GOV/MIL Conservative Sen. Josh Hawley wants to raise federal minimum wage

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Conservative Sen. Josh Hawley wants to raise federal minimum wage

By Caitlin Huey-Burns
June 10, 2025 / 6:03 AM EDT / CBS News

Missouri GOP Sen. Josh Hawley plans to introduce legislation Tuesday to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour — a position that aligns one of the most conservative Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill with some of the most liberal members of Congress.

The legislation, called the "Higher Wages for American Workers Act," would raise the federal standard starting in 2026 and would also call for an increase in subsequent years to match inflation, CBS News has exclusively learned. Vermont Democratic Sen. Peter Welch has signed on as a co-sponsor.

"For decades, working Americans have seen their wages flatline. One major culprit of this is the failure of the federal minimum wage to keep up with the economic reality facing hard-working Americans every day," Hawley said in a statement to CBS News. "This bipartisan legislation would ensure that workers across America benefit from higher wages."

"We're in the midst of a severe affordability crisis, with families in red and blue states alike struggling to afford necessities like housing and groceries," Welch said in a statement to CBS. "A stagnant federal minimum wage only adds fuel to the fire. Every hard-working American deserves a living wage that helps put a roof over their head and food on the table — $7.25 an hour doesn't even come close."

The federal minimum wage currently sits at $7.25 per hour and has not risen since 2009, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

The move by Hawley puts him at odds with conservative party orthodoxy, which has traditionally opposed a federal minimum wage increase on the grounds that it would be costly for businesses and ultimately, for consumers. But Hawley's pitch is reflective of the party's realignment in the Trump era, where the president's brand of populism has fueled a shift among working-class voters away from Democrats and towards Republicans.

Hawley has been pushing Republicans to embrace this shift. The minimum wage legislation is part of a broader, aspirational package of legislative proposals he dubbed the "Pro-Worker Framework for the 119th Congress." This includes a proposal to help strengthen protections for union jobs, as well as for organizing and collective bargaining.

Earlier this year, he teamed up with Sen. Bernie Sanders to introduce legislation to cap credit card interest rates at 10%. And in the last Congress, he introduced legislation that would require companies with revenues of $1 billion or more to pay their employees at least $15 per hour. In recent weeks, Hawley has been urging his party against cuts to Medicaid benefits in the budget reconciliation bill.

In November, voters in Hawley's home state of Missouri approved a ballot measure to raise the state's minimum wage to $15 per hour, starting in 2026. But the Legislature repealed part of the law that would allow later increases to adjust for inflation.

Earlier this year, President Trump rescinded a Biden-era executive order that raised the minimum wage for federal contractors to $17.75 per hour. At his Senate confirmation hearing in January, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he does not support raising the federal minimum wage, arguing that it is a decision best left up to the states.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Heaps and heaps of bullshit, while completely ignoring the root cause of falling affordability for "Every hard-working American."

The only reason Americans can't afford their groceries and every other aspect of life's necessities is inflation and the root cause of inflation is the government's/banker's constant creation of unbacked, fiat currency. A hundred years ago, one could easily live - and live well - on a-Dollar-a-day.

American politicians, conservative or leftist, studiously avoid placing blame where it belongs, much less attempt to fix any of it.

Best
Doc

PS: As I typed the above, I just happened to have a 1921 Silver Dollar on my desk. In 1921, that Silver Dollar would easily feed a family for a day and have change left over! How we have fallen.
 

energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
When NY State raised the minimum wage to $15.00 an hour, the tourist town I live in did this...

They had to cut the maintenance crew to 1 or 2 people with no over time and when money is tight, their hours are cut or someone is laid off. All town employees lost health care they were supplied as part of their employment. The town could no longer afford it. One hotel is shut down this year, the other hotel is now staffed by one desk clerk who has to do everything, including working on all three floors. House keeping no longer works by the hour. They get $7.50 to clean a room, no mater how long it takes. Gift shops, restaurants, etc are working with skeleton crews. The largest gift shop is now up for sale. You can only raise prices so far, before people stop coming because everything is to dam expensive. The next town over an order of ten chicken wings is now $17.99. and they also rely on tourism. Which is in decline as those with the money to vacation are heading to the less expensive places. The lakes barely have boats running around. No one is water skiing or swimming. It's been a complete disaster.

When the phone company came in last week to run new internet service, I talked to the guy who said their company is having a hard time dealing with the wage increases and he and his wife are just biding their time while she finishes her masters degree in a year, before they pack it up and head south to North Carolina.

All those people retired on fixed incomes will be impacted when they raise the federal minimum wages as the costs are passed on to consumers.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
energy_wave wrote: "All those people retired on fixed incomes will be impacted when they raise the federal minimum wages as the costs are passed on to consumers."

DW and I are extremely blessed. Both of us have very modest SS income, but decades ago - before we got together - we both independently made arrangements to fund our own retirements. Now (though it would pinch us a little bit) we could live independently of Social Security.

It will come as no surprise to those of you that follow me, that we did this with precious metals.

Best
Doc
 

Peachy

Contributing Member
Cui bono? I haven't carried a union card in many, many years. If I remember correctly, the Union contracts on wages are directly related to minimum wage.

Each state sets their own minimum wage, so this is unnecessary IMHO.
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
The velocity of the money already in the current system is a big enough problem that increasing the minimum wage will be like throwing fuel on an already out of control fire.

If he is trying to incentivize people going to work? Instead of raising the minimum wage, they need to lower entitlements and increase the penalties for hiring illegals.
 
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