"I say to Senator
McConnell: Stop worrying about your billionaire friends, they're doing just
fine. Start worrying about the working families of your state and around this
country."
Hours after rallying
with striking AT&T workers in Louisville, Kentucky, Sen. Bernie
Sanders on Sunday used his visit to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's
home state to blast the Republican for refusing to allow a vote on legislation
to raise the minimum wage and turning his back on laid off coal miners protesting
over lack of pay.
"I say to Senator
McConnell: Stop worrying about your billionaire friends, they're doing just
fine," said Sanders, a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate. "Start
worrying about the working families of your state and around this country who
are struggling to keep their heads above water."
As Common Dreams reported last
month, the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives passed legislation that
would raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025, but McConnell
signaled he would not even allow the bill to reach the Senate floor for a vote.
Noting that 10 out of the 25
poorest counties in the United States are located in Kentucky, Sanders said
McConnell doesn't "have the right to prevent debate and votes on the most
important issues facing the working people of this country."
"Workers in Kentucky and
America cannot get by on $9 or $10 an hour," said the Vermont senator. "They
need a living wage. If you would like to explain to over half a million workers
in Kentucky who are making less than $15 an hour why they do not deserve a
living wage, that is your prerogative."
"Stop your
cowardice," added Sanders, "have the guts to debate the issues."
Sanders' rally comes as laid
off coal
miners have been blocking train tracks in Cumberland, Kentucky for
over three weeks to protest Blackjewel's refusal to pay them after the company
went bankrupt last month.
Additionally, a group of
retired Kentucky coal miners suffering from black lung traveled to Washington,
D.C. last month to meet with McConnell and demand action on legislation to fund
their medical care. As Common Dreams reported,
the coal miners said McConnell was "rude" during their meeting and
brushed off their concerns.
"Coal miners are not my
enemy," Sanders said Sunday, detailing the comprehensive
Green New Deal proposal his campaign released last week. "Workers
in the fossil fuel industry are not my enemy. Climate change is our
enemy."
No comments:
Post a Comment