The New Republic Daily
Report
06/27/12
Bare
Minimum: Mitt Romney Abandons His Other Good Idea Timothy
Noah
I long ago gave up trying to figure out who the “real”
Mitt Romney is, but among the various claimants to that title is a guy who would
like to index the minimum wage to inflation. I like this Mitt, because raising
the minimum wage would provide a useful jolt of stimulus right now to the
faltering recovery, and indexing it to inflation would keep us from waiting too
long before we raised it again.
“The minimum wage is important to our economy,” Romney’s campaign literature
said in 2002 when he ran for Massachusetts governor, “and Mitt Romney supports
minimum wage increases, at least in line with inflation” (italics mine).
This past January, while campaigning in New Hampshire, Romney said, “My view has
been to allow the minimum wage to rise with the [Consumer Price Index] or with
another index, so that it adjusts automatically over time.” Although Romney no
longer seemed to contemplate minimum-wage increases in excess of the
inflation rate, he still backed automatic increases tied to inflation. For
Romney to maintain—over ten years!—such consistency on a topic as controversial
as the minimum wage was unusual, to say the least.
It couldn’t last, and it didn’t. Newt Gingrich, the Club For Growth, and
The Wall Street Journal editorial page all hammered Romney for
reiterating his former position, saying it would kill jobs. By March, Romney was
telling CNBC’s Larry Kudlow that, when the Democratic Massachusetts legislature
had tried to increase the state minimum wage, he’d vetoed it. (He didn’t mention
that he’d tried to substitute a smaller increase or that his veto was
subsequently overridden.) Romney also told Kudlow that “right now there’s
probably not a need to raise the minimum wage.”
The press interpreted this as a flip-flop, which wasn’t quite right. It was a
neutering. Romney said he still believed that the minimum wage ought to be
indexed. But he noted that inflation hadn’t risen very much since 2009, the last
time the minimum wage had been raised (to $7.25). And since even that small
inflation increase would today justify raising the minimum wage (to $7.77),
Romney tweaked his indexing formula, too. He said he would adjust the minimum
wage based on inflation plus “the jobs level throughout the country,
unemployment rate, [and] competitive rates in other states, or, in this case,
other nations.” Anyone who couldn’t use these additional variables to squelch
any proposed minimum-wage increase just wasn’t trying.
Continue
Reading "Bare Minimum"
An
Auspicious Model for the Supreme Court's Swing Voters on Obamacare
Jeffrey Rosen
The
Muslim Brotherhood Won An Election. But Is It Really Democratic?
Eric Trager