Councilmember Sawant, community activists urge Harborview to end harassment of immigrant custodians


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 2/28/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

Councilmember Sawant, community activists urge Harborview to end harassment of immigrant custodians

SEATTLE – Councilmember Kshama Sawant delivered a letter to the Harborview Medical Center administration in solidarity with Harborview custodians, requesting the institution rectify charges of racial harassment and intimidation of custodial staff. Her office met with 40 custodians employed at Harborview where they face hostile working conditions, receive less pay, and face threats of termination for lack of English language proficiency.

"The hostile working conditions for Harborview custodians is outrageous," said Sawant. "Discrimination, be it on the basis of race, language, or gender, is unacceptable and hurts ALL workers." Further she pledged: "If UW Medicine custodians at Harborview have to resort to public actions to win justice, I pledge to march at their side."

In her letter, Sawant requested that the custodians at Harborview receive back pay and that the Haborview administration take steps to ensure a harassment-free atmosphere for custodial staff.

The Coalition of Refugee and Immigrant Communities issued a statement asking for support "to resolve this unfair targeting of immigrants and refugees at Harborview."

[View in Council Newsroom]

Sawant affirms election pledge, accepting average workers’ wages


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 1/27/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

Sawant affirms election pledge, accepting average workers’ wages

SEATTLE – City Councilmember Kshama Sawant issued the following statement regarding her election pledge to take only average workers’ wage:

“Every Councilmember faces a choice of who they represent and which world they inhabit. My place is with working people and their struggles. I want to give a voice to workers, trade union members, women, and immigrants. As a Councilmember, I re-commit to a fundamentally different political outlook. In line with the principles of the political party I represent, Socialist Alternative, I pledged to stay accountable to working people by taking only average workers’ wage.

“The people of Seattle elected me as a socialist on the platform of a $15/hour minimum wage, for affordable housing, and to tax the rich to pay for public transit and education. In addition, I strongly support all efforts to increase wages. Data shows Seattle median wages for men at $60,000 while only $51,000 for women; and people of color earn only 45% of the median income of white workers. I will fight to close the gender pay gap and to overcome the structural racism in working and living conditions.

“Seattle City Councilmembers receive over $117,000 a year – the second highest of any city council in the country. Inevitably, such a salary removes Councilmembers from the realities of life for working people. I will only take home $40,000 per year. This amount is roughly the full-time take-home pay of a Seattleite.

“After paying taxes, the remainder of my salary will go to a Solidarity Fund to help build social justice movements. Throughout the year I will be making donations from this Solidarity Fund to causes such as workers’ strike funds, and environmental, civil rights, and women’s rights campaigns.

“I have so far made two initial commitments. The first is $500 to Puget Sound SAGE, a union- and community organization that played an important role in the $15 minimum wage initiative in SeaTac last year. I have also pledged $15,000 of my salary this year to the 15Now.org grassroots campaign.

“I commit to a regular and transparent accounting of all the income and expenses of the Solidarity Fund.”

[View in Council Newsroom]

Councilmember Sawant statement on Metro Cuts and proposed ‘Plan B’


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 1/21/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

Councilmember Sawant statement on Metro Cuts and proposed ‘Plan B’

SEATTLE – City Councilmember Kshama Sawant issued the following statement regarding the impending Metro cuts and the proposed Plan B Measure:

"A functioning transportation system is critical to the working people who make Seattle and the wider region run. The ongoing cuts to Metro disproportionately affect low-wage workers, the elderly, the disabled, and people of color. As a regular bus rider, I stand with other riders in King County who are opposing devastating cuts to these services. I am also in solidarity with Metro workers who are threatened with layoffs and a proposed wage freeze.

"The primary solution being put forward to address these cuts is the Transportation Benefit District Proposal (TBD), also called Plan B. This would cover the $74 million shortfall by using regressive taxation in the form of increasing the Vehicle Licensing Fee (VLF) and raising sales tax by 0.1%. Washington State has the most regressive tax system in the nation. This proposal would force the same low-income households, already battered by the recession, to again pick up the tab on behalf of big business and the wealthiest 1%. Moreover, the TBD will not permanently solve the crisis and working people will be asked to pay again and again.

"Seattle and King County have an obligation to find progressive and permanent sources of funding to ensure cuts are averted, fares are reduced, and that Metro service is expanded with new priority given to chronically under-served neighborhoods."

[View in Council Newsroom]

Councilmember Sawant statement on Eastside Catholic students’ petition delivery to Archdiocese


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 1/15/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

Councilmember Sawant statement on Eastside Catholic students’ petition delivery to Archdiocese

SEATTLE – Councilmember Kshama Sawant issued the following statement in response to Eastside Catholic students’ petition delivery to Archdiocese:

"I stand in solidarity with the students at Eastside Catholic School who walked out of classes in protest and have continued to rally for the reinstatement of their Vice Principal Mark Zmuda.  I am concerned not only by the unjust way Mark Zmuda has been treated, but also by the school administration’s threats to discipline students if they continue their protests, violating their freedom of speech. I applaud the students for broadening their struggle to defend all LGBTQ rights within the Archdiocese of Seattle’s school system.

"I, and many others, have been inspired by the principled stand taken by the students.  History has shown that collective action of this kind has effectively combated so many forms of discrimination in our history and helped secure victories for marriage equality, civil rights, and women’s suffrage. The widespread practice of employment discrimination based on sexual orientation must be opposed everywhere it occurs. It destroys lives and sows divisions among workers and young people in our society."

[View in Council Newsroom]

Councilmember Sawant City Council Inauguration Speech


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 1/6/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

2014 Seattle City Council Socialist Alternative Inauguration Speech
(as delivered)

My brothers and sisters,

Thank you for your presence here today.

This city has made glittering fortunes for the super wealthy and for the major corporations that dominate Seattle’s landscape. At the same time, the lives of working people, the unemployed and the poor grow more difficult by the day. The cost of housing skyrockets, and education and healthcare become inaccessible.

This is not unique to Seattle. Shamefully, in this, the richest country in human history, fifty million of our people – one in six – live in poverty. Around the world, billions do not have access to clean water and basic sanitation and children die every day from malnutrition.

This is the reality of international capitalism. This is the product of the gigantic casino of speculation created by the highway robbers on Wall Street. In this system the market is God, and everything is sacrificed on the altar of profit. Capitalism has failed the 99%.

Despite recent talk of economic growth, it has only been a recovery for the richest 1%, while the rest of us are falling ever farther behind.

In our country, Democratic and Republican politicians alike primarily serve the interests of big business. A completely dysfunctional Congress DOES manage to agree on one thing – regular increases in their already bloated salaries – yet at the same time allows the federal minimum wage to stagnate and fall farther and farther behind inflation. We have the obscene spectacle of the average corporate CEO getting seven thousand dollars an hour, while the lowest-paid workers are called presumptuous in their demand for just fifteen.

To begin to change all of this, we need organized mass movements of workers and young people, relying on their own independent strength. That is how we won unions, civil rights and LGBTQ rights.

Again, throughout the length and breadth of this land, working people are mobilizing for a decent and dignified life for themselves and their children. Look at the fast food workers movement, the campaigns of Walmart workers, and the heroic activism to stop the Keystone XL pipeline!

Right here in SeaTac, we have just witnessed the tremendous and victorious campaign for fifteen dollars an hour. At the same time, in Lorain County, Ohio, twenty-four candidates ran, not as Democrats or Republicans, but as ‘Independent Labor’ and were elected to their City Councils.

I will do my utmost to represent the disenfranchised and the excluded, the poor and the oppressed – by fighting for a $15/hour minimum wage, affordable housing, and taxing the super-rich for a massive expansion of public transit and education. But my voice will be heard by those in power only if workers themselves shout their demands from the rooftops and organize en masse.

My colleagues and I in Socialist Alternative will stand shoulder to shoulder with all those who want to fight for a better world. But working people need a new political party, a mass organization of the working class, run by – and accountable to – themselves. A party that will struggle and campaign in their interest, and that will boldly advocate for alternatives to this crisis-ridden system.

Here in Seattle, political pundits are asking about me: will she compromise? Can she work with others? Of course, I will meet and discuss with representatives of the establishment. But when I do, I will bring the needs and aspirations of working-class people to every table I sit at, no matter who is seated across from me. And let me make one thing absolutely clear: There will be no backroom deals with corporations or their political servants. There will be no rotten sell-out of the people I represent.

I wear the badge of socialist with honor. To the nearly hundred thousand who voted for me, and to the hundreds of you who worked tirelessly on our campaign, I thank you. Let us continue.
The election of a socialist to the Council of a major city in the heartland of global capitalism has made waves around the world. We know because we have received messages of support from Europe, Latin America, Africa and from Asia. Those struggling for change have told us they have been inspired by our victory.

To all those prepared to resist the agenda of big business – in Seattle and nationwide – I appeal to you: get organized. Join with us in building a mass movement for economic and social justice, for democratic socialist change, whereby the resources of society can be harnessed, not for the greed of a small minority, but for the benefit of all people. Solidarity.

[View in Council Newsroom]