Progressives make last push for $15 minimum wage as relief bill heads to Senate

1 Mar, 2021
Progressive Democrats have made a desperate call asking the Biden administration to overturn a Senate rule keeping a minimum-wage raise out of the upcoming Covid-19 relief bill. But Biden is unlikely to listen.
Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled last week that a Democrat-proposed provision hiking the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour could not be tacked on to the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion stimulus bill. MacDonough, a Democrat who acts as a sort of referee in the upper chamber, declared that a wage hike would not fall under budget rules, and as such could not be passed with a simple majority, unlike the rest of the stimulus package.
In a letter to President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday, California Rep. Ro Khanna (D) and a collection of progressives – among them Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan) – pleaded with the administration to overturn the technical hurdle and attach a wage increase to the bill.
Continue reading at www.rt.com

On the Minimum Wage, Joe Biden Chose Failure

By Branko Marcetic
Feb.27, 2021
The following is a tale of two lost causes.
One is the $15 minimum wage. A longtime priority of the labor movement and the broad Left, the measure was one of the few big-ticket items Joe Biden had agreed to adopt from Bernie Sanders’s platform after vanquishing him in the Democratic primary. Though its impact would be seriously eroded by inflation compared to when it was first proposed, getting it passed would have still been transformational and life-changing for many, given that it would raise wages for 32 million workers, narrow the racial pay gap, and boost incomes for single-income parents, disproportionately mothers.
Always a tall order given the corporatist, conservative nature of US politicians, the idea took a big leap closer to reality after Democrats won the runoffs in Georgia, giving them fifty votes in the Senate and therefore total, albeit flimsy, control over the federal government. Pushing it through was clearly going to be a tough slog. But as a core promise of Biden’s winning campaign, and one that has already been shown to be popular in Trump-loving Florida, where it won more votes than either presidential candidate, the measure has both public backing and some pretty big political benefits.
So how did they fight for it?
Continue reading at jacobinmag.com

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