Ref: Obama turut berjuang untuk kenaikan upah buruh minimum per jam. Bila 
dibandingan  dengan di NKRI, mereka yang berpangkat presiden yang dipilih oleh 
rakyat tidak pernah omong kenaikan gaji buruh, karena mereka tidak ambil pusing 
dengan kebutuhan hidup kaum pekerja. Kalau dilihat dengan kenaikan gaji yang 
diusulkan oleh Obama, ap serang buruh USA bekerja 11 jam seperti buruh di NKRI 
harus membanting tulang satu bulan.

http://www.theage.com.au/world/obama-seeks-to-raise-minimum-wage-to-9-an-hour-20130213-2ecpb.html

Obama seeks to raise minimum wage to $9 an hour
  Date  February 13, 2013 - 3:40PM 
  a.. 

 
Job done ... US President Barack OBama greets members of Congress after his 
State of the Union speech. Photo: Getty Images

Washington: President Barack Obama, seeking to put the prosperity and promise 
of the middle class at the heart of his second-term agenda, called on Congress 
to raise the federal minimum wage to $9 an hour, saying that would lift 
millions out of poverty and energise the economy.

In a State of the Union address that fleshed out the populist themes of his 
inauguration speech last month, Obama declared it was "our generation's task" 
to "reignite the true engine of America's economic growth — a rising, thriving 
middle class."

"A growing economy that creates good middle-class jobs — that must be our North 
Star," he said. "Every day, we should ask ourselves three questions as a 
nation: How do we attract more jobs to our shores? How do we equip our people 
with the skills to do those jobs? And how do we make sure that hard work leads 
to a decent living?"

 
State of the Union speech ... US President Barack Obama. Photo: Reuters

The increase in the minimum wage — from its current $7.25 an hour — was the 
most tangible of a raft of initiatives laid out by the President, from 
education to energy, which Obama said would accelerate the nation's economic 
recovery by helping those in the broad middle class.

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Raising the minimum wage, which the White House said would affect at least 15 
million workers, also holds political appeal for the younger Americans, 
struggling workers and labour groups, all of which were important to Obama's 
re-election victory.

Speaking to a divided Congress, with many Republicans still smarting from his 
electoral victory last November, Obama declared, "Together, we have cleared 
away the rubble of crisis, and say with renewed confidence that the state of 
our union is stronger."

He urged lawmakers to act on immigration, climate change, the nation's fiscal 
woes, and above all, gun violence, offering an emotional appeal that drew 
heavily on recent tragedies like the mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. If 
they do not move, he said, he will use his executive authority to enact his own 
measures.

Obama also spoke darkly of the consequences of a failure to reach a budget 
deal, which would set off automatic spending cuts on the military and other 
government programs.

"These sudden, harsh, arbitrary cuts would jeopardise our military readiness," 
he said, describing them as a "really bad idea."

Obama took the podium after a rousing welcome from lawmakers and other 
dignitaries. But millions of US TV viewers, not to mention people glancing at 
their phones inside the chamber, were distracted by a manhunt unfolding across 
the country, where police in the San Bernardino Mountains of California were 
tracking Christopher J. Dorner, a suspect in the killing of several officers. 
News coverage concentrated on the search almost up to the point the President 
entered the chamber.

Republicans rejected Obama's activism, saying it would inevitably translate 
into higher taxes and an overweening government role, strangling growth and 
deepening the nation's fiscal hole.

But in selecting Sen. Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American from Florida, to deliver 
their party's official rebuttal, Republicans implicitly acknowledged the damage 
they had suffered at the polls from their hard line stance on immigration. 
Rubio, one of the party's rising stars, favours overhauling immigration laws.

In a speech dominated by domestic issues, Obama admonished North Korea a day 
after it tested a nuclear weapon, rattling its Pacific Rim neighbors. He warned 
the country's reclusive government that it faced further isolation, swift 
retaliation, and a United States bent on improving its own missile defence 
systems.

But as new threats erupted, old threats, Obama said, were receding. He 
announced, for example, that 34,000 troops would return home from Afghanistan 
by this time next year. That withdrawal, representing half the current US 
force, underlined his resolve to wind down the second war of his presidency as 
quickly as he did the one in Iraq.

Obama was not trying to match the lofty tone of his inauguration speech, but 
the address was clearly intended to be its workmanlike companion. In place of 
his ringing call for a more equitable society was a package of proposals — some 
requiring legislation; others merely an executive order — that constitute a 
blueprint for the remainder of his presidency.

Among the proposals was a $1 billion investment to create 15 institutes to 
develop new manufacturing technologies, building on the success of a pilot 
project in Youngstown, Ohio. He said he would use oil and gas royalties from 
federal lands to pay for research in clean energy technology that would wean 
cars and truck off oil. And he recycled a proposal to help homeowners refinance 
their mortgages at lower rates. 

New York Times


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