Top photo: Secretary Hillary Clinton and Center for American Progress
President Neera Tanden attend the “Why Women’s Economic Security Matters For
All” panel discussion at The Center For American Progress on Sept. 18, 2014, in
Washington, D.C.
Hillary Clinton campaign emails released by
Wikileaks on Monday show Center for American Progress President Neera
Tanden advising against a $15 minimum wage, a key progressive goal during these
past
four years.
In late April 2015, New York
City Mayor Bill DeBlasio sent an email to Clinton campaign chairman John
Podesta, campaign manager Robby Mook, and longtime Clinton aide and CAP
chief Tanden offering them a preview of an email he would later send out describing
the progressive agenda he planned to promote.
“Following up on my
conversations with each of you last week, I want to keep you updated on the
next steps in our efforts to organize progressives nationally to take on income
inequality. Below is an email going out today for an event coming up in 2
weeks. I believe you will agree with much of this content. Please let me know
if you want to discuss. Thanks – Bill,” he wrote.
“Should we care about this?”
asked Podesta. The policy agenda DeBlasio laid out in the email included a $15
federal minimum wage.
Tanden shrugged it off.
“Substantively, we have not
supported $15 — you will get a fair number of liberal economists who will say
it will lose jobs,” she wrote back. “Most of rest seems fine (obviously trade
sticks out). Politically, we are not getting any pressure to join this from our
end. I leave it to you guys to judge what that means for you. But I’m not
sweating it.”
Bear in mind this was only two
weeks after thousands
of workers in over 200 U.S. cities took part in demonstrations asking for
$15 an hour.
The Center has been the object
of increased criticism by observers who see it less as a center of progressive
reform, and more as a Hillary Clinton White House in waiting.
Clinton senior aide Jake
Sullivan, who Podesta included in his original reply, replied back that “John
Podesta (and the Red Army) want to support $15!” — an indication that the
campaign chair was leaning towards that policy request.
Tanden ended the email thread,
writing back, “And when you say Red Army, you mean the base of the Democratic
party, right? :) Just want to be clear here.”
Throughout the Democratic
primary, Clinton opposed a $15 minimum wage — campaigning
instead on a federal minimum wage of $12 an hour. However, the $15 minimum
wage made
it into the Democratic Party’s presidential platform — with the support of
Tanden, who was a Clinton appointee to the platform committee.
Less clear, however, is if
Clinton will abide by that platform. For example, in a Clinton campaign “Wonks
for Hillary” email sent in early September, the campaign stressed that Clinton
supports a $12 federal minimum wage and $15 “where economically feasible”:
A spokesperson for the Center for American Progress directed all
questions to the Clinton campaign. Podesta did not respond to a request for
comment. (Full disclosure: the author of this post worked at the Center for
American progress from 2009 to 2012.)
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