amy: i want to bring in michael zweig to the conversation. york state coordinating committee of the poor people's campaign, you wrote the book "class, race, and gender: challenging the injuries and divisions of capitalism." can you talk about the fact -- columbia university found only 46% of voters with household incomes less than twice the federal poverty rate cast a vote in 2016 compared to 68% turnout rate for voters with a household income more than twice the poverty line. this leads politician to ignore whole swaths of people and what you think needs to be done, and how the poor people's campaign is addressing this, michael. michael: thank you for having me here today, amy. bishop barber, good to be with you. the task is to understand, first of all, why it is we have these outrages that cause poverty, because the women of this country to lose their agency, lose their right to health care, threaten the environment, all of these issues that are brought together and have a special effect on poor and low-wage workers. these are not just thin