মঙ্গলবার, ১৯ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Minimum-Wage Gambit Puts GOP on Defensive

It must be hard to remain stone-faced knowing you're on television when the president says that anybody who works 40 hours a week shouldn't be in poverty. Who could be against that?

Steve Cole/Getty

That, at least, is how President Obama framed his call for an increase in the minimum wage to $9 an hour (up from the current $7.25). Seated right behind Obama for the State of the Union, and in full camera range, John Boehner managed to stay expressionless; he didn't even pretend to empathize.

The next day the House Speaker dismissed Obama's proposal, saying he'd been in the middle of periodic fights over hiking the minimum wage for 28 years, his entire political career, beginning in the Ohio House of Representatives. "When you raise the price of employment, guess what happens? You get less of it," he said, staking out his opposition to Obama on an issue that once again leaves Republicans on the wrong side of popular opinion.

Raising the minimum wage polls well, with Democrats almost universally supporting it; independents, 74 percent; and Republicans, 50 percent, according to a Lake Research survey last year. With Obama on the road selling his proposals, Tony Fratto, a former Bush White House official, tweeted, "Has raising the minimum wage ever not polled well?" In a series of tweets, he proposed the GOP stop "fighting unpopular fights over and over again," and instead outbid the Democrats and "insist on an $11 minimum wage."

In a follow-up email, Fratto said his call for $11 was "mostly facetious," but his larger point is that the "knee-jerk opposition to minimum-wage increases in my party " that's a problem. Democrats know they can always call for a minimum-wage increase, and that will be popular " If this is simply a political exercise " take away the Democrat ability to claim a "win' by effectively always outbidding them."

There won't be a bidding war with Republicans, and once you get beyond the political gamesmanship the White House makes a good case for advancing the idea of an increase in the minimum wage despite Boehner's negative response. A senior White House official points out that in 1996, the Republican Congress passed legislation to raise the minimum wage that Bill Clinton signed into law. The previous year, then-Majority leader Dick Armey had vowed to oppose any increase with every fiber of his being.

Democrats and Republicans agree on the politics, that it's a loser for the GOP.

During his State of the Union address, President Obama called on Congress to raise the minimum wage to nine dollars per hour.

President Bush signed the last increase into law in 2007 after Democrats regained control of both the House and Senate. "History has shown this is the type of idea that can get more traction than a lot of other things you might want to do about poverty," says the White House official, attributing much of the rise in economic inequality to the erosion of the minimum wage through inflation. In austere economic times, hiking the minimum wage has the virtue of not costing the Treasury any money, though economists disagree over its effect on tax revenue and job creation.

The late Ted Kennedy worked with Bush on the '07 increase, and he was the driving force in Congress over a period of decades to boost wages for the poorest Americans. If Obama's proposal becomes law, increases in the minimum wage would be tied to the cost of living, ensuring regular increases and defusing the issue politically.

James Sherk, a senior policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, says that apart from the political differences that are playing out around Obama's proposal, the current economic climate is likely to thwart any increase in the minimum wage. Recent increases, in 1990, 1996, and 2007, all occurred when the economy was seen as expanding and Republicans didn't push back as much. Now, says Sherk, conservatives worry about the "unintended consequences, that you hurt the people you want to help."

Democrats and Republicans disagree about the economic consequences of a higher minimum wage, but they do agree on the politics, that it's a loser for Republicans and mostly a winner for Democrats. "It should resonate," says Matt Bennett, a co-founder of Third Way, a centrist Democratic group. "No one will win an election on this, but it rounds out with some base voters that he's focused on their needs, too." Democratic pollster Stefan Hankin agrees that it speaks to the Democratic base, but warns that it also risks deepening the divide between the business community and Democrats at a time when the GOP is in such disarray that an olive branch to business might be better politics. Either way, Democrats have set a proposal in motion that if it doesn't pass in this Congress, it likely will in the next.

Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.

Eleanor Clift is a contributing editor for Newsweek. Follow her on Twitter.

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

Tags: John Boehner,Barack Obama,U.S. Politics You Might Also Like var OB_Template = 'The Daily Beast'; var OB_demoMode = false; var OBITm = '1255455386150'; var OB_langJS = 'http://widgets.outbrain.com/lang_en.js'; if (typeof(OB_Script) != 'undefined') { OutbrainStart(); } else { var OB_Script = true; var str = unescape("%3Cscript src=\'http://widgets.outbrain.com/OutbrainRater.js\' type=\'text/javascript\'%3E%3C/script%3E"); document.write(str); } Comments Powered by Livefyre Gabby: Let's Get This Done

Former Rep. Gabby Giffords and her husband Mark Kelley have released a new TV ad spurring Congress to act on gun control legislation. 'There are solutions we can agree on' to curb gun violence, Giffords says, 'even gun owners like us.'

Play Christie to Doctor: Shut Up! Play Keep Your Day Job, Kerry! Play Hillary Clinton Bids Farewell, For Now Brennan Hearing Reignites Drone Debate Blinded by the Drones

For John Kael Weston and other men on the frontlines of Iraq and Afghanistan drone strikes raise many uncomfortable questions. He writes on why we need clearer policy and guidelines for these silent killers.

by John Kael Weston Bottom Feeding The GOP's Chuck Hagel Farce by Peter Beinart Great Compromise The Drone Consensus by Daniel Klaidman Self-Control Obama's Smart Move on Drones by Michael Tomasky Top Spook Will Brennan Subdue the CIA? by Daniel Klaidman Sorry GOP: Rove Is No Schumer

Rove's latest plan to return the GOP from the political wilds is infuriating base Republicans, writes Lloyd Green.

by Lloyd Green Highly Anticipated The Benghazi Testimony Hillary on the Hot Seat

Clinton faces a grilling on the Benghazi attack when she testifies on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. Eli Lake reports.

by Eli Lake Unavenged Where's the Benghazi Justice? by John Avlon Amazing That Emotional Hillary by Michael Tomasky The Real Art of Power George W. Bush The recently leaked paintings by George W. Bush revealed the former president's previously unknown artistic side. And art critics were reasonably impressed.... AP Winston Churchill "When I get to heaven, I intend to spend a considerable portion of my first million years in painting," Winston Churchill told Life magazine?in 1946, "and so get to the bottom of the subject.... AP Dwight Eisenhower Although he did not take up painting until he was 58 years old, Dwight Eisenhower completed more than 250 works of art.... View Full Gallery ?

George W. Bush's portraits and more paintings by world leaders (and dictators).

Prev Next View Full Gallery More Assault Weapons Debate Dianne Feinstein Wants to Ban These Guns by Justin Green Other News Politics Mourdock Vows to Keep Being Heard Bonus Quote of the Day McCain Sees Broad Support for Background Checks Get More from Political Wire Entertainment Rihanna ends up bloodied after London club scrape Week in Photos for Feb. 15, 2013 Cheryl Burke chats diet, exercise, relationship rumors and more! Get More from Wonderwall Entertainment "SNL': "Fox & Friends' corrections, if you missed "em PopWatch Planner: The Oscars, "Downton Abbey,' and the Independent Spirit Awards "Saturday Night Live' Recap: Christoph Waltz had our curiosity, played it straight, and now we just want to see "DJesus Uncrossed' Get More from EW.com Entertainment Country Singer Mindy McCready Dies At 37 Of Apparent Suicide America's Hardest-Working Know-It-All "Die Hard" Hero John McClane Almost Got Beat At The Box Office By Nicholas Sparks Get More from Buzz Feed The Daily Beast Help About Contact Us Jobs Advertise Privacy Community Policy Terms of Use Financial Disclaimer Copyright & Trademark Sections: Home Election Entertainment Books Video Women in the World Press Newsweek Subscribe Featured: Fashion Week Oscar Buzz The Royalist Howard Kurtz David Frum Newsweek Subscriber Help Partners: Expedia Hotels Hotwire Merchantcircle Reference Thesaurus Urbanspoon Weather data provided by Weather Underground, Inc. Switch to Mobile ? 2013 The Newsweek/Daily Beast Company LLC Get Email Updates Sign Up Sign up for daily email updates from The Daily Beast Rubric head.js('http://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js', 'https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js') window.twttr = (function (d,s,id) { var t, js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return window.twttr || (t = { _e: [], ready: function(f){ t._e.push(f) }}); js=d.createElement(s); js.id=id; js.src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); return window.twttr || (t = { _e: [], ready: function(f){ t._e.push(f) } }); }(document, "script", "twitter-wjs")); twttr.ready(function (twttr) { twttr.events.bind('click', function(event) { dailybeast.analytics.trackSharetoolClick("TWEET", window.location.pathname); }); }); window.fbAsyncInit = function() { FB.init({appId:'189930913679',status:true,cookie:true,xfbml:true}); //catch like event FB.Event.subscribe('edge.create', function(href, widget) { dailybeast.analytics.trackSharetoolClick("FBLIKE", href, widget.getAttribute("pagename")); }); //catch unlike event FB.Event.subscribe('edge.remove', function(href, widget) { dailybeast.analytics.trackSharetoolClick("FBUNLIKE", href, widget.getAttribute("pagename")); }); }; var switchTo5x = false; if (typeof stLight != 'undefined') { stLight.options({publisher:'3d9f370c-ec3a-4248-b23b-c041cc77078e', onhover:false}); } var _sf_async_config = {uid:20421,domain:"thedailybeast.com",sections:"politics",authors:"Eleanor Clift",useCanonical:true}; (function() { function loadChartbeat() { window._sf_endpt = (new Date()).getTime(); var e = document.createElement('script');e.type = 'text/javascript';e.src = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://s3.amazonaws.com/" : "http://") + "static.chartbeat.com/js/chartbeat.js"; document.body.appendChild(e); } var oldonload = window.onload; window.onload = (typeof window.onload != 'function') ? loadChartbeat : function() { oldonload(); loadChartbeat();}; })(); var _qevents = _qevents || []; var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-17082295-1']); _gaq.push(['_setDomainName', '.thedailybeast.com']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })(); _qevents.push( { qacct:"p-bcLY1r4ynM-2-", labels:dailybeast.analytics.getQuantcastLabelString() } ); //quantserve(); (function () { var d = new Image(1, 1);d.onerror = d.onload = function () {d.onerror = d.onload = null;}; d.src = ["//secure-us.imrworldwide.com/cgi-bin/m?ci=us-904381h&cg=0&cc=1&si=", escape(window.location.href), "&rp=", escape(document.referrer), "&ts=compact&rnd=", (new Date()).getTime()].join(''); })(); (function( ){ BF_WIDGET_JS=document.createElement('script'); BF_WIDGET_JS.type="text/javascript"; BF_WIDGET_SRC="http://ct.buzzfeed.com/wd/UserWidget?u=thedailybeast&to=1&or=vb&wid=1&cb=" + (new Date()).getTime(); setTimeout(function() {document.getElementById('BF_WIDGET_1').appendChild(BF_WIDGET_JS);BF_WIDGET_JS.src=BF_WIDGET_SRC},1); })(); var _mb_site_guid ="64137bb7a9c959eb85eca31411ca733e47592e6dea09f5ba63fe64af2e1c8218"; $.priorityQ.domReady.add("Amazon Auto Trigger/Linksmart tag", $.priorityQ.WHENEVER, function(){ $.getScript("http://wms.assoc-amazon.com/20070822/US/js/auto-tagger.js?tag=thedailybeast-autotag-20&locale=US&overwrite=Y"); $.getScript("http://cdn.linksmart.com/linksmart_2.3.0.min.js"); }); dailybeast = dailybeast || {}; dailybeast.links = dailybeast.links || {}; dailybeast.links.beastTv = "/content/dailybeast/videos";

President Bush signed the last increase into law in 2007 after Democrats regained control of both the House and Senate. "History has shown this is the type of idea that can get more traction than a lot of other things you might want to do about poverty," says the White House official, attributing much of the rise in economic inequality to the erosion of the minimum wage through inflation. In austere economic times, hiking the minimum wage has the virtue of not costing the Treasury any money, though economists disagree over its effect on tax revenue and job creation.

The late Ted Kennedy worked with Bush on the '07 increase, and he was the driving force in Congress over a period of decades to boost wages for the poorest Americans. If Obama's proposal becomes law, increases in the minimum wage would be tied to the cost of living, ensuring regular increases and defusing the issue politically.

James Sherk, a senior policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, says that apart from the political differences that are playing out around Obama's proposal, the current economic climate is likely to thwart any increase in the minimum wage. Recent increases, in 1990, 1996, and 2007, all occurred when the economy was seen as expanding and Republicans didn't push back as much. Now, says Sherk, conservatives worry about the "unintended consequences, that you hurt the people you want to help."

Democrats and Republicans disagree about the economic consequences of a higher minimum wage, but they do agree on the politics, that it's a loser for Republicans and mostly a winner for Democrats. "It should resonate," says Matt Bennett, a co-founder of Third Way, a centrist Democratic group. "No one will win an election on this, but it rounds out with some base voters that he's focused on their needs, too." Democratic pollster Stefan Hankin agrees that it speaks to the Democratic base, but warns that it also risks deepening the divide between the business community and Democrats at a time when the GOP is in such disarray that an olive branch to business might be better politics. Either way, Democrats have set a proposal in motion that if it doesn't pass in this Congress, it likely will in the next.

Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.

Eleanor Clift is a contributing editor for Newsweek. Follow her on Twitter.

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

Former Rep. Gabby Giffords and her husband Mark Kelley have released a new TV ad spurring Congress to act on gun control legislation. 'There are solutions we can agree on' to curb gun violence, Giffords says, 'even gun owners like us.'

For John Kael Weston and other men on the frontlines of Iraq and Afghanistan drone strikes raise many uncomfortable questions. He writes on why we need clearer policy and guidelines for these silent killers.

Rove's latest plan to return the GOP from the political wilds is infuriating base Republicans, writes Lloyd Green.

Clinton faces a grilling on the Benghazi attack when she testifies on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. Eli Lake reports.

George W. Bush's portraits and more paintings by world leaders (and dictators).


Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/02/17/minimum-wage_gambit_puts_gop_on_defensive_302186.html

willie nelson khloe kardashian Wreck It Ralph Hunter Hayes Movember USC shooting halloween

কোন মন্তব্য নেই:

একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন