Biden Still Committed to Raising Minimum Wage: White House Press Secretary

Zachary Stieber
By Zachary Stieber
March 1, 2021US News
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Biden Still Committed to Raising Minimum Wage: White House Press Secretary
President Joe Biden speaks to the media at the White House before he walks to Marine on the south lawn in Washington, on Feb. 27, 2021. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

President Joe Biden is committed to raising the minimum wage after a Senate rules expert appeared to kibosh the provision in the latest COVID-19 relief package, his press secretary said on Sunday.

“He can’t do it on his own, but he is absolutely committed to raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

“He thinks it’s long overdue. He believes that men and women who are working hard, trying to make ends meet, should have—should not be living at the poverty level. And we’re going to spend the next few days and weeks looking for the best path forward, working with Democrats and Republicans, hopefully, to do exactly that.”

Congressional Democrats, with Biden’s backing, are ramming his relief bill through both chambers with no apparent Republican support by utilizing a budget process that’s been used for various proposals in the past.

Budget reconciliation requires a simple majority in the Senate, as opposed to the normal 60-vote threshold. That enables Democrats to pass it with no Republican votes, as they hold 50 seats and the tiebreaking vote that the vice president can cast.

But the body’s chief parliamentarian ruled last week a minimum wage hike couldn’t be included in the bill because of rules governing the budget process. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) kept the provision in the version the chamber later passed, but the White House has said it will not try to overrule the rules expert.

Senate Democrats are now working on alternatives, including a penalty on large corporations that don’t pay their workers a certain amount.

Sen. Bernie Sanders
Senate Budget Chairman Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) arrives for a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 25, 2021. (Susan Walsh/Pool/Getty Images)

“The president supports exactly what Sen. Sanders does, which is increasing the minimum wage for the American people, for workers who are just trying to make ends meet,” she said. “We’re gonna have to spend the next several days or even weeks figuring out what the best path forward is, but he’s committed to doing that.”

The federal minimum wage is currently $7.25 an hour. It was last raised in 2009. But 27 states have higher minimum wages. If states have a higher wage floor than the federal minimum wage, then employees are entitled to the higher of the two.

Even before the parliamentarian ruled against including the wage in the new package, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) signaled he didn’t want it hiked so much, putting the provision in peril. He proposed increasing it to $11 across to years.

Republicans have argued the hike doesn’t belong in a relief package and should be dealt with separately. Two GOP senators recently introduced a bill that would increase the wage to $10 an hour by 2025 while another announced legislation that would force big companies to pay their workers at least $15 an hour.

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) on Sunday said the relief package includes a number of measures that have nothing to do with relief.

“There’s $100 million for an underground transit system in the Silicon Valley. There’s a bridge in New York. There’s hundreds of millions of dollars for the arts and so on. There are things that have nothing do with COVID that are unrelated. Minimum wage was one, of course,” he said.

But Democrats have said it is related to helping people amid the pandemic.

“I basically support raising the minimum wage in the COVID bill because that is a huge part of economic recovery,” Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) said. “The people who are suffering most from the minimum wage and what’s happening in the pandemic are the essential workers, many of them are women and many of them are getting paid very low wages.”

Psaki was speaking during appearances on “Fox News Sunday” and CNN’s “State of the Union.” Portman and Hirono appeared on ABC’s “This Week.”

From The Epoch Times

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