Protesters online and in the streets are using the hashtag #EssentialAndExcluded to highlight how certain communities are disproportionately affected by coronavirus and the subsequent government response.

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Many are raising the issues as it became clear how many people were excluded from stimulus checks that came as a response to coronavirus lockdowns.

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As the stimulus checks have started rolling in for people across the country, there is a growing conversation about those who have been left out of the relief package. Workers such as janitors, day laborers, domestic workers, and healthcare staff are still being made to work, considered essential employees. But many of them are not receiving any benefits because they’re undocumented. For them, not doing their work would mean they have no income; and going into work under these circumstances means they’re at a high risk of being exposed and, in turn, contracting coronavirus.

It’s put them in a frustrating spot.

On Tuesday, workers’ right organizations gathered in a caravan of more than 60 cars outside New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s office in Manhattan to protest against stimulus funds being denied to these communities.

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The protests spanned across three blocks, according to organizers who also helped put together a similar protest in Los Angeles, California last week.

Organizers recorded about 200 cars in the caravan at the protest in L.A. A day after that protest, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a $125 million disaster relief package specifically for the undocumented workers of the state.

Salvador G. Sarmiento, campaign director at National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) that organized the campaigns, says while there is “no magic bullet” that brought in Governor Newsom’s announcement, their movement was a crucial part in “a growing chorus of groups that were making it really clear: you can’t just turn your back.”

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Sarmiento told the Daily Dot that Tuesday’s protest in New York brought together 100 protesters who demonstrated while staying inside their cars and maintaining social distancing.

Given current circumstances, with many people unable to go out to the streets, others showed solidarity on social media with #EssentialAndExcluded and #YNosotrosQue (what about us?):

#YNosotrosQue caravan today got cheers and clapping from taxi drivers, bike delivery workers, and truck drivers working in Manhattan despite the pandemic. Will @NYGovCuomo support NY's undocumented immigrants? Or continue the exclusion?✊🏾#Recovery4All #EssentialAndExcluded pic.twitter.com/9LQfF83kLc — Nadia Marin-Molina (@nadianadiamarin) April 22, 2020

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Immigrant workers are #EssentialAndExcluded. It's time for NY and CT to create disaster relief funds for immigrant workers! Take action: https://t.co/647htAsvsg https://t.co/UrKA0gUjig — Unidad Latina en Acción CT (@ULAnewhaven) April 21, 2020

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Sarmiento says they’ve been hearing about the fears and dilemmas of day laborers and undocumented workers who are “confronting these realities at the local level” and that is where #YNostrosQue, “what about us, what will we do?,” originated.

What will governors do to reject that racism, and include ALL #EssentialAndExcluded workers?



cc: @NYGovCuomo https://t.co/00hUeaGXjx — Santanesc (@santanesc_info) April 21, 2020

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I’m with the Caravan of #EssentialAndExcluded workers! #YNosotrosQue – what will we do to ensure undocumented workers & families receive emergency aid @NYGovCuomo? What about us NY, what will we do to reject racist exclusions & include ALL immigrants in life-saving assistance? — Jennifer Hadlock (@jenorganizer) April 21, 2020

“It’s not an exaggeration to say that some lives are at stake and without that assistance, some folks are forced to put themselves at risk, will get sick and will die because of these exclusions at the federal level,” Sarmiento told the Daily Dot.

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Following their protests, they’ve received calls from organizers in other parts of the country, such as San Antonio and Miami, who are also looking to bring the issue to their respective governors and mayors.

While they acknowledge that now is a difficult time to organize in person, they feel that they’ve been able to use social media to their advantage.

“We might be physically distanced but we can’t be socially absent,” says Sarmiento.

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Meanwhile, their activism on social media has helped raise funds.

“Social media has played a huge role in our campaign for funds to help the day laborers,” Viridiana Vidal, one of the organizers with NDLON, told the Daily Dot. “We have received hundreds of thousands in donations and support from many personalities.”

As of 2017 data, there were 1.2 million undocumented immigrants in New York. On Wednesday afternoon, New York City was set to declare another stimulus package addressing concerns for tenants, small businesses, essential workers, and the homeless, but there was no mention of addressing concerns for undocumented workers.

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While Sarmiento has been disappointed with Governor Cuomo’s approach, he says he is hopeful that things will turn around because hope is their only option.

“The federal government has been really clear what they think of our immigrant communities and what [President Donald] Trump is doing this week only reaffirms what we already know,” he said, in reference to President Trump’s recent tweet about temporarily halting immigration. “So the failure of the federal government has left this huge gap between immigrants and emergency assistance. We need localities and states to fill that gap.”

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