As
if the low-wage workers of America
aren�t having a hard enough time making ends meet, Rep.
Michelle Bachmann has now said that she would favor doing
away with the minimum wage, if it would help to eliminate
the nation�s economic troubles.
Minimum
wage workers and all low-wage workers are at the bottom
of the heap now. They are the most expendable and are usually
the first to go in a downturn. Usually, they have no benefits
and they can forget a pension or living decently in retirement.
Why
would anyone target them to give up even more? Rep. Bachmann,
R-Minn., is so far removed from reality, she apparently
thinks that $7.25 is enough to support a family, and that
punishing them with lower wages is a way to help boost the
economy. Just the opposite is true, since every penny they
make is put back into the economy, right away, and it�s
usually the local economy that benefits.
She
suggested eliminating the minimum wage last weekend, at
the same time also suggesting that the corporate tax rate
be reduced. Bachmann is in a virtual tie with Mitt Romney,
the former Massachusetts
governor, in recent polling for the GOP presidential nomination.
Bachmann
is not alone. She has been emboldened by others in her parties
(Republican and Tea), who have taken draconian steps to
reduce pay, benefits, and pensions of workers. For now,
they have settled for attacking public workers and their
unions, but the rest will soon be under the gun. This is
being done at a time when the unemployment rate has inched
back up to 9.1 percent. It�s 40 percent in the black community,
and the children of that community are not finding jobs
for the summer, so their unemployment rate is 20 or 30 percent
higher than that of their parents. So far, this is not a
campaign issue of great importance.
On
the Indian reservations, unemployment is astronomical and
poverty on those often-sparse lands is a deadly condition.
On
the Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota Indian Reservation, one of
the economically poorest communities in the United States, unemployment is at 80 percent, according
to the group from Warren Wilson College (North
Carolina) that made its third trip to Pine Ridge earlier
this year to work and assist the people of the reservation.
This is not an issue that comes up often among candidates
of either party.
Compared
to those who live in inner cities and on Indian reservations,
workers who still have jobs are well off, but Republicans
and many Democrats are hard at work to see that they have
less expendable income.
Just
this past week, the New Jersey Assembly passed a bill that
will make government workers pay more of their pension and
health care costs. The plan of Republican Governor Chris
Christie to make public workers pay far more than their
share of the burden of balancing the budget is coming to
pass. Christie, along with other Republican governors, are
loathe to close tax loopholes for Corporate America and
the rich and to raise taxes on those who can afford to pay
a little more in taxes.
They
aren�t all Republicans. Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat,
threatened the public worker unions in New
York with the layoffs of nearly 10,000 workers if they did
not grant the concessions that he was seeking in their pay,
benefits, retirement, and working conditions. The largest
of the unions has reached a tentative agreement with the
governor and has accepted non-paid furlough days in each
of two years. He also has refused to consider raising the
taxes on corporations and the rich and closing tax loopholes
that cost government at every level billions of dollars
each year.
The
list goes on. State after state is going after the government
workers. In many states and in many of the nation�s largest
cities, workers in those cities are people of color and
their unions are of utmost importance to them. Their unions
have been the change factor in their lives and their union
contracts have provided enough income for them to send their
children to college and to put enough away for retirement,
not to mention provided health benefits that allowed them
to seek regular care and remain healthy.
Because
public workers have these benefits, along with decent pay,
other workers, especially in the private sector, have fallen
prey to the repeated attacks of Corporate America and their
minions in the Republican Party and Tea Party. Because of
those propaganda attacks, fellow workers are demanding that
public workers be denied decent pay, health benefits, pensions,
and, even their very jobs.
The
forced concessions in New Jersey were supported by a significant number
of Democrats, who have been frightened into supporting a
right wing Republican agenda, which has been pushed by the
fringes of their own party. Rep.
Bachmann, the head of the Tea Party Caucus in the House
of Representatives, has been one of the most vociferous
members of congress in calling for the elimination of social
programs of the federal government, as well as those of
state and local governments.
Since
she announced a few days ago that she would seek the nomination
of the Republican Party for president of the U.S.,
she hasn�t skipped a beat. She has, like so many Tea Party
types before her, only offered the sketchiest of plans to
solve the problems of the nation. In fact, her plans appear
to be non-existent. In that, she is not too far behind the
rest of the GOP�s field of presidential hopefuls.
Bachmann
has become a celebrity of sorts for her gaffes and mistakes,
which reporters are counting up on a regular basis. For
example, she claimed on national television that the health
care program known as �Obamacare� would cost 800,000 jobs
and cited the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) as the source
of her information. The CBO did not say that, but only said
that the health care plan would have a small impact on jobs.
She
claimed that President Obama is responsible for a sharp
increase in the number of government �limousines,� but the
increase was ordered before Obama�s time. She also has obscured,
if not lied, about receiving government farm subsidies.
According to FactCheck.org, she claimed that she never received
�a penny� of farm subsidies, but she reported the subsidy
payments on her income tax returns in 2006, 2008, and 2009.
Her version of the founding fathers� opposition to slavery
was wrong, even citing one of the early politicians who
was not a �founding father.� Her list goes on and can only
become longer, as her campaign for the GOP nomination continues.
Surely,
though, her assault on the minimum wage, the last thread
keeping many workers from falling into the abyss, displays
among the worst and most callous (so far) attitudes toward
those who are unfortunate enough to have to work at that
rate of pay.
It�s
hard to imagine that in a country that was once a beacon
to the rest of the world that a person of such incredibly
modest intellect as Ms. Bachmann could seriously think she
is capable of running a state, let alone a country as complex
as the U.S.A. Yet, there she is,
and the scary part is that what passes for a free press
is beginning to pay attention to what she says, no matter
how wacky. The press has gone into its horse-race mode and,
as usual, is not capable of paying attention to the issues.
It�s as if there are no issues.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former
union organizer. His union work started when he became a
local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in New York State. In
addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous pressure
from factory food producers and land developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello. |