Michigan Governor Rick Snyder on Tuesday signed a bill to hike the minimum wage in the state to $9.25 over the next four years after the Republican-led legislature gave its stamp of approval.
Michigan is the first state with a Republican-led legislature to raise the minimum wage — currently at $7.40. It joins Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Minnesota, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, who have all raised their minimum wage.
Future increases will be tied to inflation.
The wage hike comes just one day before activists had planned to submit hundreds of thousands of signatures calling for a ballot initiative to hike it to $10.10, the Associated Press reported. $10.10 is the wage national Democrats and the president have championed.
“This was a great exercise in bipartisanship and both chambers working together in close partnership, coming up with an agreement and executing on that,” Snyder said, according to the AP. “It’s good for the hard-working people of Michigan.”
Snyder, a Republican, rejected criticisms from business lobbies who said the wage hike would cut into their profits and cause layoffs; Snyder said the measure is “economically sound.”
Republican Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville said he’d introduced the wage hike bill to repeal and replace the law the ballot initiative would seek to amend; it’s unclear at this point whether the law will prevent the ballot initiative from going forward, but some Democrats voted against the bill because they said it silenced the wage petition.









