"Every single Dem who voted against a $15
minimum wage should be primaried."
By Jake Johnson
March 07, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Sen. Bernie Sanders' last-ditch effort to
reattach a $15 minimum wage provision to the Senate
coronavirus relief package failed Friday morning
after 8 members of the Democratic caucus joined all
50 Republicans in voting down the Vermont senator's
amendment.
"Every single Dem who voted against a $15 minimum
wage should be primaried,"
declared Krystal Ball, host of HillTV's
"Rising."
In a statement following Friday's vote, Sanders
said that "at a time when millions of people are
working for starvation wages, when the minimum wage
of $7.25 an hour has not been raised by Congress
since 2007, when the president of the United States
and the House of Representatives support it, it is
absolutely imperative that the Senate approve an
increase in the minimum wage to $15 an hour."
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"If any senator believes this is the last time
they will cast a vote on whether or not to give a
raise to 32 million Americans, they are sorely
mistaken," the Vermont senator continued. "We're
going to keep bringing it up, and we're going to get
it done because it is what the American people
demand and need."
Sanders' attempt to add an overwhelmingly popular
federal minimum wage increase to the coronavirus
relief package via the amendment process came after
the Senate parliamentarian—an unelected official
with zero constitutional authority—issued an
advisory
opinion that deemed the proposed pay hike a
violation of budget reconciliation rules.
After the White House made clear that Vice
President Kamala Harris
would not be willing to exercise her authority
to override the parliamentarian's advice, Senate
Democrats removed the $15 minimum wage provision
from their version of the coronavirus relief bill.
"Because of an unfortunate and misguided decision
by the parliamentarian, this reconciliation bill
does not include an increase in the minimum wage to
$15 an hour," Sanders said on the Senate floor
Friday. "In my view, an unelected staffer in the
Senate should not be in charge of determining
whether 32 million workers in America receive a
raise."
Pennsylvania Lt. Governor John Fetterman, a
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate, said in a
statement Friday that "every single senator who
voted against a $15 minimum wage today should be
forced to live on $7.25 an hour so that they can
demonstrate to all of us how it's possible."
"While these senators sit comfortably in
Washington making $174,000 a year, millions of
Americans are struggling every day to get by, and
they cannot wait any longer," Fetterman added. "They
need a living wage now. All work has dignity, and
all paychecks must too. If the Senate were to pass a
$15 minimum wage, 24 million people would see their
wages rise. Instead, 58 deeply out of touch senators
decided to turn their backs on working people."
"It is despicable and unacceptable that there is not
unanimous support among Democrats in Congress for a
$15 minimum wage," said Rep. Jamaal Bowman.
By Kenny Stancil
March 07, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "CD"
- "
After eight members of the Democratic caucus joined
all 50 Republicans in the U.S. Senate on Friday to
kill an amendment reattaching a $15 minimum wage
provision to the Senate's coronavirus relief
package, progressives pointed out that nearly every
single one of the lawmakers who voted against the
raise for low-paid workers nationwide is a
millionaire.
"Today's vote on Senator Sanders' $15 minimum
wage amendment is incredibly sad," Morris Pearl,
chair of the Patriotic Millionaires and author of
the forthcoming book Tax the Rich,
said in a statement.
"$15 per hour is the bare minimum anyone in this
country needs to survive," Pearl continued, "and it
is baffling that any member of the U.S. Senate, much
less a number of Democrats, could look at the crisis
this country is enduring and decide that tens of
millions of low-income workers, including millions
of frontline workers who put their lives on the line
every day in the midst of a global pandemic, should
not get a raise."
Nina Turner, co-chair of Bernie Sanders' 2020
presidential campaign and current candidate running
for election to the U.S. House in Ohio's 11th
district, responded to the vote by
tweeting: "every single one of the senators who
voted against raising the minimum wage is a
millionaire."
Journalist Ken Klippenstein shared the net worth,
according to the most recent financial
disclosures compiled by the Center for Responsive
Politics, of the eight Democrats who voted against
Sanders' (I-Vt.) $15 minimum wage amendment.
While her present net worth may trail that of
other lawmakers, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), was
especially enthusiastic about denying a raise to
millions of poorly paid U.S. workers. With her
$174,000 annual
salary, Sinema is well on her way to joining her
wealthier colleagues in the millionaire ranks.
In his statement, Pearl said that "the Senate
failed the American people today."
"Every single Republican Senator who voted
against $15 today failed their constituents," he
continued. "The Democrats who voted against $15
today not only failed their constituents, the
decision they made—to put some ancient Senate
tradition ahead of the priorities that they ran on
and that they stand for—was wrong economically,
morally, and politically."
Pearl was referring to the fact that Senate
Democrats removed the $15 minimum wage provision
from their version of the Covid-19 relief bill
after the White House made clear that Vice President
Kamala Harris would
not be willing to exercise her authority to
override a widely condemned advisory
opinion of the Senate parliamentarian—an
unelected official with zero constitutional
authority—that deemed the proposed pay hike a
violation of budget reconciliation rules.
Sanders' attempt to use the amendment process to
add a federal minimum wage increase to the
coronavirus relief legislation came in the wake of
that decision.
"It is despicable and unacceptable,"
said Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), "that there is
not unanimous support among Democrats in Congress
for a $15 minimum wage."
"There is no excuse," Pearl added. "Senator
Kyrsten Sinema, Senator Jon Tester, Senator Joe
Manchin, Senator Chris Coons, Senator Jeanne Shaheen,
Senator Tom Carper, Senator Maggie Hassan, and
Senator Angus King failed both their people and
their party. Neither those voting next year nor
those reading the history of the next generation
will appreciate those senators who could have
changed the course of history—but chose not to."
Undeterred, Sanders
said Friday that "if any senator believes this
is the last time they will cast a vote on whether or
not to give a raise to 32 million Americans, they
are sorely mistaken. We're going to keep bringing it
up, and we're going to get it done because it is
what the American people demand and need."
Joining Sanders was Rep. Pramila Jayapal
(D-Wash.), who
tweeted that she "will never stop fighting to
make the minimum wage a living wage."
"It's long overdue that we give 32 million
workers a raise and lift a million people out of
poverty," Jayapal added.
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