Michigan Legislature OKs minimum wage, sick time initiatives
LANSING, Mich. — The Republican-controlled Michigan Legislature on Wednesday passed laws to raise the state’s minimum wage to $12 an hour and require employers to offer paid sick leave — if they are not watered down before taking effect next year.
The proposed ballot initiatives could have gone before voters in November, but now they will not. Their pre-emptive passage by lawmakers is part of an unprecedented business-backed strategy — the legality of which is in question — to make them easier to alter during the “lame-duck” period in November or December. If voters had passed the measures, legislators would have needed three-fourths majorities in each chamber to change them, instead of the simple majority votes they will need now.
Many Democrats voted against the bills they support, saying they do not know what amendments are coming, including whether Republicans could try to repeal them altogether. Sen. Curtis Hertel Jr., of East Lansing, called the manoeuvr “nothing more than a classic bait-and-switch, a trick on the voters here in Michigan, an attack on our democracy.” And Rep. Leslie Love of Detroit said it is a form of “voter suppression.”
The Senate voted 24-13 to pass both bills, with three Republicans and 10 Democrats in opposition. The votes were 78-28 in the House, where more Democrats joined most Republicans in support — declaring victory while vowing to fight any attempt to scale back the laws.


