That title is not a joke. Bob Geiger, who might be the best Senate reporter in the blogosphere,
once again has the story:
Senator Wayne Allard (R-CO), evidently convinced that he was beating a dead horse by continuing his quest to ban flag-burning and discriminate against gay people, announced this month that he would not seek reelection in 2008 and the thought of having so little time left to screw the working poor from a comfy U.S. Senate seat must have just been eating him alive.
Allard, who has voted against a minimum wage increase more often than Fox News smears Barack Obama, went for broke this week and introduced a bill that would have eliminated the Federal Minimum Wage entirely and left the wage rate for the lowest-paid workers to each state.(...)
"In its current form, the bill attempts to blindly blanket the Nation with a new Federal minimum wage without regard to unique economic conditions of each individual State," said Allard in fighting the proposed $2.10 increase in the federal minimum wage. "Less Government intervention, at all levels, enables the private sector to attract, recruit, and retain the best possible employees and reward increased productivity and responsibility with higher compensation."(...)
Fortunately, saner heads prevailed and Allard's disgusting legislation was killed, but with 28 Republican Senators voting in favor of no federal oversight of the lowest wage an American worker can be paid.
Clearly, with only 28 of 49 Republicans voting for this bill, the reason Republicans did not try and pass this legislation during their time in the majority was because they did not have the votes. Forget that it is insane, 19th century, political suicide--that didn't stop them most of the time. It it is enlightening to look at
the Senators who did vote to abolish the federal minimum wage, including Cornyn, McCain, Hagel and Sununu. Does Cornyn think that he is invincible in Texas in 2008, despite
his 44% approval rating? Does Sununu even plan on running for re-election in New Hampshire? Does anyone still think McCain is a moderate? This is the sort of vote that is even less popular than escalation. Also, can we please tone down the Hagel worship in the blogosphere?
Yikes. Maybe they were all scared by Hugh Hewitt's latest pledge to not support any Republican who refused to defend the divine right of the Hapsburg crown against unruly Serbian nationalists.
The AFL-CIO blog also has coverage of this latest episode of extremist, Republican wingnuttery.