Trump picks opponent of higher minimum
wage for Labor Department
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[December 09, 2016]
By Amanda Becker and Robert Iafolla
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President-elect
Donald Trump named fast-food executive Andy Puzder to head the U.S.
Department of Labor on Thursday, drawing criticism from labor advocates
worried about his opposition to a higher minimum wage and government
regulation of the workplace.
Puzder, chief executive of CKE Restaurants Inc, which operates the
Carl's Jr. and Hardee's fast-food chains, has frequently argued in the
media that higher minimum wages would hurt workers by forcing
restaurants to close.
He has bashed a new Labor Department rule aimed at extending overtime
pay to more than 4 million U.S. workers and has praised the benefits of
automation in the fast-food industry.
Fast-food workers, who are largely not unionized, are engaged in a
multi-year campaign known as the "Fight for $15," which is supported by
labor unions, to raise minimum wages to $15 an hour. They have had
state-wide successes in New York and California and in cities and
municipalities such as Seattle.
The federal minimum wage is $7.25. Workers in states that have higher
minimum wages are entitled to the higher rate, the Labor Department
says.
Trump, in a statement released by his transition team, praised Puzder
for a "record fighting for workers" and said he would ensure
occupational safety standards.
"He will save small businesses from the crushing burdens of unnecessary
regulations that are stunting job growth and suppressing wages,” Trump
said.
In the same statement, Puzder, 66, said he agreed with Trump that "the
right government policies can result in more jobs and better wages for
the American worker."
The Labor Department regulates wages, safety and discrimination in the
workplace.
Republican Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton in last month's election
by carrying swing states - and some traditionally Democratic states - in
the U.S. Rust Belt after promising to create jobs and to review or
cancel trade deals that he said were bad for workers.
National labor leaders had urged their rank-and-file members to back
Clinton, saying Trump's appointments and policies would not align with
his promises to workers.
Labor leaders have been girding for Trump to appoint pro-business
regulators at the Labor Department and the National Labor Relations
Board, and to roll back key regulatory initiatives of the Obama
administration such as the Labor Department rule granting overtime pay
to more than 4 million salaried workers, both unionized and not
unionized.
"He was talking a good game when he was running for president, as far as
helping workers and leveling the playing field for them, but with the
nominations he's made it's just the opposite," said Lee Saunders,
president of the public employees union AFSCME.
Shake-ups are expected under Trump at the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, or EEOC, which enforces federal anti-discrimination laws.
Trump will have an early opportunity to shape the EEOC when he replaces
its general counsel, Obama appointee David Lopez, who is leaving the
agency this month, and a vacancy on the commission.
Trump will also be able to fill two current vacancies on the five-member
NLRB early in his term, likely tipping the agency to a more
business-friendly posture.
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Andy Puzder, CEO of CKE Restaurants, departs after meeting with U.S.
President-elect Donald Trump (R) at the main clubhouse at Trump
National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., November 19,
2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File PIcture
Although just 11.1 percent of U.S. workers were represented by a
union in 2015 - down from 20.1 percent in 1983, the first year
government statistics were kept - labor unions are a powerful force
in Democratic politics. But union members' support for Clinton at
the election was lower than it had been for President Barack Obama
four years ago.
About 51 percent of voters from union households backed Clinton,
with 42 percent supporting Trump, a CNN exit poll showed. Democrat
Obama won 58 percent of the same voters in his 2012 re-election win
against Republican Mitt Romney.
Business groups welcomed the appointment of Puzder. Robert Cresanti,
president of the International Franchise Association, an industry
group, praised him as an "exceptional choice" who would bring
"business experience and policy acumen on so many issues impacting
employers and employees."
Democrats were critical.
"In Andrew Puzder, Trump found a labor secretary that would help him
roll back the minimum wage, end the overtime rule that will raise
wages for millions, weaken safeguards for workers, and to wipe out
unions," said American Bridge, a liberal advocacy group.
DISPUTE WITH UNION LEADER
Trump's decision to pick Puzder comes as he engaged in a Twitter
dispute with the head of a local United Steelworkers union in
Indiana.
United Steelworkers Local 1999 President Chuck Jones, who represents
workers at United Technologies Corp's Carrier plant in Indianapolis,
criticized Trump for inflating the number of jobs that would be
saved by his intervention in the company's decision to move some
production to Mexico.
Trump responded on Twitter that Jones had done a "terrible job
representing workers."
Jones said after speaking to the company that 800 jobs would remain
in Indianapolis, of which 730 will be union jobs and 70 management
positions. Trump said last week that a deal by Indiana to give the
company $7 million in tax breaks would keep 1,100 jobs in the
region.
"Our people, at that point in time, got their hopes back up that
they might have a job," Jones told CNBC on Thursday.
"All he had to do is come back and say I was misled by (United
Technologies)," Jones said about Trump. "Instead of doing that he
goes on the attack on me?"
(Additional reporting by Julia Edwards Ainsley, David Shepardson and
Emily Stephenson in Washington and Dan Wiessner in Albany, N.Y.;
Editing by Leslie Adler and Peter Cooney)
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