Thursday marked the five-year anniversary of the last federal minimum wage hike—and the day that Democratic former Gov. Ted Strickland ran out of cash just days into his attempt to live on a minimum wage budget.
“I had $77 to spend on food, transportation, activities and other personal expenses for the week,” the Ohio Democrat and current president of the Center for American Progress Action Fund wrote in Politico magazine. “I didn’t make it.”
He’s advocating raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 — “hardly a living wage, but a major step forward.” Democrats have adopted hiking the minimum wage as an election year priority, though Republicans have balked at the idea and legislation has been stalled in Congress.
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Strickland, who was one of a handful of legislators who took the minimum wage so-called Live the Wage challenge last week, used his own experience to highlight hard choices, limited options, and hardships those living on minimum wage must face.









