Social justice movement veterans help Poor People’s Campaign
CARTHAGE, N.C. — As the Poor People’s Campaign launches a new initiative, its charismatic leader is working with the generation of civil rights leaders who stood by the Rev. Martin Luther King’s side and continued his efforts to stamp out poverty and racism after his assassination.
“The movement for love and justice and truth is always a continuation. It’s never completed,” said the Rev. William Barber, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign. “And you never approach any movement for justice as though you were the first one.”
Leaders who have battled injustice since the 1960s – the Rev. Jesse Jackson, children’s advocate Marian Wright Edelman, and attorney Al McSurely – say the work of the Poor People’s Campaign is urgently needed as income and wealth inequality grows.
“Fewer and fewer have more and more, subsidized by the government,” Jackson said in an interview at his office in Chicago. “And more and more have less and less.”


