politics?

Anthony Joel Quezada

In the 35th Ward we have implemented projects of participatory democracy, encouraging people to make decisions in their communities. We have implemented policies like participatory budgeting, where residents ages fourteen years and older, regardless of their immigration status, can decide how we spend $1.5 million in infrastructure improvement funds. Usually that responsibility is the alderman’s alone. But here in the 35th Ward, we encourage all residents to engage in that process.

We need to explore how we can expand participatory democracy across the city.

We also have community-driven zoning and development. So when there are zoning change requests, it’s not just the alderman who’s making those decisions alone, it’s the surrounding community that comes together and makes those decisions collectively.

We need to explore how we can expand participatory democracy across the city.

When budget season comes around, why don’t we put out a survey to the people of Chicago asking, what would you like this budget to reflect? What kind of investment priorities? And then the mayor’s office, as well as the City Council, should implement a lot of those recommendations. How are we bringing more people into the process so they don’t feel like decisions are being made behind closed doors or in the interests of only the ultrarich or the powerful?

I think the best way to secure, expand, and strengthen democracy and democratic socialism is to bring in people to the local decision-making process.

Lillian Osborne

And it’s also strategically important for us to be doing that, because socialists in office can’t just rule from on high. They won’t be able to carry out their agenda if they don’t build a large enough base of support and engage people in the process.

Anthony Joel Quezada

People in our country have been so disillusioned by the failures of government. They’re not brought in, they’re not empowered or invited in to make decisions collectively. It is usually just elected officials and the people who fund their campaigns who make those decisions.

Lillian Osborne

And they feel like government doesn’t work for them.

Anthony Joel Quezada

Exactly. It’s funny, because people don’t know what it looks like for themselves to co-govern with their elected officials, but I think we all have a clear understanding of how elected officials co-govern with the capitalist class.

So I think we need to flip the script. We’ve done that locally and in some of our democratic socialist and progressive wards, but I think now we have an opportunity to co-govern at the city level with Mayor Johnson’s administration.

Lillian Osborne

I think what you’re speaking to is raising working-class expectations. And part of that is creating real substantive ways for people to have a say over how society is run.

Anthony Joel Quezada

A lot of people are so disenfranchised by the democratic process because they don’t see themselves in it. Everyone always says, well I vote and nothing ever changes. But our movement has proven here in Chicago that you can make that happen.

All our democratic socialist incumbents won their elections outright — nobody went to a runoff. That was proof that what we’re doing is a successful model of co-governance. We are a prime example of starting the process of restoring trust in democracy and in elected officials. Our movement is doing that.

Lillian Osborne

Business interests in the city have threatened to sabotage Brandon Johnson’s agenda and his tax plan by pulling investment and relocating. Traditionally, socialists and working-class reformers have argued that you have to counter these threats from business by explaining to the public who’s behind the attacks and mobilizing ordinary people behind your agenda. How do you see this playing out in the coming months?

Anthony Joel Quezada

We cannot demobilize, that’s for sure. Our movement needs to quadruple its efforts in base-building, in political education, in coalition building. We have a lot of work to do to make sure we have a coalition of people across the city that are ready and clear around the agenda that we need to implement.

I believe that the best safeguard is always a mass movement of people, of workers, of poor people. Brandon is the best that we’ve probably ever had to represent the interests of the working class [in the mayor’s office]. In order for him to implement our agenda, we need to be there with him. And he needs to be there with us.

I think we can have a collaborative approach, but at the same time, there are going to be times when we do need to fight back.

We need to tax the rich to implement the policies that we need. We can’t have fully funded schools, affordable housing, good public parks for everyone if we just nickel-and-dime poor and working-class people. The ultrarich and the wealthiest people and corporations in our city need to pay their fair share.

So I think this administration and the city council need to be clear around what their agenda is, and then make sure that we go to people in business, people in the community, people in labor — everyone needs to come together and say, this is what we’re going to do. I think we can have a collaborative approach, but at the same time, there are going to be times when we do need to fight back.

I don’t have all those answers fully, but I do know that we have to be very intentional about our approach.

Lillian Osborne

There are some powerful ways that you can operate in local government, but capital flight is a real risk and partly why we need a broader national movement.

Anthony Joel Quezada

We need to have a social, political, and economic order where all of humanity’s needs can be met. That’s a very big task. We have many steps to get there. So we need to find a sustainable pace in which we take those steps, but also there needs to be international solidarity around the power that multinational corporations have over many things.

When I was running for office, I said this all the time. I said we need to tax corporations, because we can’t just keep nickel-and-diming poor and working-class people. And people would say well, what are you going to do if those corporations leave? Instead of asking, why do corporations have the right to do that? Why do they get to dictate the terms when we hold them accountable? Why do we accept that and not say, hey, it’s wrong when corporations leave and destroy entire communities?

Lillian Osborne

And to that end, what is your thinking about how we keep people engaged and organized around that threat toward Johnson’s policy agenda when an election isn’t happening?

Anthony Joel Quezada

It is consistent organizing. We cannot organize just when there are elections. We need to be constantly engaging poor and working-class people across our city. There are multiple ways we do that. There is labor organizing, there is community and political organizing, and there is political education.

So people who are working in labor organizing should understand, know, respect, and build solidarity with people who are doing ward-level organizing. And they should in turn have relationships and shared goals with the people who are doing mutual aid organizing.

We have a unique and powerful political ecosystem in Chicago. I believe we have the building blocks of a broader mass movement here.

We have a unique and powerful political ecosystem in Chicago. I believe we have the building blocks of a broader mass movement here, but we have just not consolidated that and identified our shared goals. Many people across the city want to see, for example, our mental health care clinics reopen, want to have universal health care, want to see fully funded schools, or public housing or affordable housing. Many of us are doing that same work from all sorts of angles. But we’re not doing it strategically together.

And that is hard to achieve. But we need to be aspirational around how we are building a broader class-conscious movement in our city.

Lillian Osborne

What do you think gets in the way of that?

Anthony Joel Quezada

It can be egos, it can be personalities, or it also can be historical problems. Turf is sometimes a word we use, where people are like, this is our area where we organize and we organize these people alone. So there’s a sense of needing control.

And then I think we’re not taking the time to listen to each other. We do not have the luxury to cross our arms and ignore one another. We need to be very intentional about how we solve these problems. We need to learn how to work together. That doesn’t mean we’re always going to agree on everything. But we need to come together and identify shared goals, and we need to develop a strategy around how we achieve those things.

We do not have the luxury to cross our arms and ignore one another. We have an opportunity where our movement can deliver for working-class people across the city.

Right now, we have an opportunity where our movement can deliver for working-class people across the city. And it is our responsibility to do so because this is an opportunity that we have not had probably ever. People make comparisons to Harold Washington’s administration in the 1980s, but Washington did not have as strong of a progressive and left-wing city council or this broader ecosystem of organizations like Chicago Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), United Working Families, the People’s Lobby, and neighborhood independent political organizations.

We are in a unique moment in our city’s history — and we need to learn how to do the best we can with what we have right now.

Lillian Osborne

If you could get people unified around three priorities, what would those three things be?

Anthony Joel Quezada

Housing, health care, and poverty and economic justice as a whole. That’s very broad, but I think it’s about working to eliminate systemic disinvestment in communities and making sure people have guaranteed housing, like ending homelessness. We can also provide quality health care to people and mental health care especially.

Lillian Osborne

I would say jobs, too.

Anthony Joel Quezada

Yeah. The bread and butter. As Mayor Johnson has said, the safest communities in the United States are the most invested communities; invested communities are healthy communities — they’re happy communities. Why is this such a radical idea?

Lillian Osborne

What do you think can realistically be won over the next few years, and what challenges do you see ahead?

Anthony Joel Quezada

It’s funny, because I feel like what was once a really high goal has now become the floor. We’ve been working for Treatment Not Trauma, Bring Chicago Home, and youth employment programs and services for a long time. And it’s very possible that we are going to pass these things within a very short amount of time.

So now our movement is actually coming back together and reflecting. We have to push our imagination and push what we thought was possible. So that’s really exciting.

Lillian Osborne

I think that’s the product of grassroots progressive organizations, unions, and socialists expanding what’s politically possible.

Anthony Joel Quezada

I think the thing that might get in the way is fracturing within our coalition, things like not communicating or not working well together. We could be our own barrier to what we’re trying to achieve.

But then also there could be forces within the real estate lobby or within larger corporations or status quo party members that might start interjecting themselves into what we’re trying to achieve. So I think we just need to be really cognizant and constantly aware of the dynamics that we’re in.

Lillian Osborne

This past week you voted no on an important measure. Can you tell us more about that?

Anthony Joel Quezada

We have been contracting with outside agencies to fill some of the vacancies in the Cook County Health system. On Thursday, there was a contract renewal for one of these agencies, for $48 million to hire people to make sure we are fully staffed. I voted no because I was not properly briefed on this proposal, and I have not been presented with a longer-term strategic plan on how we’re moving away from outsourcing.

I was hearing a lot of concerns from workers in Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 73 — that the agencies we are paying are headquartered in Florida and Texas and are funding right-wing campaigns and PACs in these states and across the country. And I don’t think we can continue this trend of overreliance on contracting out to agencies, which is undercutting public sector unions.

My personal philosophy is that workers know best. Workers know what they need in their workplaces.

My personal philosophy is that workers know best. Workers know what they need in their workplaces. They know what they need to protect their patients. And so, if there are workers who are telling me we need to have adequate retention bonuses or hiring bonuses, or we need to move away from these agencies because these agency workers don’t know how to navigate the hospitals, they’re not being properly trained, we’re having to train them ourselves, or they’re not doing as much work as we need them to do, those are very real concerns.

I’m very committed to working with my colleagues, the Cook County Health system and with our partners in labor to develop a comprehensive strategic plan to move away from outsourcing and to make sure we are investing in the workers that are here and the workers that we want to start attracting.

Lillian Osborne

You’re sitting on the county board that Toni Preckwinkle runs. She’s also the chair of the Cook County Democratic Party and arguably one of the most powerful politicians in the state of Illinois. Historically, the Cook County Democratic Party was a major political machine run by the Daleys. Have you experienced any political pressure from Preckwinkle or the party yet?

Anthony Joel Quezada

Some of the pressure comes from within, from my own insecurities. My first couple board meetings, I was sitting there, and it felt so surreal. I’m the youngest person in the room. I was like, what am I doing here? [laughs] I went from cleaning tables and washing dishes a few years ago to now being a legislator at the county board.

I’ve been needing to ground myself in my work and remember that I was elected for a reason. As an organizer, I’ve been very committed to fighting for social, racial, and economic justice in my community for a long time. I have built those relationships with trust. So I have to remember that I have the support of many thousands of people who sent me here for a reason.

The other pressure I feel is conformity. I have taken a couple no votes here and there, and I remember the first no vote that I took my heart sank to my feet. I was like, oh my God, I’m so afraid right now because I’m voting no while a majority of my colleagues have voted yes on something. So it made me feel like a black sheep and made me wonder, am I just being oppositional for no reason? But no, I think when you’re an elected official and you’re a legislator, you have the right to vote the way you need to vote.

Toward your larger question, I don’t feel like I’ve been pressured yet by outside forces, like the Democratic Party. If someone has a problem with the way I’m governing or legislating, they can call me. And Madam Preckwinkle has respected me. She doesn’t treat me like a child or as a puppet or anything.

When I need to make votes and decisions, I’m responsible to my constituents and my communities. That’s front and center. I feel very secure and confident and supported by the fact that I work in coalition with social movements across the city that are with me. So I don’t feel alone.

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Dollar General Is Still Putting Workers in Harm’s Way

Workers say Dollar General continues to understaff its stores and pay poverty wages. The alleged violations have gotten so bad that, this week, shareholders defied the company’s board of directors and approved a proposed third-party audit of safety conditions.

Forty-nine people have been killed at Dollar General stores since 2014. (Jeremy Hogan / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images)

Kenya Slaughter put up with a lot when she worked at Dollar General. She says her starting pay at the Alexandria, Louisiana, location, one of the dollar-store chain’s nearly twenty thousand shops, was around $9 an hour. A woman once ran into the store with a butcher knife, locking herself in the break room and refusing to leave. Faulty air conditioning was a problem too.

“We can’t even control our own air,” Slaughter told me, echoing a complaint that is pervasive among the chain’s employees. When I spoke to David Williams, another Dollar General worker, last year, he described drinking two bottles of Powerade and a large bottle of water during his shift to ward off dehydration and heat strokes at his store in New Orleans.

There are other issues alleged by workers: rat infestations, fire hazards, and even, according to Slaughter, a lack of running water.

“One of the stores in my district was shut down because it didn’t have any running water,” she says, adding that it took Dollar General a week to close the store. “They put a Porta Potty in the backyard and expected the employees to use that. These executives get to control the air conditioning at their offices, and they definitely don’t have to use a Porta Potty.”

Slaughter was speaking to me by phone from a bus heading to Goodlettsville, Tennessee, where Dollar General is headquartered. The company’s annual shareholder meeting took place on May 31. Dollar General workers, joined by labor organizations such as United for Respect, the Union of Southern Service Workers, and Step Up Louisiana, protested outside the gathering. Slaughter recently left her job at Dollar General to work for Step Up Louisiana.

Her low starting pay at Dollar General isn’t unusual. Williams started at $8 an hour, and a 2021 report from the Economic Policy Institute found that 92 percent of the company’s employees made less than $15 an hour; 22 percent made less than $10 an hour. The company is currently the United States’ fastest-growing retailer, opening around one thousand stores a year and employing more than 170,000 people.

When I asked Slaughter how much she feels Dollar General workers should be paid, she said $25 an hour; at the very least, she said, workers deserve $15. After all, she added, they aren’t just cashiers: with the company’s systematic understaffing of stores, they are janitors, security guards, and managers too.

Alleged low pay and inadequate safety and health measures at stores are the issues that led Dollar General workers to convene in Goodlettsville, just as they did last year. Their demands include safe staffing, paid time off after exposure to workplace hazards such as the frequent robberies at the dollar-store chain, and worker input on all new safety practices. As Slaughter wrote in a 2020 op-ed for the New York Times, “I’m afraid we’ll become more of a target for robberies because everyone knows we don’t have any security and people are getting desperate.” According to CNN, forty-nine people have been killed at Dollar General stores since 2014.

Inside the shareholder meeting, Williams presented a proposal on behalf of a Domini equity fund, calling for a third-party audit on how Dollar General’s policies impact worker well-being.

“This company has expanded so fast, and so recklessly, that on any given day, I might have to deal with a rat infestation, a door that won’t lock, or someone pointing a gun at me with no security to protect me,” said Williams while speaking in favor of the proposal.

I shouldn’t have to feel like I need a bulletproof vest to go to work.

Similar proposals in prior years had been defeated, but this year, shareholders approved the nonbinding resolution despite the company’s board of directors’ recommendation that it be rejected, calling it “unnecessary.”

That change is thanks to the efforts of Slaughter, Williams, and other Dollar General employees, which come at the same time as a wave of fines levied against the megacorporation by the US Department of Labor. Dollar General is currently on the list of “severe violators” compiled by the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA), which has levied more than $21 million in proposed fines against the company since 2017.

“Dollar General continues to expose its employees to unsafe conditions at its stores across the nation,” said assistant secretary for Occupational Health and Safety Doug Parker in a statement last month.

Efforts by workers to unionize the company’s stores in response to rampant mistreatment have thus far been defeated by the company. In 2020, Dollar General shut down a Missouri store that voted to unionize. In 2021, they retained anti-union law firm Labor Relations Institute, paying consultants $2,700 per day to defeat a union drive at a Connecticut location.

When I asked Slaughter about Dollar General’s negligence regarding worker health and safety, she argued that the key is an unwillingness to safely staff stores and grant workers their preferred number of hours, as both would affect the company’s bottom line. At times, the stores are staffed by only one employee, which leaves them not only unable to keep shelves stocked and customer lines moving, but leaves them vulnerable to violence and robberies too.

“What I need them to realize is that it doesn’t even take sixty seconds for someone to have a heart attack or for someone to get a gun pulled on them,” says Slaughter, who supports demands that Dollar General limit the amount of cash kept at stores and design store layout and infrastructure to prioritize safety. “You shouldn’t have to go to work and worry if you’re going to return home the same way that you arrived at work. The executives certainly don’t have to do that.”

“We’re not even talking about the irate or unwell customers, but about knives and guns being pulled on people while they’re at their place of work,” she adds. “No one should have to deal with that. I’m not a police officer. I’m not a paramedic. I’m not SWAT. I don’t work for the Secret Service. I shouldn’t have to feel like I need a bulletproof vest to go to work.”