Politics & Government

Congressman Dave Reichert Addresses Demonstrators at D.C. Office

According to Working Washington, 50 demonstrators organized by Working Washington traveled to Washington, D.C., and occupied U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert's office.

U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Wa.) addressed about 50 demonstrators in his Washington, D.C. office Tuesday after they traveled to the nation's capital as part of a protest organized by Working Washington.

Among those who traveled were Jamel Moxey, a , to speak to the topics of the difficulty of finding jobs and a heavy student loan burden many college students face.

Though the group showed up at Reichert's office without an appointment, Reichert surprised the group by coming in through the elevator behind them and choosing to talk with them without an appointment.

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"I got to give him credit. He took time out of his day to talk to us," said Moxey, who is studying for an associate degree in communications.

The group of about 50 demonstrators in Reichert's office were part of a reported 3,500 to 4,000 demonstrators nationwide who came to the nation's capital to talk to legislators about concerns such as Social Security, job creation, funding education, and extending unemployment insurance benefits, according to Working Washington, a group that organizes for progressive causes.

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The week-long demonstration, organized by Working Washington and other progressive organizations nationwide, is called "Take Back the Capitol."

The demonstrators also went to other Washington state legislators, including Republican Congresswomen Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R -WA 5) and Jaime Herrera Beutler (R - WA 3), said spokesman Nathan Jackson.

Patch has not received a call back from Reichert's office seeking a response and a characterization of the meeting, but Reichert's Twitter account reported:

"Met with #99inDC outside my office today. We had a productive discussion about unemployment and the economy."

While giving Reichert credit for talking to the group, Jackson said that they still don't feel that Reichert and the group don't see eye-to-eye on key issues such as shipping jobs overseas, and Reichert's endorsement of what Working Washington characterized as an expansion of free trade agreements.

"Reichert said that someone is going to get hurt, and we got the impression that someone is going to be us, not the corporations," Jackson said.

Moxey, 18, said that the demonstrations show that politicians need to pay attention to the concerns of college-aged Americans.

"I am from where the next generation wil be coming from, the next leaders, the people who will hold clout in the future," he said.

stretches from his home city of Auburn to Bellevue, Mercer Island, Duvall and down to Eatonville and Mount Rainier National Park.



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