Faith in Public Life: People of Faith Support Minimum
Wage Raise Majorities of all religious groups favor increasing the minimum wage from $ 7.25 an hour to $ 10.00 an hour, including black Protestants (87 %), Catholics (73 %), Americans who are religiously unaffiliated (68 %), white mainline Protestants (61 %) and white evangelical Protestants (61 %).
Not exact matches
The association conducted a survey ahead of Ontario's minimum
wage raise implementation and the vast
majority of respondents said they planned to increase prices in some way.
▪ Show me the money: The
majority of Miami entrepreneurs said they provide
wage increases and promotions, with most
raises given on an unscheduled basis (52 percent) driven by either employee performance or positive business growth.
A
majority of voters polled, by a margin of 62 percent to 34 percent, oppose
raising the minimum
wage for fast - food workers to $ 15.
Raising the minimum
wage, helping small businesses, and strengthening workers» rights are all backed by a
majority of the public when they don't know these policies are Labour's.
According to a ComRes poll, for example, a clear
majority of public supports
raising the minimum
wage and increasing the top rate of tax to 50p from 45p — two key Labour pledges.
For Cuomo, a united Democratic Senate
majority is a nightmare scenario: a centrist at heart, he belittled
raising the minimum
wage before it came back into vogue, ridiculed the idea of hiking taxes on wealthy people, and still won't comply with a ten - year - old court ruling to fork over state cash to underfunded city public schools.
We're not only giving minimum
wage workers the
raise they deserve — we're putting real dollars back into the pockets of families who really need it,» said Senate
Majority Coalition Co-Leader Jeffrey Klein in a statement.
In fact the Deputy
Majority Leader, Senator John DeFrancisco, appeared to take a shot at the governor when he spoke against
raising the minimum
wage on the Senate floor.
«I don't think the IDC played a definitive role in any of that,» Lipton said, «and I think a progressive
majority in the state Senate could have gotten much better
raise the age legislation passed, could have gotten a much stronger minimum
wage bill, not to mention all the stuff that's left undone.»
Though there remains an upstate / downstate divide among Senate Republicans, particularly when it comes to
raising the minimum
wage, GOP
Majority Leader John Flanagan's leadership position is not in jeopardy, according to his deputy, Sen. John DeFrancisco.
With about three weeks to sew up New York's budget, typically unified Senate Republican
majority appears divided on how to respond to Gov. Andrew Cuomo's push to
raise the minimum
wage.
The
majority of New Yorkers who support a minimum
wage hike want it to be
raised at least $ 10 an hour so workers don't have to flood food pantries looking for food to feed their families.
At 7:11 a.m. Friday, Sen. John DeFrancisco, the deputy
majority leader from Syracuse, was the last senator to stand up on the Senate floor to discuss the bill that provides $ 24.8 billion in funding for schools and also
raises the minimum
wage.
Republican Senate
Majority Leader John Flanagan is close to a «Faustian pact» with Democratic Gov. Cuomo to
raise the state's minimum
wage to a national high of $ 15 an hour — boosting union power and possibly costing New York hundreds of thousands of jobs, The Post has learned.
DeFrancisco, the Senate's pugnacious deputy
majority leader from Syracuse, has been one of the more vocal critics of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's drive to gradually
raise the minimum
wage from $ 9 to $ 15.
«I believe that if we ban outside income from active employment for elected officials and pay them a livable
wage to
raise their families, it will go a long way to cure the temptation of a few to engage in this type of bad behavior,» said Bonacic, a veteran in the Senate's Republican
majority.
ALBANY, NY (02/14/2013)(readMedia)-- Last year, Speaker Silver and the Assembly
Majority led the way by introducing and passing legislation to
raise the minimum
wage and provide for indexation.
In a statement, Republican Senate
Majority Leader John Flanagan said
raising the minimum
wage to such a degree could lead to «unintended consequences such as severe job losses and negatively impact many businesses who are already struggling just to keep their heads above water.»
When Cuomo was running for re-election in 2014 and seeking the endorsement of the labor - backed Working Families Party, the governor committed to aiding Senate Democrats, who favor
raising the minimum
wage, in their campaign to win the
majority.
Cuomo faces opposition on
raising the minimum
wage from the Senate's Republican
majority, which argues that the jump from the current $ 9
wage, which was effective Jan. 1, to $ 15 will result in job losses and worsen New York's image as bad for business operators.
But Senate
Majority Leader Dean Skelos (R - Nassau County) said Wednesday he has no interest in
raising the minimum
wage.
The Assembly's Democratic
majority has long supported
raising the minimum
wage.