Bernie Sanders to push for $15/hour
minimum wage at Walmart shareholder meeting
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[June 05, 2019]
By Nandita Bose
ROGERS, Ark (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders will attend Walmart's annual
shareholder meeting on Wednesday to advocate for workers' rights as the
retailer battles mounting pressure to hike its minimum wage for hourly
employees.
The U.S. Senator from Vermont will present a shareholder proposal at the
event asking the world's largest retailer to give its hourly employees a
seat on its board and will press the company to raise wages. The
proposal, which is buried at the end of Walmart's annual proxy filing,
has little chance of passing as the founding family, owns a majority of
shares.
Walmart's shareholder meeting begins at 10.30 a.m. EST (1430 GMT) on
June. 5 in Rogers, Arkansas.
Sen. Sanders' presence has brought fresh attention to a meeting whose
format was changed by Walmart last year to split it into two separate
events, inviting sharp criticism from labor groups and unions.
The retailer, which employs nearly 1.5 million Americans and is the
largest private-sector employer in the country, now holds its business
meeting, which Sen. Sanders' will attend, a few days before its big
shareholder event, which draws thousands of employees.
Last year it rushed through shareholder proposals at the business
meeting, which had a fraction of the attendees, in less than 30 minutes.
On Tuesday, Sen. Sanders sent out multiple tweets about the meeting. One
said: "I know people who are on government benefits because the pay at
Walmart is that low."
"Americans should not be subsidizing the richest family in America and @Walmart
workers should not be living in poverty. Walmart's greed has got to
end."
In another tweet, he said "The Waltons ... earn $25,000 a minute. The
average Walmart employee makes $25,000 a year. My message to the
Walton's is simple: Pay your employees a living wage of $15 an hour!"
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Democratic presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders
(I-VT) campaigns during a SEIU California Democratic Delegate
Breakfast in San Francisco, California, U.S. June 1, 2019.
REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
This will not be the first time Sen. Sanders has pushed Walmart to
raise wages. He has regularly pointed to the retailer as an example
of economic inequality in the country because a sizeable portion of
its workforce depends on government welfare and foodstamps.
Last year, Sanders introduced the Stop Walmart Act, a bill that
would prevent large companies from buying back stock unless they pay
all employees at least $15 an hour.
Walmart has raised its minimum wage twice since 2016 to $11 an hour.
But it is still lower than the $15 an hour that rival Amazon.com Inc
pays its employees. Others like Target Corp and Costco Wholesale
Corp also pay higher rates than the brick-and-mortar retailer.
Walmart has said it pays an average of $17.50 an hour to its hourly
employees, including benefits.
"If Senator Sanders attends, we hope he will approach his visit not
as a campaign stop, but as a constructive opportunity to learn about
the many ways we're working to provide increased economic
opportunity, mobility and benefits to our associates," Walmart has
said previously.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Rogers, Arkansas; editing by Richard
Pullin)
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