House approves $15 wage; Senate passage unlikely
WASHINGTON — House Democrats approved legislation Thursday to raise the federal minimum wage for the first time in a decade, to $15 an hour, but the bill has almost no chance in the Republican-controlled Senate.
Passage was assured after centrists won concessions for a slower phase-in, over six years instead of five. They also won assurances that the pay hike could be halted midway if a study shows job losses or other adverse effects.
A hike in the $7.25 hourly wage has been a top Democratic campaign promise, intended to address income inequality that’s driving the 2020 political debate. Democratic Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland said raising the wage is the “right thing to do.”
“America’s workers deserve a raise,” said Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a news conference with labor leaders and employees ahead of voting. Lifting a young girl into her arms, Pelosi said, “This is what it’s all about... It’s about family.”
The legislation, for the first time, would pay tipped workers the same as others earning the minimum wage, boosting their pay to $15 an hour, too. The minimum for tipped workers is now $2.13 an hour.
Republicans in the House balked at the wage hike, which would be the first since Democrats last controlled the majority. It was signed into law by then-president George W. Bush.
States are already able to raise the wage beyond the federal minimum, and many have done so. (In Ohio, the minimum wage is $8.30 per hour for nontipped employees and $4.15 for tipped.)