Aiming to Lift 'Starvation Wage,' Progressive Lawmakers Push for $15 Nationwide
“We are here today to send a very loud and a very clear message to the United States Congress, the President of the United States, and corporate America,” Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders bellowed before a crowd of striking low-wage workers in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday. “In the richest country on the face of the earth, no one who works 40 hours a week should be living in poverty.”
And it was with that message and those federal contract workers in mind that Sen. Sanders (I-Vt.), along with his progressive counterparts in the U.S House, on Tuesday introduced a bill to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.
“In the year 2015, a job has got to lift workers out of poverty, not keep them in it,” Sanders said at a rally of striking federal contract workers near the Russell Senate Building in the nation’s capital. “The $7.25 an hour federal minimum wage is a starvation wage. It has got to be increased to a living wage.”
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The Pay Workers a Living Wage Act would phase in a $15 minimum wage nationwide by 2020 over 5 steps, increasing to $9 in 2016, $10.50 in 2017, $12.00 in 2018, $13.50 in 2019, and $15 in ’20. After that, the minimum wage would be indexed to the median hourly wage.
Progressive Reps. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.), and Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) are among the members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus who introduced companion legislation in the House.
“When I’m on picket lines around the country, people tell me they’re protesting because they’re working harder than ever and still can’t make ends meet,” Ellison said in a statement. “The Progressive Caucus stands in solidarity with the working Americans putting in longer hours and seeing smaller paychecks. In the richest nation in the world, no business should be able to pay so little their workers are forced to find second and third jobs to feed their kids.”
According to a press statement from Sanders, if the minimum wage had kept up with productivity and inflation since 1968, it would be more than $26 an hour today.
Meanwhile, the legislation would gradually eliminate the practice of paying tipped workers a different, lower wage. In his speech on Wednesday, Sanders described that wage as “a loophole that allows employers to pay tipped workers a shamefully low $2.13 an hour.”
Boosting the federal minimum wage, which has not been done since 2009, would directly benefit 62 million workers who currently make less than $15 an hour, including over half of African-American workers and close to 60 percent of Latino workers, the bill’s backers say. They cite a January 2015 poll showing that 63 percent of Americans support a $15 minimum wage.
As The Hill notes, Sanders’ bill is unlikely to get a vote in the GOP-controlled Senate.
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