Senate minimum wage battle could play out in midterm elections
Joe Biden's effort to raise the federal minimum to $15 fell at the first hurdle in the upper chamber but the popular issue could sway votes in 2022
Sara Fearrington, a North Carolina waitress, joined the Fight for $15 campaign two years ago. A server at a Durham Waffle House, her take-home pay fluctuates between $350 and $450 a week, leaving her struggling to pay bills every month. She voted for Joe Biden, who had pledged to increase the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. It was the first time Fearrington, who is 44, had ever voted in a presidential election.
It would mean everything. It would create stability for my household," she said of the impact that a higher wage could have on her and her family of five, which includes her husband, who suffers from a rare lung condition, and a granddaughter who has asthma.
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