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Address: Congress Needs to Act on Minimum Wage
April 26, 2014
Hi, everybody. In my State of the Union Address, I talked
about pizza. More specifically, I talked
about a pizza chain in Minneapolis – Punch Pizza – whose owner, John Soranno,
made the business decision to give his employees a raise to ten bucks an hour.
A couple weeks ago, I got a
letter from a small business owner who watched that night. Yasmin Ibrahim is an immigrant who owns her
own restaurant – Desi Shack – and plans to open another this summer.
Here’s what she wrote. “I was moved by John Soranno’s story. It got me thinking about my … full-time
employees and their ability to survive on $8 an hour in New York City.” So a few weeks ago, Yasmin put in place a
plan to lift wages for her employees at both her restaurants to at least $10 an
hour by the end of this year.
But here’s the thing – Yasmin isn’t
just raising her employees’ wages because it’s the right thing to do. She’s doing it for the same reason John
Soranno did. It makes good business sense.
Yasmin wrote, “It will allow us
to attract and retain better talent – improving customer experience, reducing
employee churn and training costs. We
believe doing so makes good business sense while at the same time having a positive
impact on the community.”
Yasmin’s right. That’s why, two months ago, I issued an
Executive Order requiring workers on new federal contracts to be paid a fair
wage of at least ten dollars and ten cents an hour.
But in order to make a difference
for every American, Congress needs to do something. And America knows it. Right now, there’s a bill that would boost
America’s minimum wage to ten dollars and ten cents an hour. That would lift wages for nearly 28 million
Americans across the country. 28
million. And we’re not just talking
about young people on their first job.
The average minimum wage worker is 35 years old. They work hard, often in physically demanding
jobs.
And while not all of us always
see eye to eye politically, one thing we overwhelmingly agree on is that nobody
who works full-time should ever have to live in poverty. That’s why nearly three in four Americans
support raising the minimum wage. The
problem is, Republicans in Congress don’t support raising the minimum
wage. Some even want to get rid of it
entirely. In Oklahoma, for example, the
Republican governor just signed a law prohibiting cities from establishing
their own minimum wage.
That’s why this fight is so
important. That’s why people like John
and Yasmin are giving their workers a raise.
That’s why several states, counties, and cities are going around
Congress to raise their workers’ wages.
That’s why I’ll keep up this fight.
Because we know that our economy works best when it works for all of us
– not just a fortunate few. We believe
we do better when everyone who works hard has a chance to get ahead. That’s what opportunity is all about.
And if you agree with us, we
could use your help. Republicans have
voted more than 50 times to undermine or repeal health care for millions of
Americans. They should vote at least
once to raise the minimum wage for millions of working families. If a Republican in Congress represents you,
tell him or her it’s time to give the politics a rest for a while and do
something to help working Americans. It’s
time for “ten-ten.” It’s time to give
America a raise.
Thanks, and have a great weekend. |