Tuesday, May 19, 2026

CCAG: Know the Facts, Shift the Narrative


Coalitiion building was a hallmark during this session of the Connecticut State Legislature as labor and community and immigrant rights groups allied to “Stand Up Connecticut” against the attacks from the Trump administration on working people.

The long term fight has been for economic and social justice in a state with one of the highest gaps between billionaires and everyone else and the need to tax the rich including the windfall delivered to billionaires by MAGA while cutting healthcare and all services.

The Connecticut For All coalition, CT AFL-CIO, the Immigrants Coalition and the Connecticut Tenants Union all mobilized with significant partial victories for people's needs. The following assessment of the session is from the Connecticut Citizens Action Group, addressing the priorities they mobilized around.

By CCAG

Wednesday night marked the last day of Connecticut’s legislative session for 2026. For many of us, this entire session has felt like emergency triage due to DOGE-damage and the Trump administration. Luckily, many Connecticut legislators and advocates, like you, stepped up to fight back.


Connecticut started the year with a massive budget cut from the Federal government leaving families vulnerable to food insecurity, lack of medical care and then soon after skyrocketing prices due to the illegal war of aggression against Iran. 


We saw some significant victories, and some disappointments. But the people of the Nutmeg state came together to send a strong message to Washington DC/Mara-Lago that Connecticut will not be held hostage and we will protect our communities. 


First and foremost, we want to thank every person who protested, testified, wrote a letter, called their legislator, came to a lobby day or even just shared information this session. It is because of you we have new legislation reigning in the unchecked power of ICE, renewing community solar programs, the implementation of universal absentee voting and so much more. 


This session, CCAG was focused on Democracy, Climate & Environment, Healthcare and Private Equity. 


The legislature passed a budget which makes adjustments to the spending guardrails and volatility cap, acknowledging the need for us to spend more to meet this moment. We did not see all we wanted, particularly around progressive revenue and in protecting healthcare for more than 200,000 people slated to lose it due to harmful federal cuts - we continue these fights.


Along with several legislative victories it did give us something else worth holding onto:  Proof that organized people can still bend power toward the public good.

What we won together:


Democracy and immigrant protections: SB 397 strengthens accountability for federal law enforcement, including ICE, by allowing residents to sue in state court for violations of their rights. It also protects sensitive places like schools, hospitals, and houses of worship, requires federal agents to show identification, bans masks, and limits license plate reader surveillance.

Voting rights: HB 5001 implements no-excuse absentee voting, following Connecticut voters' approval of the constitutional amendment in 2024. The bill also includes a ban on ICE at polling places, a major victory for democracy and voter protection.

Healthcare: HB 5127 passed, restricting medical providers from promoting or helping patients sign up for medical credit cards that can trap people in high-interest debt. Key pieces of the healthcare affordability fight also moved forward through the budget, including extended subsidies, guardrail adjustments, and a feasibility study for a Connecticut Option. We again defeated Junk Insurance plans, which would  have placed small businesses at risk.

Private equity accountability: Two bills addressing private equity passed both chambers this session. SB 125 requires greater transparency in nursing home ownership, helping expose who is actually profiting from care facilities. SB 196 limits hospital real estate investment trusts, or REIT,arrangements, a financial scheme that can separate hospitals from the land they sit on, drive up costs, and drain resources away from patient care. Together, these bills are important first steps toward stopping private equity and real estate investors from treating healthcare as another extraction site.


Climate and environment: HB 5340 expands access to renewable power generation and solar energy, while HB 5334 strengthens protections for riparian areas, the vegetated land near rivers and streams that helps reduce flooding, prevent erosion, protect drinking water, and filter toxins.


Economic justice: HB 5003 makes targeted investments in safer and more equitable workplaces, supporting workers, including first responders, veterans, nurses, teachers, and blue-collar workers.

What still needs pressure:

Connecticut has the resources to do better. We are one of the wealthiest states in the country. No one should go without food, healthcare, safe housing, clean water, or protection from a dangerous climate while billionaires receive massive federal tax cuts.

Victories are not the end of the work. They are proof that pressure works. We will keep organizing, keep watching, and keep pushing for a state that meets this moment with the courage our communities deserve.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

May Day Highlights Working Class Unity from the Streets to the Polls

 

by Jahmal Henderson


Workers, high school students, and community members filled the New Haven Green for May Day demonstrations calling out corporate greed and demanding stronger protections for workers.


Three rallies were organized by the May Day Strong coalition in Connecticut beginning in Hartford with a protest at Palentir electronics against their collaboration with ICE, and then rallying at the State Capitol celebrating passage of a major labor bill that day.

In the afternoon in New Haven many stopped by a host of information tables including the Connecticut People’s World to learn more about the issues. Speeches from labor, peace and social justice groups were followed by a march through downtown.


Born from the 1886 U.S. push for the eight hour day, International Workers’ Day unites people worldwide in honoring labor’s struggles and solidarity.


On Saturday the annual People's World May Day rally “Working Class Unity: From the Streets to the Polls.” brought everyone together around the urgent need to protect our voting and democratic rights. It reminded us that real change starts with the work we do on the ground, informing our communities, sharing essential information, having meaningful conversations, and carrying that collective energy to the polls to make the changes we need.


Emcee Jahmal Henderson, chair of the Newhall CTCPUSA Club and a key organizer in Connecticut, announced the Edie and George Fishman Library gifted to the New Haven Federation of Teachers (NHFT) last July with volumes spanning 80 years of working class struggle..


The rally opened with greetings from Leslie Blatteau, president of NHFT and high school student Brandon Daley along with leaders of Unite Here Locals 33 and 34 at Yale. Brandon, a junior, described his deep involvement in local youth advocacy, from protesting for increased education funding to holding Yale accountable and organizing a Students over Billionaires school walkout on May Day.

BarbaraVereen, organizing director of Unite Here Local 34, called for solidarity with Yale’s clerical and technical workers, expressing appreciation for turnout at the massive April 23 contract rally where members demanded higher wages in response to inflation and rising living costs while Yale's $44 billion endowment continues to soar. Jake Thrasher, staff organizer of Local 33 spoke about their campaign to win union recognition for Yale’s postdoctoral workers. Postdoc Greg Zilberg got an ovation when he announced that on May 1, 2026 an overwhelming vote won representation for nearly 1,400 researchers. 


The centerpiece of the event was an inspiring slideshow "May Day Around the World", highlighting labor rights rallies and protests on all continents and industries mirroring the huge rallies against MAGA and for workers rights and immigrant rights throughout Connecticut and the U.S. Union members Terrell Williams, Lisa Armstrong, and Ben McManus served as narrators, underscoring the significance of the U.S. labor movement reclaiming International Workers Day this year..


The crowd was treated to a special performance by Scotticesa Marks and her family filling the room with songs of resistance, inspiring attendees to rise to their feet and join in, singing their favorite tunes as the whole crowd sang along. Scotticesa created a new movement song from the words on the Communist Party banner carried in the May Day march, “Tax the Rich, House the Poor, Money for Jobs, Not for War.”

Jess Corbett, president of the Western Connecticut Area Labor Federation and proud member of Local 34 and New Haven Rising, stepped up to the mic to lay out this year's May Day demands. He reminded everyone the fight to Tax the Rich, in Connecticut and across the country, is far from over, and that working people have to keep pushing back against a system built to protect the rich..

Tabitha Sookdeo, executive director of Connecticut Students for a Dream, lifted up the demand of “No ICE” and the ongoing struggle for immigrant rights. She spoke about how easy it is to feel discouraged in moments like these, but also how important it is to remember that we are not alone, and we are not powerless. Together, we defend our communities by demanding stronger, humane immigration laws. An omnibus bill expanding protections was signed into law in Connecticut three days later, the result of a huge organizing effort.


Henry Lowendorf, chair of the Greater New Haven Peace Council, spoke on the demand of “No War,” displaying a banner showing the billions poured into war while the resources working people depend on continue to shrink. His message was clear: every dollar spent on war is a dollar stolen from the working class.


Jess spoke about the fourth demand “Protect Our Vote.” Solidarity pledge cards were signed and turned in, another step in defending democracy from the ground up.

The May Day celebration closed with the New Haven group "Singing Resistance". Voices rose, chants echoed back and forth, and the night ended the way May Day should, community and workers standing together, singing together, and refusing to back down
.


Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Waterbury May Day: We are the Resistance


The May Day rally/celebration on the Waterbury Green was full of militant energy and excitement. A

father/son duo played Congo drums as people arrived. People rocked and rolled as they signed in.

Bilal Tajildeen, one of the organizers, introduced MC Kay Munoz. She had great energy and spoke in

both English and Spanish. With placards, some in Spanish,“Aqui Estamos y Nos Vamos,” and some in English, “Fund Healthcare Not Wars,” “Power To The People,” and “Tax Billionaires,” waving in the evening light, Kay told a personal story. With emotion she explained how her grandfather, suffering a great deal of pain, worked so hard to support the extended family.


Naugatuck Valley Project representive Karime Pimentel spoke in Spanish while Jacqueline Bayas translated in English. She shared the plight of Domestic Workers. The highlight was how they rallied at the legislature to demand sick days and won! In the process, their profession was acknowledged and respected.


On the Green, labor/community educator Steve Schrag set up a table full of registration voter forms and a box asking people to check off a form rating the President’s job. Steve invited the crowd to sign up for a teach-in on May 19th from 6-8 pm at The People Center, Waterbury.


Carpenters Union representative Mike Iacoviello explained the history of May Day. He shared that everyone should have not just a living wage but a thriving wage. Also present was Kit Salazar Smith, staunch unionist and recently anointed Naugatucks’ 2026 Earth Day Mayor for the Day. Starting in the 1990s, Kit fought for and helped win the creation of Naugatuck’s Passive Park/Nature Preserve and the green jobs it generated.


Rapping up the presentations, Ryan Hendricks, recruited by Maribel Rodriguez, performed a poem about working people. He put it together in less than 2 weeks. It was a big hit with the crowd.

With Congo drums playing in the background, people marched and chanted in English and in Spanish around the Green. The energy was palpable and the time enjoyed by all.

Maribel Rodriguez






Sunday, May 10, 2026

Major Immigrant protection bill signed into law


The successful, hard fought campaign to expand protections for immigrants in Connecticut was celebrated at the bill signing of SB 397 outside the State Supreme Court. Written following wanton ICE violence in Minnesota and other communities, the bill was championed by New Haven State Sen Gary Winfield, chair of the Judiciary Committee.

In a contentious two day House debate, Connecticut stories of ICE kidnapping immigrant students and parents were shared. “This is a very measured response to federal overreach and a way to protect people living here in the state of Connecticut from, frankly, a lawless and out-of-control ICE.” said Bridgeport state representative Steven Stafstrom.

The omnibus bill creates ‘protected areas’ from immigration enforcement including schools, hospitals, social service agencies and houses of worship. It bans agents from wearing masks, allows citizens to sue for constitutional violations, and limits use of automated license plate readers It prohibits state or local police departments from hiring former federal law enforcement officers found guilty of misconduct and requires 480 hours of training before officers can be hired by state agencies. 

It also gives the state inspector general the right to investigate the use of deadly force by federal agents, and removes immunity from officers who arrest or assault someone taking photos or videotaping their actions

After passing the Senate, the bill was debated in the House for two days before passing 91-57 along party lines. No Republicans voted in favor.

Many thanks to everyone who made this possible by testifying, showing up and spreading the word,” said Tabitha Sookdeo, naming “CT For All organizations that worked tirelessly, members and staff at CT Students for a Dream, ACLU of CT, Husky for Immigrants, Hartford Deportation Defense, Make the Road CT, NHFT, 32 BJ SEIU, SEIU 1199 NE, CT AFL-CIO, GHIAA, and more.” 


The Connecticut AFL-CIO joined in support of the rights of immigrant workers. “This bill is a vital step in ensuring that ICE is held accountable to Connecticut’s laws,” said president Ed Hawthorne. “It serves as a reminder that when we raise our voices against injustice, we create real change”.


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Yale Workers Say “We Can't Keep Up”


Unity of purpose and determination filled the streets in New Haven on April 23 as hundreds of union workers and community allies marched on Yale with a clear message: “We Can't Keep Up!”

The members of Unite Here Locals 34 and 35, are fighting for fair wages and benefits to keep up with the skyrocketing cost of living. But for seven months there has been little progress from wealthyYale University at the bargaining table

When Unite Here International President Gwen Mills took the mic following the march, she pointed toward the administration offices saying, “My message to Yale is that the entire union is behind these workers 110%. My message to you,” she said looking out at the massive crowd of union members is “we have your back.”

Yale claims they are in dire straits and have reduced staff and non-tenure faculty. They’ve even revoked summer storage for low-income students and made cuts to graduate enrollment. You might think Yale is on the verge of collapsing. Yale is hoping we don’t know any better. We do know better.

Yale is sitting on over $44 billion – making them the second wealthiest university in the nation.

When they claimed their back was against the wall in the past and made cuts to the workforce, their endowment continued to grow.

What are the workers at Yale asking for? Improvements to their health care, critical job protection language, and a wage increase that reflects the value of their work and makes up for what they lost since the end of their last contract.

The workers at Yale are the unsung heroes of the university and they deserve a contract that reflects the value they add to the school every single day. What Yale union workers are able to win sets the standard for all workers in the region.

Yale must pay its fair share and settle fair contracts. We must build a city where our residents have access to good jobs, world-class schools, affordable housing, and youth opportunities.” said New Haven Rising director Scott Marks.