This May Day, Let’s Choose Workers Over Billionaires and Corporate Rule
Everywhere we look, the corporate billionaire class is tightening its grip — on our economy, on our politics, and even on our imaginations. Prices soar while wages stagnate. Corporations dodge taxes while our communities fight for schools, housing, and healthcare.
And through it all, the same few voices call the shots - because the system was built for them.
That’s why this May 1, 2026, Move to Amend is joining people across the country in the Workers Over Billionaires day of action organized by May Day Strong. Together with hundreds of labor unions, community groups, and national networks, we’re taking a stand for a simple but urgent truth: a democracy that serves the many cannot coexist with an economy rigged for the few.
Democracy Is on the Line - and So Are Our Lives

Every demand for democracy is also a struggle for economic justice. When corporations have constitutional rights and money is treated as speech, billionaires can buy political access and block the policies that working people need to survive, from living wages to housing to healthcare.
Corporate power isn’t an accident of capitalism; it’s a constitutional arrangement. The courts have granted “personhood” or "inalienable rights" to entities that were never alive, never voted, and never bled. Those same rights have been used to crush unions, poison communities, and silence dissent.
This May Day, we are taking those struggles for justice to the streets.
Read moreMovie Night: American Oligarchy
What if the systems shaping our lives aren’t broken—but working exactly as designed?
On April 22, we’re hosting a virtual movie night featuring the powerful documentary:
Movie Night: American Oligarchy

Affiliate & Advocate Spotlight - April 2026

Across the country, Move to Amend affiliates and volunteers continue to do the kind of work that rarely makes headlines—but is essential to building a movement capable of lasting change. It’s happening in community meetings, at public hearings, in conversations with neighbors, and in the steady expansion of a coalition that understands the root of the problem.
Read moreFrom No Kings Day to Nationwide Action — Let’s Build the Pressure
Thank you again for being part of No Kings Day 3.
Across the country — in big cities and small towns alike — people stepped into the streets, into public squares, into community spaces… and into something bigger than themselves.
Strangers became allies.
Conversations turned into clarity.
And a shared feeling rippled through it all:
We are not alone — and we are not powerless.
Now the question is: how do we turn that moment into momentum?

Honoring Women’s Month: Equality, Democracy, and the Power of “We the People”
March is Women’s Month — a time to celebrate the people who’ve worked for generations to bring us closer to true equality. So first, a huge shout-out to our friends and allies with the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Coalition, who are still leading the way to making equal rights a real part of our Constitution.
Here’s something that might surprise you: women still don’t have guaranteed equal rights under the Constitution. And you’re not alone if that’s news — 76% of people in the U.S. think we already do, and 97% agree we should.
The ERA (the 28th Amendment) was first approved by Congress in 1972 and needed 38 states to ratify it. It took longer than expected, but thanks to Nevada (2017), Illinois (2018), and Virginia (2020), that 38-state milestone has finally been reached. Now, we just need Congress to stop dragging their feet and remove an outdated deadline so equality can officially become the law of the land.

Declaration of Independence from Corporate Rule — Part 2
How did corporations gain constitutional rights in the first place?
It was never voted on..
There was no national debate.
No constitutional amendment.
Yet today, corporations can claim constitutional protections and spend unlimited money in elections.
How did that happen?
Understanding the answer reveals how power in America has evolved.
Fossil Fuel Subsidies Surge — And Corporate Constitutional Rights Are Why
While communities face rising energy bills, climate disasters, unaffordable healthcare and shrinking public budgets, oil and gas corporations are thriving — propped up by tens of billions in federal subsidies.
How much public money are they receiving?
That depends on how you count.
Conservative estimates of direct federal subsidies — including tax breaks, discounted leasing rates, royalty reductions, and industry-specific deductions — place fossil fuel support at roughly $30–35 billion per year, a sharp increase from prior years after additional subsidies and favorable provisions were expanded in 2025
But broader analyses that include state and local incentives, indirect supports, and systemic advantages put the number far higher — often cited around $80 billion annually or more.
And if you include the true societal costs — public health impacts, climate damage, environmental cleanup, and military expenditures tied to securing global oil supply — economists estimate the effective public cost climbs into the hundreds of billions per year.





