The
New Business Wage Boosters
By
Shawn Zeller
Congressional Quarterly Weekly, 11/17/06
Is
the business community -- so long aligned with
the Republicans -- already warming to the new
Democratic majority's agenda?
At
least one liberal advocacy group, Let Justice
Roll, thinks so. The group is a coalition of social
service, religious and left-leaning advocacy groups
that has been lobbying for increases in state
and federal minimum wages. Just before the midterm
election, its leaders announced their recruitment
of a number of business advocates -- a key reason,
they contend, why voters on Nov. 7 approved all
six state ballot initiatives to raise the wage
above the federal floor, in Arizona, Colorado,
Missouri, Montana, Nevada and Ohio.
In
each state, "We had local business leaders
saying that they didn't want to be used as poster
children" for opposition to raising the wage,
says group spokeswoman Betsy Leondar-Wright.
Among
the business leaders speaking out, she says, were
Eileen Fisher, chief creative officer of the eponymous
high-end women's fashion house; Arnold Hiatt,
the former CEO of shoe seller Stride Rite; and
Adnan Durrani, a Cincinnati venture capitalist.
Hiatt
says the wage boost will create "a stable
workforce and strong economy." Durrani says
it will increase "productivity, job satisfaction
and especially brand loyalty."
Leondar-Wright
says the group plans to mobilize the business
arm of its coalition anew when Congress returns
under its new leadership and begins work on the
federal minimum wage boost the Democrats have
promised.
At
that point, though, they'll face concerted opposition
from some of Washington's most powerful business
groups, including the National Restaurant Association
and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
But
Leondar-Wright contends there's a growing rift
on the issue: Smaller and privately owned businesses
are parting company with Washington trade-group
leaders and major public corporations. In fact,
she says, the wage-boosting smaller companies
"are outraged at being used as spokespeople
for the other side."
Source:
CQ Weekly: The definitive source for news about
Congress.
Copyright © 2006 Congressional Quarterly
Inc.
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