USA TODAY International Edition

Minimum wage likely won’t stay in relief bill

Dems are still looking for ways to raise wage

- Ledyard King

WASHINGTON – Advocates of a $ 15- an- hour federal minimum wage scored a temporary victory last week when the House approved the increase in its vote to advance President Joe Biden’s COVID- 19 relief bill.

But it doesn’t appear they’ll be popping champagne as the bill goes to a Senate vote this week.

A key Senate official already has ruled the increase that the House passed early Saturday morning cannot be included in the bill. And an effort pushed by progressiv­es to overrule the Senate parliament­arian’s decision is one few think is realistic. Goodbye Plan A.

Then there was a proposal being crafted by Senate Democrats to backdoor a minimum wage increase by inserting a provision that penalizes large corporatio­ns that did not pay their workers at least $ 15 an hour. The plan, led by Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden, D- Ore., conversely would provide income tax credits to small businesses if they paid their workers higher wages.

But that proposal – Plan B, in effect – has been pulled. Senate Democrats shelved it because of the difficulty of shoehornin­g such a complex piece of legislatio­n in a bill that needs to move quickly through Congress, according to three sources familiar with the bill not authorized to speak on the record.

Biden and Democratic leaders want to pass the relief package that extends unemployme­nt benefits before the current benefits expire March 14.

That has left Democrats scrambling for a Plan C. Essentiall­y, that would most likely be a stand- alone bill raising the wage or including it in a larger measure – like an infrastruc­ture bill –

that could get the Republican support necessary for passage. Both would be longer shots than including it in the COVID- 19 relief bill.

“It’s a matter of basic human decency and fairness. And I am very, very optimistic that we will find another path,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D- Conn., told reporters Monday. “We’re going to do the minimum wage at some point. It may not be this week, but it will be.”

Progressiv­es say the relief package is by far the best vehicle to attach the $ 15 wage increase because the bill is being moved through Congress in a special procedure called reconcilia­tion that allows it to be approved with a simple 51vote majority rather than the 60 votes needed to overcome a legislativ­e hurdle known as the filibuster.

That would allow Democrats to pass the relief bill without a single Republican senator, since Vice President Kamala Harris could break the tie in the evenly split chamber. That assumes that every Democrat would go along with a relief bill that raises the wage, a step that two Democrats – Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona – have said they oppose.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D- Calif., was one of close to two dozen House Democrats who sent a letter to the Biden administra­tion Monday morning asking them to overrule the Senate parliament­arian and keep the $ 15 minimum wage in the final bill.

The California liberal said it was an issue many progressiv­es, including groups representi­ng women of color, believed was a “core priority” for Democrats and the country.

“If we’re going to do it through reconcilia­tion, we might as well do it now,” Khanna said of some Democrats’ suggestion to try passing the minimum wage in another reconcilia­tion bill.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that Harris would not initiate the process to overrule the Senate parliament­arian’s decision stripping the minimum wage provision out of the COVID- 19 relief bill.

It’s “not a simple decision. It would also require 50 votes,” she said. “The president and the vice president both respect the history of the Senate. They both formerly served in the Senate, and that’s not an action we intend to take.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont independen­t who is leading the charge for a $ 15 wage, said last week that the proposal won’t stand much of a chance of passing if it’s not attached to the relief package because no Republican would support it.

“The only way that we are going to raise the minimum wage is through reconcilia­tion or ending the filibuster,” Sanders said.

Congress hasn’t raised the federal minimum wage – now $ 7.25 an hour – since 2007, even though a recent Pew Research poll shows Americans overwhelmi­ngly favor an increase. Over the past decade, food costs, housing expenses and CEO pay has climbed yet those at the bottom of the economic ladder have not seen similar gains in their wages, progressiv­es contend.

President Barack Obama called on Congress to boost the minimum wage in 2014, but the effort went nowhere. The Democratic- led House voted in 2019 to raise the minimum wage to $ 15 an hour, only to see the Republican- controlled Senate kill the proposal.

Currently, 31 states have a minimum wage law that allows at least some workers to be paid less than $ 10, according to the U. S. Department of Labor.

No state has a minimum wage at $ 15 or above, though the District of Columbia does.

Republican­s are united against the $ 15 proposal, citing opposition by some small businesses and an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office that estimates the measure would result in the loss of as many as 1.4 million jobs. The same analysis said it would boost the pay for as many as 27 million Americans and would lift nearly 1 million out of poverty

Higher wages increase the cost to employers of producing goods and services, and those costs are generally passed on to consumers who usually react by purchasing fewer goods and services, according to the CBO. As a consequenc­e, employers faced with having to scale back their output usually cut back their workforce.

GOP senators Mitt Romney of Utah and Tom Cotton of Arkansas are proposing a $ 10 wage, but only if businesses are required to use the internet- based E- Verify system designed to prevent employers from hiring undocument­ed workers.

“It’s a matter of basic human decency. ... I am very, very optimistic that we will find another path.” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D- Conn.

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