Labor activists target Midwest
politicians opposing wage increases
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[September 02, 2017]
By Chris Kenning
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. activists plan
protests in up to 400 cities across the United States on Monday's Labor
Day holiday to demand a minimum wage of $15 an hour, and are targeting
politicians in Midwestern battleground states who have blocked such
salary increases.
The demonstrations, backed by the Service Employees International Union,
will focus on hospital and home care workers, joining the fast-food and
janitorial staffers who have protested since the "Fight for $15"
movement started in 2012.
The movement has helped to spur politicians in a growing number of
cities such as New York, Seattle, Minneapolis and Washington, D.C., to
adopt measures that over time raise minimum wages to $15 an hour.
Organizers are also increasing pressure on legislatures and governors,
particularly in the Midwest, that have blocked or rolled back increases.
The increased focus on politicians who oppose wage increases may capture
some of the populist job-related voter discontent in traditionally
Democratic Midwest states that helped U.S. President Donald Trump win
the White House, said Dick Simpson, a political science professor at the
University of Illinois at Chicago.
"The minimum wage issue is one (issue) they can immediately identify
with because it affects their pocketbook with every paycheck," he said.
Republican Governor Scott Walker of the presidential swing state of
Wisconsin is among those targeted, as is Illinois Republican Governor
Bruce Rauner, who last month vetoed raising the minimum wage to $15 by
2022, saying it would hurt employment and businesses.
"I'm doing 40 hours of campaigning and knocking on doors and making
phone calls, whatever it takes to get Walker out of office," Milwaukee
hospital worker Margie Breelove said.
A voter-engagement drive, also slated to begin on Monday, seeks
thousands of workers to pledge to volunteer 40 hours leading up to the
2018 elections.
The idea is to support candidates, most of them Democrats, for state
legislatures or governor who favor wage hikes and union rights in such
states as Iowa, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin and Illinois, along with other
areas outside the Midwest.
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Protest signs are pictured in SeaTac, Washington just before a march
from SeaTac to Seattle aimed at the fast food industry and raising
the federal minimum wage and Seattle's minimum wage to $15 an hour
December 5, 2013. REUTERS/David Ryder/File Photo
"It's not just about taking out people that have been rigging the
rules against us, it's backing candidates who are prepared to
support our agenda," SEIU President Mary Kay Henry said in a
telephone interview.
Representatives for the governors of Wisconsin, Missouri and
Illinois did not respond to requests for comment on Friday.
Opponents of raising the current federal minimum hourly wage of
$7.25 argue that it hurts businesses. The federal minimum wage was
last increased in 2009.
But supporters of an increase say the current level is not enough to
live on and helps fuel the need for social safety-net programs. They
point to studies showing little impact on jobs.
Under a law approved last year, California set a $15 target for all
workers, which it plans to reach in 2023. New York state is also
gradually increasing its minimum wage to $15 an hour for all
workers. Cities, including Minneapolis, have also approved such
legislation.
However, since 2016, eight states, including Alabama, Kentucky and
Iowa, have passed laws pre-empting local wage laws, according to the
Economic Policy Institute.
St. Louis' minimum wage, which had increased to $10 an hour,
recently reverted to $7.70 after the legislature prohibited cities
from creating separate wage laws. Missouri Governor Eric Greitens
had opposed the increase.
(Reporting by Chris Kenning; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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