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Scuba

(53,475 posts)
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 03:27 PM Nov 2014

Fat on Restaurant Cash, Democratic Lawmakers Float Minimum Wage Preemption in IL

http://www.prwatch.org/news/2014/11/12677/il-lawmakers-float-minimum-wage-preemption-bill

Democratic state legislators in Illinois are mulling an effort to thwart Chicago's effort to raise its minimum wage, even as they raise the state wage above the national average. And the state National Restaurant Association affiliate is eating it up. Efforts to "preempt" local governments from enacting a higher minimum wage is most closely associated with the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which counts the National Restaurant Association among its members and has long pushed bills like the “Living Wage Preemption Act." At ALEC's meeting next month in Washington D.C., "Minimum Wage Preemption Policies" will be at the top of the agenda.

The Illinois preemption measure comes amidst an effort by legislative Democrats to raise the wage in the lame duck session. On election day, Illinois voters overwhelmingly supported an advisory referendum calling for the legislature to raise the state's minimum wage to $10.65 per hour -- even as voters also elected a new governor, Republican Bruce Rauner, who has called for lowering or eliminating the minimum wage altogether. The GOP governor-elect said he would only sign a minimum wage bill if the legislature agreed to corporate-friendly measures like tort reform and overhauling the workers compensation program.

House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton, both Democrats, signaled they would push for passage of the minimum wage increase that voters demanded before Rauner took office in January -- yet also said they are gauging support for a preemption measure that would block cities from enacting their own higher wage. This would shut down an effort in Chicago to raise the minimum wage to between $13 and $15 per hour. Chicago has been the site of some of the biggest "Fight for $15" fast food protests in the country, with over 50 people arrested during the most recent protests in September.

...

One group that is likely celebrating the preemption proposal is the Illinois Restaurant Association, the state chapter of the powerful National Restaurant Association (sometimes referred to as "the Other NRA&quot . NRA affiliates around the country have been key in thwarting minimum wage and paid sick day efforts through preemption measures, as the Center for Media and Democracy has documented.
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Fat on Restaurant Cash, Democratic Lawmakers Float Minimum Wage Preemption in IL (Original Post) Scuba Nov 2014 OP
Damn it! These folks elect a repuke Governor upaloopa Nov 2014 #1
But we re-elected super majorities of Dems in both houses of the legislature. ColesCountyDem Nov 2014 #2
And a Governor with a veto pen upaloopa Nov 2014 #3
Not to be trite, but it's complicated. ColesCountyDem Nov 2014 #4

upaloopa

(11,417 posts)
1. Damn it! These folks elect a repuke Governor
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 03:32 PM
Nov 2014

and vote to increase the minimum wage! Are their collective heads up their asses?
They get the government they elect!

ColesCountyDem

(6,943 posts)
2. But we re-elected super majorities of Dems in both houses of the legislature.
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 07:00 PM
Nov 2014

It was a complicated election, for lots of reasons.

ColesCountyDem

(6,943 posts)
4. Not to be trite, but it's complicated.
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 09:51 PM
Nov 2014

The first problem was that Democrats didn't turn out. The second is that the state is a financial basket case-- not Gov. Quinn's fault (he inherited the mess from Blagojevich and Ryan)-- and Gov. Quinn had made very little substantive progress in getting the state's finances whipped into shape. The third problem was, for want of a better expression, "Quinn fatigue".

That said, Gov.-elect Rauner's veto pen isn't going to be worth much, because Democrats can override any veto easily, should they decide to do so.

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