Friday, October 10, 2014

Union boss paid $154 an hour pushes for minimum wage hike

10/10/2014


AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka is pushing for a $10.10 federal minimum wage as a show of union support for low-income workers, but Trumka is paid 15 times that amount.
Based on AFL-CIO’s annual report to the U.S. Department of Labor, the union coalition paid Trumka a gross salary of $272,250 plus $49,881 in other disbursements during its 2014 fiscal year ending June 30. Trumka’s total pay of $322,131 was the equivalent of a $154.87 hourly wage.
“Working people will turn out for candidates who support solutions that will make a difference in the real world – from raising the minimum wage to ensuring that all workers can bargain collectively and make a livable wage,” Trumka said in an Oct. 8 statement.
Trumka’s own thoroughly livable wage is paid for with money taken from workers in AFL-CIO member unions. Many of those unions, including American Federation of Teachers and American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees,take dues and mandatory fees from taxpayer-funded public employees.
AFL-CIO didn’t respond to a Watchdog.org request for comment on Trumka’s compensation.
On Twitter, Trumka expressed his support for a federal minimum wage hike using a hashtag popularized by President Obama’s Organizing for Action.
AFL-CIO has attempted to build momentum for the president’s $10.10 minimum wage campaign in the days leading up to 10/10, portraying the current $7.25 minimum wage as too little to support a family when working 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year.
In 2013, less than 5 percent of American workers and less than 3 percent of those over the age of 25 were paid minimum wage. Studies have shown minimum wage hikes reduce employment among young, unskilled workers.
Another theme of AFL-CIO’s minimum wage messaging has been “income inequality,” with AFL-CIO asserting in a recent ad, “all the income gains of the last 15 years went to the richest 10 percent of Americans.” According to the U.S. Census Bureau, this is a category that includes Richard Trumka, whose $272,250 gross salary alone put him well into the top 5 percent.
Trumka isn’t the only union boss to demand a higher minimum wage while taking more than 20 times the current $7.25 rate from American workers.
AFSCME describes a federal minimum wage hike as “a civil rights issue,” and AFSCME President Lee Saunders screamed for “solidarity” at a recent Ohio AFL-CIO convention. Saunders was paid $350,058, the equivalent of $168.30 per hour, during the union’s 2013 fiscal year.
AFT President Randi Weingarten recently celebrated expanded “living wage” mandates from far-left New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio, suggesting DeBlasio’s action was a model for the whole state.
Weingarten was paid $557,875, the equivalent of $268.21 per hour, during the teachers union’s 2014 fiscal year.
Not to be outdone, Service Employees International Union, whose 1.8 million public- and private-sector members are not affiliated with AFL-CIO, has called steeper government wage mandates “essential for advancing civil & human rights today.”
SEIU President Mary Kay Henry was paid $295,870 in 2013, or $142.25 per hour.
Jason Hart is a reporter for Watchdog.org and Ohio Watchdog. His work has appeared at Washington Examiner, RedState, The Federalist, Townhall, and elsewhere.


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