I . 5 OPINION Vor ByRo D What happening with the Rainbow Coalition around the country? One place you might want to look is Ne York State where state Representative Ar­ thur O. Eave has worked to build one of the most for­ midable state chapters of the Rainbow Coalition in America. State Chairman Eave, who is Deputy Speaker of the Ne York 'State Assembly has managed to pull together a broad range of constituencies under the umbrella of the Rain­ bow Coalition with repre­ sentation in virtually every major city in the state, and most of he state congressional dis­ tricts. The Deputy Speaker who is from Buffalo in upstate New Yor k, has also been able to build an effective wor king relation be­ tween upstate New York and the"Big Apple," New York City; a feat that speaks well of his stat­ ure and reputation in the state, as well as his talents as an or­ ganizer. BUDGET FOR THE PEOPLE ow, under Eave's leader­ ship, the New York State Rain­ bow Coalition has launched a campaign for a People's Rainbowca I Budget Taking the cue &om Nation­ al Rainbow Coalition Pcesident Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, the Nev/ York State Rainbow is targeting the State Capital, Albany, and the New York Assembly as the 'In the final analysis the Informed movement into various dimensions of politics which Jackson has inspired may be his greatest legacy.' • . major focal point to exercise some grassroots people power. , During his 1988 P.residential Campaign Jesse Jackson focused a great deal on the question of inspiring and mobilizing people for empower­ ment. In this regard Jackson used his campaign '88 as a vehicle to build statewide infra­ structures and organization to empower people at the state and local level. paigns to a Peoples Budqet at help-t e-rich, STRUCTURE HAVEIMPACf Often turning campaign ral­ lies and events into workshops and teach-ins on practical politics Jesse J ackson pointed to state capitals and state legis­ latures as centers of power which Rainbow Coalitions and the progressive movement needed to target for legislative action days and lobbying, in­ eluding major efforts to impact on state budget priorities. Since the era of New Federalism enacted by Richard Nixon in the late sixties, much of what happens in counties, vil­ lages and cities is decided in state capitals through policies established by state legislatures. Hence the need for "Jackson Action" Rainbow style at state capitals across the land. Having picked up on the les­ son, the New York State Rain­ bow is now showing the way. When Governor Mario Cuomo anounced some months ago that there would have to be some substantial cuts in spending to balance the budget in light of a 2.6 billion dollar defici, the New York Rainbow Coalition sprang into action. The principal concern was that vital services to poor and · ck he-poor p an EEDED TO working 'people not be dis­ mantled -or crippled, and that the budge not be balanced on the backs of the poor. . on the capital for a day of mass direct action and lobbying. By all measures the New York­ S tate Rainbo Coalition's, mobilization i.round .state budget priorities would appear to be a model for Rainbow Coalitions and progressive ac­ tivists nationwide. When analysts exxamine the meaning and results of Jesse Jackson's 84 and 88 campaigns and the growth of the Rainbow movement, they seldom focus on the' kind of expanded politi­ cal participation and concrete focus on empowerment that the New York Rainbow's Cam­ paign for a Peoples Budget rep­ resents. Yet in the final analysis the massive and informed move­ mentpnto various dimensions of politics which Jess Jackson has inspired may be his greatest legacy. I'm sure he's saying RIGHT ON to the New York Rainbow Coalition. I ..... The David Duke Victory: GO'p . Responsibility By Robert . Taylor Although the Republican party has tried desperately to distance itself from the election victory of former Ku Klux KJan member Davide Duke, Reagan ad­ ministration policies toward Blacks and Bush administration campaign tactics in part paved the way for Duke and his anti­ Black message. Running as a Republican Duke won a natrow victory recently in Louisiana's 81st district - an area basically compo ed of vir­ tually all white New Orleans suburb of Merairie. He will now represent that district in the tate legislature. uke achieved victory by run­ on a conservative platform whi included nco-racist char­ ges ,s ch as the assertion that whites were being denied their civil righ ts by Blacks. And noting that Blac are having babies at a much faster rate than whites, he promised that the would do something to "curb the birth rate among Black welfare mothers." Duke's openly anti-Black and anti-J ewish utterances shocked the Re pub licans and party chairman Lee Atwater claimed Duke had fooled th whites who voted for him, Atwater is wrong! We must remember that it was TAX 'REFORM' HURTS POOR 1n the face of a "reformed tax structure which this year will allow the wealthiest 10% of New York's population to pay no taxes, the Rainbow Coalition is also determined to fight for the re-iastitution of a progre ive tax system which will force the wealthy to pay their fair share. At a recent statewide con­ ference in New York City, 500 Rainbow activists, labor leaders, grassroots organizers, ministers and elected official gathered from around the state to finalize a "Peoples Budge and to undergo orientation and training in the fme art of lobby­ ing. of this writing state legis­ lators are being contacted dis­ trictby district in an effort to line up support for the People Budget On March 6, the Rainbow Coahtion and its allies will take the campaign for a Peoples Budget directly to 'the capital when scores of people from around the state will converge 'David Du e is saying openly what allot of hites fee ... ' in etairie where the citizen rallied behind their 1 sheri whe e ordered his deputies to stop and questi 0 any Blacks driving through predominantly white areas. Remem er that Metairi itself i in large p rt a result f "whit I fli ht - bein composed of whites who fl d New rleans in th 1960' in order to avoid court-ordered cb 01 integr - tion. Thos whites wh voted for' Duke knew exactly what they were doing. They knew of hi nearl 2O-year association with the Viciously anti-Black � They knew he now beaded an orga ization whose sole purpos was 0 figh for the rights of white people." They heard What he s id about reducing the Black birth-rate. The applauded when he declared that school in­ tegration was harming hite children. The real problem is that Duke was saying openly what a lot of whites fcel and would say to one . another but would not say publicly for fear of being labeled racist. The simple fact is that de pite their power and wealth a I t of whi e people fear Blac . And another fact is that the Republican party has long played on .this white fear of Blacks. It was no mistake that Atwater himself as head of the Bush �mp ign made a jor . ue out of Willie Horton - a Black man who raped a white . It was n mistake that nt Bush spent mu of ampaign attacking Is." And we need ot repea the count] ss instance that f rmer President Reagan throu policy and statement m de whites feel cornf rta 1 with eir prejudices. vid Duke and hi anti-Bl ck m ss ge may have w n in Louis' a but he indirectly h d. the h lp of R nald Reag n, Bush and e Alw tCL