What We Support Today
- Civil rights, strong anti-discrimination
measures and affirmative action
- Policies to promote a decent wage, high
growth, full employment economy
- Labor law reform and worker health and
safety protections
- Decent minimum living standards for all,
including anti-poverty programs, a fair minimum
wage and a comprehensive "safety net"
- Universal, affordable health care
- Family leave and child care
- Progressive and fair tax policies
- International workers' rights and fair
trade Education and training programs
- Education and training programs
Our History
To A. Philip Randolph and
Bayard Rustin, APRl's co-founders, the fight
for workers' rights and civil rights were
inseparable. Randolph (1889-1979) was the
greatest black labor leader in American history
and the father of the modern American civil
rights movement. Rustin (1912-1987), a leading
civil rights and labor activist and strategist,
was the chief organizer of the historic 1963
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and
Randolph's greatest protege. Randolph and
Rustin forged an alliance between the civil
rights movement and the labor movement. They
recognized that blacks and working people of
all colors share the same goals: political and
social freedom and economic justice. This
Black-Labor Alliance helped the civil rights
movement achieve one of its greatest victories
- passage of the Voting Rights Act, which
removed the last remaining legal harriers to
broad black political participation. Inspired
by this success, Randolph and Rustin founded A.
Philip Randolph Institute in 1965 to
continue the struggle for social, political and
economic justice for all working Americans.
APRI is an Organization of Black Trade Unionist
to Fight for Racial Equality and Economic
Justice. Today, APRI is led by President
Clayola Brown whose vision and energy has
sparked a new beginning for our organization
and for the movement as a whole.