The Guardian (USA)

Bernie Sanders unveils plan for $17-an-hour US minimum wage

- Chris Stein in Washington

Bernie Sanders on Thursday announced a proposal to raise the federal minimum wage to $17 an hour, saying the potent inflation Americans have faced over the past two years makes it necessary for the government to institute higher wages for workers.

Sanders intends to next month formally introduce legislatio­n raising the minimum wage over a five-year period to a level $2 higher than the $15 an hour Joe Biden and many Democrats have pushed for in recent years. But there is no sign of Republican­s wavering in their opposition to the proposal.

“As a result of inflation, $15 an hour back in 2021 would be over $17 an hour today,” said Sanders, an independen­t senator who caucuses with the Democrats. “In the year 2023, in the richest country in the history of the world, nobody should be forced to work for starvation wages. That’s not a radical idea. If you work 40-50 hours a week, you should not be living in poverty. It is time to raise the minimum wage to a living wage.”

Congress has not approved a minimum wage increase since raising the level to $7.25 an hour in 2009, where it remains for workers in 20 states. Voters in several states and cities across the country have approved raising their minimum wage to $15 an hour, but progress on a national increase has remained elusive.

In 2021, Democrats attempted to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour as part of a large spending bill intended to help the US economy recover from the Covid pandemic, but the effort failed, in part due to the defections of eight Democratic lawmakers.

Biden later that year signed an executive order raising the minimum wage for federal contractor­s, which affected as many as 390,000 workers, but the president has not said if he supports the increase to $17 an hour. A White House spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

In the two years since, Americans have faced the highest inflation since the 1980s, with consumer price increases hitting an annualized peak of more than 9% in June 2022, though they have moderated in recent months. While workers’ wages also increased over that period in part because of a tight labor market, the pace has not kept up with inflation.

“As a home healthcare worker, I make just $12 an hour. I worked in fast food for over 30 years and I never, never made $15 an hour. And now $15 isn’t even enough for what we’re going through today,” said Cookie Bradley, a founding member of the Union of Southern Service Workers, who joined Sanders in the announceme­nt.

Although Sanders was supported by the heads of major labor groups the AFL-CIO and Service Employees Internatio­nal Union (SEIU), he said little about how he planned to overcome objections both from Republican­s and reluctant Democrats.

He said: “This is a popular issue. I don’t think there’s a state in the country where people do not believe we should raise the minimum wage. I would hope that every member of Congress understand­s that and there will be political consequenc­es if they don’t.”

Republican­s, who took control of the House of Representa­tives this year, have shown at best lukewarm enthusiasm for a minimum wage rise, and have instead focused on trying to convince Americans that Biden is to blame for the rapid inflation. In 2021, Republican senators introduce two proposals, one that would raise the federal minimum wage to $10 an hour, and another that would give a tax credit for workers who make less than $16.50 an hour. Neither went far in the Senate, which Democrats currently control.

The SEIU president, Mary Kay Henry, said her millions of members would be keeping an eye on which lawmakers support Sanders’s proposal.

“We are going to be watching any congresspe­rson, senator or in the

House, that dares to say that they are not going to vote yes for Senator Sanders’

bill, because they need to be held accountabl­e at the ballot box,” Henry

cution and the presiding US district court judge, Timothy Kelly. Clashes in court and motions for mistrial were frequent.

Trump played an outsized role in the trial, given the reverence the Proud Boys accorded the former president. In closing arguments, the prosecutio­n said they acted as “Donald Trump’s army” to “keep their preferred leader in power” after rejecting Joe Biden’s victory.

The former president has long been considered the linchpin for the involvemen­t of the Proud Boys and others in the Capitol attack when he called for a “wild” protest on 6 January 2021 in an infamous December 2020 tweet and told supporters to “fight like hell” for his cause.

More than a thousand arrests have been made in connection to the Capitol attack and hundreds of conviction­s secured. Trump was impeached a second time for inciting an insurrecti­on but acquitted by Senate Republican­s. He still faces state and federal investigat­ions of his attempted election subversion.

In court, prosecutor­s said Tarrio and his top lieutenant­s used Trump’s December tweet as a call to arms and started putting together a cadre that they called the “Ministry of SelfDefens­e” to travel to Washington for the protest, according to private group chats and recordings of discussion­s the FBI obtained.

Around 20 December 2020, Tarrio created a chat called “MOSD Leaders Group” – described by Tarrio as a “national rally planning committee” – that included Nordean, Biggs and Rehl. The chat was used to plan a “DC trip” where all would dress in dark tones, to remain incognito.

The prosecutio­n argued that Tarrio’s text messages about “Seventeen seventy six”, in reference to the year of American independen­ce from Britain, suggested the leadership of the Proud Boys saw their January 6 operation as a revolution­ary force.

Lacking evidence in the hundreds of thousands of texts about an explicit plan to storm or occupy the Capitol, the prosecutio­n used two cooperatin­g witnesses from the Proud Boys to make the case that the defendants worked together in a conspiracy to stop the peaceful transfer of power.

The first witness, Jeremy Bertino, told the jury the Proud Boys had a penchant for violence and there was a tacit understand­ing that they needed to engage in an “all-out revolution” to stop Biden taking office, testimony meant to directly support a sedition charge.

The second witness, Matthew Greene, told the jury he did not initially understand why the Proud Boys marched from the Washington monument to the Capitol to be among the first people at the barricades surroundin­g Congress, instead of going to Trump’s speech near the White House.

Once the Proud Boys led the charge from the barricades to the west front of the Capitol, Pezzola using a police riot shield to smash a window, Greene said he realized there may have been a deliberate effort to lead the January 6 riot.

The prosecutio­n persuaded the judge to allow them to use a novel legal strategy: that though the Proud Boys leaders did not really engage in violence themselves – Tarrio was not even in Washington – they got other rioters to do so, using them as “tools” of their insurrecti­on conspiracy.

The defense protested the ruling allowing prosecutor­s to show the jury videos of other low-level Proud Boys and random rioters committing violence at the Capitol, saying that it amounted to making the five defendants guilty by associatio­n.

Notwithsta­nding the other evidence, the defense’s complaint was that if the jury had to assess whether the defendants’ limited use of violence alone met the threshold to “destroy by force the government of the United States”, the outcome might have been affected.

 ?? Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images ?? Bernie Sanders, an independen­t who caucuses with Democrats, said on Thursday: ‘It is time to raise the minimum wage to a living wage.’
Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images Bernie Sanders, an independen­t who caucuses with Democrats, said on Thursday: ‘It is time to raise the minimum wage to a living wage.’

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