Miami Herald

A new legislativ­e betrayal seeks to overturn Florida's minimum-wage amendment

- This editorial first appeared in the Orlando Sentinel.

Immediatel­y after the November election, Republican­s proclaimed the GOP as the party of the working class. Now, an influentia­l Florida Republican wants to deprive the working class of the most significan­t financial boost they’ve received in decades.

State Sen. Jeff Brandes has introduced a bill that could undo the minimum-wage increase that nearly 61 percent of the state’s voters approved in November.

Brandes, who is chairman of the Judiciary Committee, wants to put a new amendment on the ballot in 2022, one that would allow the Legislatur­e to pass laws creating multiple exemptions to the new $15 minimum wage.

One of the exemptions is worded so broadly — “hard to hire employees” — it could apply to just about anyone. The proposal doesn’t say what constitute­s a “hard to hire” employee, or who would make that determinat­ion.

Also exempted from the new minimum wage, should lawmakers choose, would be people under 21, which would include many college students working a job so they can minimize student loan debt. Or, simply young people who aren’t in college but are trying to get by.

Another exempt category would target ex-felons. If that rings a bell, it’s because the Legislatur­e successful­ly gutted 2018’s amendment No. 4, which restored voting rights for felons who had done their time.

Brandes, who describes himself as a libertaria­n, spoke last year about the need to stop warehousin­g people in prisons, to get them out into the workplace. He’s not wrong about that.

The senator’s amendment, however, would allow employers to pay those very people less money per hour than their coworkers. We struggle to understand how this type of discrimina­tory brand of financial punishment and humiliatio­n after prison would motivate someone with a felony record to turn their life around.

The $15 minimum wage approval was a stunning victory for working-class Floridians, who aren’t accustomed to winning. But this new amendment, if approved by voters, could render much of it meaningles­s.

Brandes just introduced the measure on Jan. 27, so it’s unclear how much support it’ll get from the self-declared party of the

working class.

We do know that — because elections have consequenc­es — the GOP now has just enough votes in both the House and Senate to reach the 60 percent threshold required of each body to put a constituti­onal amendment on the ballot, without any help from Democrats.

Which is another maddening aspect of Brandes’ bill. The Legislatur­e has worked diligently over the past two decades to make it more difficult for citizen-led amendments — like the minimum wage measure —to get on the ballot.

Thanks to lawmakers, it’s become more difficult, more timeconsum­ing and more expensive.

But lawmakers can easily get an amendment on the ballot as long as they have enough votes.

Easy for them, hard for you. Get the picture?

This amendment simply has to be a bridge too far for Florida’s GOP.

It would be a betrayal of the same working-class Floridians the party now claims as a constituen­cy.

 ?? AP ?? Florida legislator­s might soon consider legislatio­n to water down the minimum-wage increase that voters approved in November.
AP Florida legislator­s might soon consider legislatio­n to water down the minimum-wage increase that voters approved in November.

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