podesta-emails
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Here is actual letter we are responding to:
April 22, 2014
Dear Hillary Clinton,
As First Lady, Senator, Secretary of State, and in your recent work
with the Clinton Global Initiative, you have advocated for the cause
of women’s empowerment around the world. Today we write to ask you to
also join us in an important women’s empowerment initiative here at
home. It involves an area to which you have a special connection and
thus presents you, specifically, with an important responsibility to
make a direct difference in the lives of hundreds of thousands of
American women and an indirect difference in millions more.
The Walmart Corporation is the largest employer in the United States,
employing about one in every hundred Americans. Unfortunately,
America’s largest employer sets a horrible example with its miserly
wage policy. Walmart pays hundreds of thousands of their workers less
per hour, adjusted for inflation, than minimum wage workers made 46
years ago. With rising housing, health and transportation costs,
Walmart workers cannot make ends meet on less than $10, $9 or even,
for some, $8 an hour. The cashiers and hourly sales associates at the
White Plains Walmart close to your house, for example, live in a city
with a living wage of — as estimated by the MIT Living Wage Calculator
— $13.05, but most hourly Walmart workers are paid thousands of
dollars per year below that standard. It’s no surprise that one
Walmart manager even admitted this disconnect between Walmart pay and
fair pay by placing a bin out last holiday season to solicit donations
from customers for his own needy workers.
Seventy percent of the positions subject to Walmart’s hourly poverty
wage regime are held by women. Most of these women are managed by men,
who — despite making up a minority of the company’s employees — make
up a majority of Walmart’s managers and officials. Irregular schedules
and a miserly sick day policy make Walmart a difficult place for
mothers to work. Take as an example one 33-year-old mother of two
featured on ABC News a few years ago: she had to leave her daughter at
home with a 103-degree fever because she was worried about her three
sick day “demerits” issued by her Walmart manager. Worse over,
Walmart’s poverty wage regime drives down the wages and benefits of
neighboring stores, again disproportionately hurting women, who make
up the majority of the low-wage workforce in America.
Walmart could end this assault on their female “associates” by paying
all their workers at least $10.92, which is the inflation-adjusted
wage that the lowest paid Walmart workers — under their founder, Sam
Walton — earned in the late 1960’s. Before Walton’s billionaire heirs
cry ‘Impossible!’, remember: (1) Walmart pays all their workers in
Ontario, Canada and Santa Fe, New Mexico over $10 an hour and still
remains quite profitable; (2) Walmart had enough funds to issue $51
billion in stock buybacks over the past five years, which could have
given every American Walmart worker a $3.50 per hour raise over the
past five years; and (3) a 2011 U.C. Berkeley economic study showed
that even if Walmart raised its starting wage to $12 and passed all
the costs onto customers, it would only cost Walmart shoppers 46 cents
more per shopping trip.
In 1986, when Bill Clinton was governor of Arkansas, you reflected a
single case of women’s empowerment at Walmart by becoming Walmart’s
first female director. During your six years as a Walmart board
member, you honorably pushed for women’s empowerment. Twenty eight
years later, we are asking you to make far broader history again for
women at Walmart by publicly pressuring your former board to end its
poverty wage regime and restore the wages of hundreds of thousands of
its female associates.
Here are four ways you can immediately activate your deep Walmart
ties to help this important feminist cause:
1. Publicly encourage former Walmart CEO H. Lee Scott, who had dinner
at your home in 2006, to build on his minimum wage raise support from
nine years ago by urging his successor C. Douglas McMillon to follow
in his footsteps by endorsing a minimum wage raise this year.
2. Publicly encourage Alice Walton, the Walmart heiress who donated
$25,000 to Ready for Hillary last year, to use her power as a major
shareholder to force a raise in the wages of the hundreds of thousands
of Walmart associates who make less in a year of work than Walton does
in 10 minutes from interest on her inheritance.
3. Publicly encourage Clinton administration advisor Leslie Dach, who
you have worked with on labor issues recently, to leverage his role as
a former Walmart executive vice president to pressure his successors
to end Walmart’s poverty wage regime.
4. Publicly encourage Walmart director Aida Alvarez, who campaigned
for you and was your husband’s final Small Business Administration
leader, to coordinate with other social justice-minded Walmart
directors — such as former Detroit mayor Dennis Archer and civil
rights activist Vilma Martinez -- to end Walmart’s poverty wage
regime.
Campaign funders like Alice Walton might be ‘Ready for Hillary’ to run
for President in 2016, but Walmart’s women have been ‘Ready for
Hillary’ to stand up for the wages they deserve this year. It would be
a shame to have your trailblazing legacy of Walmart women empowerment
rolled back. We hope you can keep it alive by pressuring your former
Walmart colleagues to raise the wages of its predominantly-female
hourly workforce to $11, their inflation-adjusted 1968 level. This is
no big deal: the workers have more than earned an $11 per hour wage,
had it taken from them by inflation year after year, and will continue
to until they can catch up with 1968, inflation adjusted.
Sincerely,
Ralph Nader
Consumer and Labor Advocate
Washington, DC
Pete Davis
Time for a Raise Campaign
Washington, DC
The Southern Labor Studies Association
Williamsburg, VA
Al Norman
Director, Sprawl-Busters
Georgia Women for a Change
Atlanta, GA
Maine Women’s Lobby
Augusta, ME
Adolph Reed
Professor of Political Science
University of Pennsylvania
Bethany Moreton
Author of To Serve God and Wal-Mart
University of Georgia
Eileen Boris
Chair, Department of Feminist Studies
University of California, Santa Barbara
Michael Pierce
Professor of History
University of Arkansas
C. Robert McDevitt
President
UNITE HERE Local 54, Atlantic City
Deborah Burger
President
National Nurses United
Ken Fones-Wolf
Professor of History
West Virginia University
Elizabeth Fones-Wolf
Professor of History
West Virginia University
Stephanie Davis
Executive Director
Georgia Women for Change, Inc.
Eliza Townsend
Executive Director
Maine Women’s Lobby
Scott Nelson
Professor of History
President, Southern Labor Studies Association
William and Mary
Nancy MacLean
President, The Center for the Study of Class, Labor, and Social Sustainability
Duke University
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