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Minnesota

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think

(11,641 posts)
Tue Dec 27, 2016, 11:26 AM Dec 2016

Minnesota GOP fights for the working man by... killing the $15 minimum wage? [View all]

Minnesota GOP fights for the working man by... killing the $15 minimum wage?

Tuesday, December 27, 2016 by Pete Kotz in News

Though Republicans' strong showing in the November elections can't be pinned to a single issue, one prevailing theme was the rural white man's thirsting support for the GOP.

Broke and left behind by the modern economy -- and perhaps a tad butt-hurt by the Democrats' fetish for identity politics -- white men in Minnesota's countryside went overwhelmingly Republican, allowing the GOP to capture both houses of the state legislature.

Now those same voters will be repaid for their support by... having their wages capped.

Minneapolis and St. Paul are both considering upping their minimum wages to $15 an hour. The idea is to help the poor better afford a basic standard of living. It also pumps more loot directly into the local economy – poor people can’t afford to save – instead of beaming it to a hedge fund manager who will park it in Panama.

But Rep. Pat Garofalo (R-Farmington) hopes to abort the idea before birth.

Garofalo wants to ban cities from raising minimums on their own, forcing any change to be made on a statewide basis.

Read more:
http://www.citypages.com/news/minnesota-gop-fights-for-the-working-man-by-killing-the-15-minimum-wage/408341685


About City Pages:

About Us

Minneapolis and St. Paul are known for their cold weather and their voracious readership. The Twin Cities perennially finish first in nationwide surveys of literacy, making the community perfect for an alternative weekly like City Pages. Founded in August 1979 as Sweet Potato, a monthly newspaper that covered the local music scene, the publication went weekly in December 1981 and took on its new name. Minnesota has produced a wealth of musical acts -- from the Replacements to Soul Asylum to Prince -- and CP has been there to record every note, often in idiosyncratic ways, such as the paper's "Rock Atlas," which won an AAN Award for Innovation in 2008...

More information:
http://www.citypages.com/about


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