Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Where Presidential Candidates Stand on Equal Pay
Where Presidential Candidates Stand on Equal Pay Women earn about 79 cents for every dollar men earn, according to Census data. And while the Obama administration has attempted to push forward legislation like the Paycheck Fairness Act to address pay inequality, many believe action on this issue will fall to the next president. On Equal Pay Day, letâs take a look at where the current crop of presidential candidates stand on the issue of equal pay for women, from most to least supportive. Hillary Clinton Clinton has long been a proponent of gender equality, including sponsoring the Paycheck Fairness Act during her time as a senator. She also cosponsored the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009, which made it harder for employers to discriminate based on gender, race, age or disability. During a roundtable on equal pay Tuesday, Clinton again called for the passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act, as well as paid family leave and minimum wage increases. âThe failure to ensure equal pay for women also impacts families and the broader economy,â Clinton said on Tuesday, adding that she expects pay inequality to become an increasingly important political and economic issue. âSome say this is just a problem for women, that men donât have to worry about it,â Clinton said. âBut thatâs just wrong.â Bernie Sanders Sanders also a supports the Paycheck Fairness Act, as well as advocating for pay equality on behalf of women and minorities. On Tuesday, he reiterated that the pay disparity is worse for women of color, who face a âpay gulf, not a gap,â the Vermont senator tweeted. Why is it that women are going to work and earning 79 cents on the dollar compared to men? Shameful. We need pay equity. #EqualPayDay â" Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) April 12, 2016 //platform.twitter.com/widgets.js Ted Cruz Cruz has acknowledged that women face hurdles in the workforce, noting heâs seen first hand some of the struggles single mothers in particular face. Within the Texas senatorâs family, his sister, aunts, and his own mother for a time have been single mothers. But Cruzâs political backing of legislation to help these women has been spotty. While he didnât cast a vote against the Paycheck Fairness Act in April 2014, he has said in the past the issue is âpolitical showboatingâ and eventually voted with his party to block the bill later that year. Donald Trump The New York businessman has flip-flopped on the issue of equal pay. Trump said last August that men and women deserve âequal pay for equal work,â but just a few months later, he dismissed the idea of a gender pay gap. âYouâre gonna make the same if you do as good a job,â Trump told an audience member during a Manchester, N.H. event in October. Perhaps more telling, a former staffer sued Trump in January for gender discrimination, claiming the Republican presidential candidateâs campaign paid male staffers more women in the same role. John Kasich For the Ohio governor, the current wage gap comes down to experience. In comments last October, Kasich made his most comprehensive statement on equal pay during this election cycle, saying much of the disparity came down to differing skill sets. âWell, a lot of it is based on experience,â Kasich said. âA lot of different factors go into it. Itâs all tied up in skills. Do you not have the skills to be able to compete?â Additionally, a 2014 Dayton newspaper investigation found that women working in Kasichâs office earned almost $10 an hour less than the men.
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