Democratic senators shy away from Bernie Sanders’ $17 minimum wage increase

Gage Skidmore/Flickr

Several Democratic senators have signaled they do not support Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont’s proposal to raise the federal minimum wage to $17 within five years. Sanders announced the proposal on Thursday afternoon at the U.S. Capitol.

By Arjun Singh

Several Democratic senators have signaled they do not support Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont’s proposal to raise the federal minimum wage to $17 within five years.

Sanders announced the proposal on Thursday afternoon at the U.S. Capitol, stating that he would hold a markup for the bill on June 14 as Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) committee. At least three Democratic Senators, however, are unlikely to support the plan, which has been supported by progressive organizations and raises questions about whether the measure will pass the Senate, where Democrats have a majority.

“Just getting to $15 is a lot of work…We have a long way,” said Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania to The Hill. Casey, who last month announced that he would run for re-election to a fourth term in 2024, sits on the HELP committee and represents a swing state that has frequently influenced presidential elections and control of the Senate.

Other senior Democrats expressed hesitation on the bill. Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a close ally of President Joe Biden who occupies the seat he once held, has called for a more gradual process. “The most important thing we can do is pass an increase in the minimum wage that includes an escalator, so we don’t have this step function where we don’t raise it for 15 years and then we raise it by a lot,” he said.

Coons was one of eight Democratic Senators who voted with Republicans to oppose Sanders’ budget amendment in 2021 to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. The others include Democrats running for re-election in 2024, such as Sen. Jon Tester of Montana.

Their opposition comes as progressive organizations have pressed Democrats, who hold a Senate majority, to pass legislation raising the minimum wage, even though it is unlikely to pass the House with its Republican majority.

“[We] struggle to feed our kids and pay our bills. We demand higher pay…we need to raise the minimum wage across the board,” said Tara Thompson of the Union of Southern Service Workers, joining Sanders as he announced the proposal. “Even $15 isn’t enough for what we’re going through,” said Marmacookie Bradley, one of the union’s founders, adding that “the cost of living is getting higher every day.”

Sanders, who is credited with shifting the Democratic Party to the left over his two presidential campaigns in 2016 and 2020, is known to introduce new ideas lacking majority support in the party, in order to build consensus around them. In his remarks introducing the proposal, he said that wages below $17 were “starvation wages…unacceptable…a national disgrace,” noting that Congress had not acted to raise the minimum wage since 2007 when they set it at $7.25 per hour, and that “political consequences” would ensue if they didn’t.

However, while the federal minimum wage has not changed, many states have enacted laws raising the minimum wage for workers within their jurisdiction. The nation’s highest minimum wage is in the District of Columbia, at $16.10, per the Economic Policy Institute, and is set to increase to $17 in July.

Where the minimum wage has been raised, the measures have been met with strong opposition from business groups, such as in New York, where Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a law raising the state’s minimum wage to $17 for New York City and surrounding areas, and $16 upstate, over the next three years.

“Additional mandates to increase wages for the agriculture industry will put New York’s food security at risk, jeopardize our food supply chains and ripple throughout our rural economies across the state,” the coalition wrote on its website.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sanders, Coons, Casey and Tester, as well as Democratic Senate candidates Ruben Gallego and Colin Allred, have been contacted for a comment.

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Image courtesy of Gage Skidmore/Flickr

6 thoughts on “Democratic senators shy away from Bernie Sanders’ $17 minimum wage increase

  1. I didn’t hear burnie saying we should tax Millionaires to pay for it. That use to be his cry until he became one by living off the taxpayers dollar. If you want to have people have more usable cash just quit having the government raise the cost of living. The 1.7 trillion dollar infrastructure bill which raises cost for everyone (promoting greentrrd policy), the 100 billions worth of weapons left in A–stan, the 100 billion for a illegal war in Ukraine. Fix the government first burnardo then we can talk about razing the wages. A 7-15% inflation rate is unacceptable, and it’s your party’s fault.

  2. I didn’t hear Bernie saying we should tax Millionaires to pay for it. That use to be his cry until he became one by living off the taxpayers dollar. If you want to have people have more usable cash just quit having the government raise the cost of living. The 1.7 trillion dollar infrastructure bill which raises cost for everyone (promoting greentard policy), the 100 billions worth of weapons left in A–stan, the 100 billion for a illegal war in Ukraine. Fix the government first burnardo then we can talk about razing the wages. A 7-15% inflation rate is unacceptable, and it’s your party’s fault.

  3. Here’s Vermont’s barking buffoon at it again, with his same old rhetoric,
    hand out more money… a man that never ran any business, including a
    lemon aid stand………..

    All though Vermonts, Sanders states he’s an ” Independent “, we all know
    he’s a socialist democRAT, when will Vermont wake up, no time soon !!

    But they’ll feel the pain when all the taxpayers leave the state

    Sanders, what a disgrace for Vermont, a two-time Presidential looser that
    didn’t even try to fight t win………………… follow the money.

  4. If we could stop the Democrat party inflation Wars, national debt, onour once precious US $dollar,
    We could be rolling in REAL income , AND economic prosperity

  5. Demand all you want. Seventeen dollars isn’t worth much when you get nothing at all.

  6. We raised minimum wage at the state level so that people could have more money in their pockets and then inflation hit. So much for the raise. How about trying something different this time like addressing costs, something no one ever talks about.

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