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Can The American Worker/Middleclass survive a Republican Congress #p2 #tcot #teaparty

The Republicans have not yet won the election yet they are already articulating their policies. I am unable to fathom that they are attempting to sell the repeal of the minimum wage when all charts show the income of the bottom 95% or so have fallen 5% while for the wealthy it has continuously increased.

From tax policies that support corporations that outsource, to their disdain for labor unions, to the minimum wage, Republicans seem to display a disdain for the American worker and middleclass. It is imperative that Americans see the difference.

Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats believe the worker is nothing but a commoditized unit of labor. Liberal and Progressive Democrats believe the worker should be represented by unions or equitable government regulations just as corporations are represented by the Chamber of Commerce and a multitude of other organizations whose sole purpose is to maximize corporate profits at all cost.

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GOP Walking ‘Into The Snakepit Of Minimum Wage’: DSCC Spokesman

First Posted: 10- 4-10 01:42 PM   |   Updated: 10- 4-10 01:42 PM

In some corners of the Democratic Party, there is genuine enthusiasm at the prospect of rolling into the November elections with a sequence of votes that could expose Republicans to charges of siding with the wealthy and being indifferent to the plight of small businesses and the poor. A bill to help the latter (small businesses) with a series of tax incentives passed through Congress — with minimal GOP support — shortly after the August recess. But a vote on the Bush tax cuts — which would have cast the GOP as protectors of upper-level income — never materialized. With it went the opportunity to crystallize a major election theme, party strategists fretted.

Now, however, a series of statements from Republican Senate candidates has handed Democrats an opportunity similar to the one they just punted. Late last week, Connecticut Senate candidate Linda McMahon was quoted as saying, in vague terms, that she’d be open to the idea of adjusting the federal minimum wage laws. That was followed on Monday with a much more declarative statement from Alaska Republican Joe Miller, who called the minimum wage laws outside the constitutional purview of Congress. And as the website Hotline pointed out, businessman John Raese, who is running for the Senate in West Virginia, "has been most adamant in opposing the minimum wage" while in Washington, Republican Dino Rossi "has a checkered history on the minimum wage."

Taken individually, the comments are ample kindling for Democratic candidates to light up in their campaigns. On a broader level, the party has a closing pitch to make.

"Joe Miller followed Linda McMahon into the snakepit of minimum wage," said Eric Schultz, communications director for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. "Last week, Republicans in Washington tried to stop the outsourcing of American jobs. This week Republicans seem intent on getting rid of the minimum wage. What exactly do Republicans have against America workers?"

In an economic climate where unemployment is rampant and underemployment is equally prevalent, calling for adjustments to minimum wage levels would seem like a political third rail — though the conservative counter-argument is that businesses would hire more if they could pay less. But the larger effect of this meme may be more about organizing Democrats than exposing potential weaknesses among Republicans.

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GOP Walking ‘Into The Snakepit Of Minimum Wage’: DSCC Spokesman

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