6.23.2006

needed: class warfare

What's the minimum wage in Canada? When was the last time it went up?

In the US, the minimum wage hasn't been raised in ten years. Ten years. Think of how your living costs have risen in the past decade. Imagine making the same salary you were earning then - if that salary didn't cover those costs in the first place.

Conservatives are fond of saying that government cannot create equality of conditions, only equality of opportunity. If a substantial portion of a population can't legally work their way out of poverty, how can there ever be equality of opportunity?

When Howard Dean tried to talk about working people who always vote against their economic interests - the first Democrat in my memory to lay that on the line - Republicans disingenuously accused him of fomenting "class warfare". In The Nation, Katrina vanden Heuvel writes:
The GOP just shafted the working people of America. By rejecting an attempt to raise the minimum wage, the Republican-controlled Senate showed that it is far more interested in lining the pockets of its campaign contributors than - as Paul Krugman wrote in a New York Times op-ed on Monday - arriving at a "new New Deal" and working to "rebuild our middle class." The 52-46 vote was eight short of the 60 needed for approval. (The measure drew the support of eight Republicans - four of these are up for re-election in the fall.)

Sen. Edward Kennedy's amendment would have raised the wage from the current $5.15 an hour to $7.25 – the first raise in a decade. "The minimum wage," as economist Gwendolyn Mink, makes clear, is supposed to guarantee an income floor to keep full-time wage-earners out of poverty. But today, the federal minimum wage guarantees abject poverty for workers... nearly $6,000 per year below the federal poverty line for a family of three."

But the vast majority of Republican Senators, several of them millionaires several times over, don't care about poverty or the well-being of their working class constituents, What they really care about is that they're sitting pretty, having voted themselves another raise - to $168,500 - on January 1.

Even the not-exactly-populist Wall Street Journal points out, "While the minimum wage has remained frozen, lawmakers' salaries have risen with annual cost-of-living increases keyed to what is given federal employees. And last week's vote in the House Appropriations Committee followed a floor vote days before in which the House cleared the way for members to get another increase valued at thousands of dollars annually." So, while Congress will soon make close to $170,000 a year, hardworking full-time minimum wage workers make just $10,700 annually.

. . . For millions of families, this callous vote means another day of choosing between rent and health care, putting food in the refrigerator or gas in the car. Meanwhile, a Big Oil CEO makes $37,000 an hour. Want to talk about class warfare?
But don't look now, we've got a terrorism scare to keep you all busy.

5 comments:

M@ said...

Minimum wage is set provincially in Canada. Ontario's was the same from 1995 to 2005 -- the "tough love" Tories are to blame for that. (I don't remember whether there was a raise in minimum wage during the previous NDP government in Ontario either, but it seems to me there was -- I think I went from $3.75 to $3.85 for my part-time library job.)

Anyhow, a good fact sheet on Ontario mininum wage is here.

James Redekop said...

Here are Canadian minimum wages by province/territory.

James Redekop said...

Too bad Congressional pay isn't tied to the minimum wage...

Of course, a lot of those in Congress could get by more than comfortably even without their Congressional salaries...

laura k said...

Here are Canadian minimum wages by province/territory.

Hey, that site once linked to wmtc.

brian said...

My minimum wage is $7.60. How do I know that? My job sucks

I would like for the Conservatives and their magical equality of opportunity to explain to me how I can afford tuition and textbooks on that... at this rate, I'll be broke by January