Minimum Wage Increase Proposed By Tom Harkin, George Miller 'A Matter Of Justice'

Dems Propose Minimum Wage Hike
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WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 11: Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA) speaks during a news conference about preserving Medicaid funding during the 'fiscal cliff' negotiations at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill December 11, 2012 in Washington, DC. Democratic legislators from the Senate and House were joined by representatives from major unions and policy organizations in calling on the White House and Congressional negotiators to protect funding for Medicaid, a health program for people and families with low incomes and resources. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON -- Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) plan to jointly introduce legislation on Tuesday to raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per hour and peg it to inflation, recently telling HuffPost their proposed boost is "the right thing to do" and "a matter of justice."

"When you see what's happened to CEO salaries and compensation since the 1970s, and what's happened to the minimum wage, it's just startling," Harkin said. "We can't continue on this way. We need a higher minimum wage."

"People do see the minimum wage as a matter of justice for people who don't have the ability to bargain for decent wages," Miller said. "And that's all this is -- it's a minimum wage. Nobody's walking away from here rich."

Harkin and Miller are rolling out their legislation three weeks after President Barack Obama stumped for raising the minimum wage during his State of the Union address, arguing that "no one who works full-time should have to live in poverty." Their bills share many of the same key details as the Obama administration's proposal, such as locking the wage floor to an inflation index and boosting the minimum wage for restaurant servers and other tipped workers.

Where their plan differs from the president's is in the magic number: Obama suggested hiking the minimum wage to $9 by 2015, while Harkin and Miller told HuffPost that the wage floor has eroded so much it should be boosted to more than $10 before being tied to inflation. Still at $7.25 an hour, the federal minimum wage hasn't been raised since 2009, after the last of a series of increases signed into law by President George W. Bush.

"I think it's too low," Miller said of Obama's $9 proposal. "If you're going to index it at that level, you lock people into a sub-minimum wage. We've always struggled to have the minimum wage keep up with the times. You play catch-up, and we need to stop that. Establish it at what it should be -- [roughly] 10 dollars an hour -- and then index it, and get on with life so you don't keep falling behind."

Explaining their more ambitious proposal, Harkin said $10.10 would get the minimum wage closer to its real-value historical high, not seen since the late-1960s.

"I was very happy the president at least talked about it," Harkin said. "And quite frankly, he wanted to implement it."

Before he assumed office in 2009, Obama called for raising the minimum wage to $9.50 by 2011 and pegging it to inflation. It was a politically thorny proposal amidst a weak economic recovery, and the president said little, if anything, about the subject during his first term.

Harkin and Miller, widely considered allies of organized labor and low-wage workers, have introduced bills to raise the minimum wage in recent sessions of Congress without success. Business lobbies such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Restaurant Association typically argue that raising the minimum wage will hurt job growth and force employers to cut back on hours, just as House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) did the morning after Obama's State of the Union address.

(Economists have produced a large and conflicting body of research on the effects -- or lack thereof -- of minimum wage increases on the job market, providing people of all political persuasions with relevant studies to make their case.)

"Republicans will throw up a smokescreen about it costing jobs," Harkin said of the new effort.

As in years past, the passage of a minimum wage increase will probably be "a slog," Miller said. "You don't introduce this in May and pass it in June. It takes time. But we know that." The increase signed into law by Bush, for instance, was passed in 2007 as part of a military spending bill that included some sweeteners for the business community, including a small business tax cut.

Harkin and Miller may have both time and public opinion on their side. It's been six years since Congress last mandated a raise, and minimum wage increases in general tend to poll well with the public, with about 62 percent of respondents supporting the president's proposal in a recent HuffPost/YouGov poll.

"The further that people fall behind, and the lower the minimum wage is, the more government subsidizes these low-wage workers," Miller said. "We subsidize them with food stamps, and we will be subsidizing them with health care. ... I appreciate everybody thumping their chest about how they're independent, free-enterprise businesses, [but] they just want a government subsidy to pay the wages of their workers."

Nineteen states and the District of Columbia now mandate minimum wages higher than the federal rate -- something Miller points to as evidence that Washington needs to catch up with much of the country. Ten states have also tied their minimum wages to the cost of living, while the federal rate has historically been raised only in lump sums. Supporters of indexing say adjusting the minimum wage annually according to inflation would strip the politics out of hiking the rate every few years.

Miller said if they can't pass the increase as a stand-alone bill, he and Harkin will consider rolling their measure into a larger legislative package. Given the generally high public support for raising the minimum wage, Democrats have already signalled that they wouldn't mind if it became a 2014 election issue for Congress.

"Historically, the way it's played out, you have these skirmishes back and forth, everyone writes their editorials," said Miller. "But at the end of the day, the American public knows that it's very unfair for people working for low wages who can't support themselves, that they go to work every day, in some cases at very difficult jobs, and they end up poor."

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Before You Go

113th Congress Facts
The Numbers(01 of07)
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The House has 233 Republicans and 200 Democrats. Each party should pick up one more seat when two vacancies are filled. Going into the election, the GOP edge was 242-193. Senate Democrats will have a caucus of 55, including two independents, Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont. Republicans have 45. That's a pickup of two seats for Democrats.(Text via the Associated Press) (credit:Getty Images)
Women(02 of07)
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The House will have 79 women, including 60 Democrats. At the end of the last session, there were 50 Democratic women and 24 Republican women. The new Senate will have 20 women members, an increase of three. That consists of 16 Democrats and four Republicans. The last Senate had 12 Democratic women and five Republicans.(Text via the Associated Press) (credit:AP)
Freshmen(03 of07)
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With two vacancies to be filled, the House has 82 freshmen; 47 Democrats and 35 Republicans. As of the end of the last session, 87 of 103 freshmen were Republicans. The Senate will include 14 new faces, with nine Democrats and the independent King. Five are women. New senators include Brian Schatz, who was sworn in on Dec. 27 to fill the seat of the late Hawaii Democrat Daniel Inouye.(Text via the Associated Press)(Pictured at left: Incoming House freshmen of the 113th Congress pose for a group photo on the East steps of the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012. AP Photo/Susan Walsh) (credit:AP)
African Americans(04 of07)
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The House will have 40 African-Americans, all Democrats. The number of Democrats is unchanged, although two Republicans will be gone: Allen West, R-Fla., lost his re-election bid, and Tim Scott, R-S.C., was appointed to fill the Senate seat of Jim DeMint, R-S.C., who is retiring. Scott will be the first black lawmaker in the Senate since Roland Burris, who retired in 2010 after filling the Illinois Senate seat of Barack Obama for almost two years.(Text via the Associated Press)(Pictured at left: Rep. Tim Scott, R-S.C., who was appointed by South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley to replace outgoing Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., walks out of the Republican policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. AP Photo/Susan Walsh) (credit:AP)
Hispanics(05 of07)
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The new House will have 33 Hispanics, with 25 Democrats and eight Republicans. That's up slightly from last year. The Senate will have three Hispanics: Democrat Robert Menendez of New Jersey, Republican Marco Rubio of Florida and Republican freshman Ted Cruz of Texas.(Text via the Associated Press)(Pictured at left: Rep.-elect Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, speaks with members of the media after a news conference with newly elected Democratic House members on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2012. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) (credit:AP)
Other Minorities(06 of07)
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The new House will have nine Asian Americans, all Democrats. There are two American Indians: Tom Cole, R-Okla., and Ben Lujan, D-N.M.(Text via the Associated Press)(Pictured at left: Sen.-elect, current Rep. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, and her husband, Leighton Oshima ride the Senate Subway on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2012. AP Photo/Harry Hamburg) (credit:AP)
Other Facts(07 of07)
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According to CQ Roll Call newspaper, the average age of House members in the 113th Congress is 57; the average age of senators is 62. It estimates that the House will include some 277 Protestants and Catholics, 22 Jews, two Muslims and two Buddhists. The Senate will have 80 Protestants and Catholics and 10 Jews. The House will have its first Hindu, Rep.Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii. Senate freshman Mazie Hirono, also of Hawaii, will be the Senate's only Buddhist and its first Asian American woman. Also for the first time, white men will be a minority among House Democrats.(Text via the Associated Press)Pictured at left: Rep.-elect Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii is seen on stage during a news conference with newly elected Democratic House members, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2012. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) (credit:AP)