In his final year in office, President Barack Obama is returning to an issue that was at the heart of the first piece of legislation he ever signed at the White House: the gender pay gap.
Obama on Friday unveiled new rules that would compel companies with more than 100 employees to provide the federal government annual data for how much they pay employees based on gender, race and ethnicity.
RELATED: Obama in final address to Dem caucus: ‘We will win In November’
That information would be used to help public enforcement of equal pay laws while giving more insight into discriminatory pay practices, he said from the White House.
“What kind of example does paying women less set for our sons and daughters?” Obama asked.
The proposal would cover more than 63 million employees — potentially providing a new wealth of data for understanding the pay gap issue and determining whether certain workers are getting short-changed.
In addition, Obama renewed his call to Congress to pass the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would potentially close loopholes in the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and require employers to prove that pay gaps are due to legitimate business reasons, not discrimination.
The president also said the White House in May will host a summit — “The United State of Women” — to examine gender equality in America.
“The notion that we would somehow be keeping my daughters … any of your daughters out of opportunity, not allowing them to thrive in any field, not allowing them to fully participate in every human endeavor, that’s counterproductive,” Obama said.
The president’s announcement Friday comes on the seventh anniversary of his signing of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which aims to close the gender pay gap by making it easier for employees to sue for pay discrimination.
The new rules would require Obama to use his executive powers, which he has been criticized by Republicans for doing often during his presidency as he looks to shore up his legacy as a champion of civil rights and progressive issues.
He most recently used executive actions on his plan to tighten federal gun lawsand granting temporary amnesty to millions of undocumented immigrants.
RT the good news: We're taking new steps to advance #EqualPay for women → https://t.co/8UoDjb2bkO
https://t.co/Kam2Wp4BJY
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) January 29, 2016
“I don’t think this is an empty move,” Robyn Muncy, interim chair of women’s studies and a history professor at the University of Maryland, said of the new pay data proposal. “I think it can have a very galvanizing, conscious-raising effect on people.”








