Tag: thomas perez
Obama Administration Seeks To Bolster Gender Wage Gap Fight

Obama Administration Seeks To Bolster Gender Wage Gap Fight

By Ayesha Rascoe

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration announced plans to expand wage reporting requirements for private businesses on Friday, bolstering its efforts to narrow the longstanding U.S. gender wage gap.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s plan would require employers with 100 or more employees to provide the agency with detailed wage information, broken down by gender, race and ethnicity.

Unlike a similar Labor Department rule proposed earlier, it would apply to all large businesses and not just federal contractors.

The plan, which is expected to take effect in September 2017, will be open to public comment but does not require congressional approval. It is part of a long-running effort by Obama and federal agencies to close the yawning gap between pay for men and women.

The commission’s proposal would not require the disclosure of specific salaries of individual employees, but it would seek aggregate data on pay ranges and hours worked.

“The goal is to help businesses that are trying to do the right thing… to get a clearer picture of how they can make sure their employees are being treated equally,” Obama said at a White House event.

He spoke on the seventh anniversary of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. The measure, the first bill Obama signed into law, overturned a Supreme Court decision that severely restricted the time period for filing complaints of employment discrimination concerning compensation.

Although fighting gender pay imbalances has been a focus for Obama, the pay gap has narrowed only slightly over the past two years.

“We can’t deliver on the promise of equal pay unless we have the best, most comprehensive information about what people earn,” Labor Secretary Thomas Perez said in a statement on Friday.

The median wage of a woman working full-time year-round in the United States is currently about $39,600, only 79 percent of a man’s median earnings of $50,400.

Gender equality in the U.S. work force, and globally, is still decades away, according to an independent report released on Wednesday.

 

 

(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Andrew Hay and Tom Brown)

Photo: Job seekers listen to a presentation at the Colorado Hospital Association health care career fair in Denver April 9, 2013. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

Secretary Of Labor Perez Rules Out Maryland Senate Run

Secretary Of Labor Perez Rules Out Maryland Senate Run

By Alexis Levinson, CQ-Roll Call (TNS)

CHESAPEAKE BEACH, Md. — Secretary of Labor Thomas E. Perez will not run for Senate in Maryland, he told CQ-Roll Call Thursday.

Several Maryland Democrats have mentioned Perez, a Maryland resident who held public office there, as a possible Senate candidate following Senator Barbara A Mikulski’s recent announcement that she would not seek another term.

But Perez, who was the keynote speaker for the Calvert County Democratic Central Committee’s Louis L. Goldstein Dinner, said he has no interest.

“No,” he scoffed when CQ-Roll Call asked if he was thinking about a bid. “Isn’t there enough people running for the Senate?”

Two Maryland Democrats have already announced their candidacies for the Senate seat: Rep. Chris Van Hollen and Rep. Donna Edwards. Edwards was also at the dinner and delivered brief remarks.

The primary for the safe Democratic seat is likely to be crowded. A number of other people, including several members of Congress and current and former state officials, are also considering running.

Photo: U.S. Secretary of Labor Thomas Perez addresses the AFL-CIO Convention, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2013 in Los Angeles. (US Department of Labor/Flickr)

President Has A Short List Of Potential Attorney General Candidates

President Has A Short List Of Potential Attorney General Candidates

By Timothy M. Phelps and Kathleen Hennessey, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A week after Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. announced plans to step down, three administration insiders lead the president’s short list to replace him, according to sources inside and outside the White House.

Solicitor Gen. Donald B. Verrilli Jr., who successfully argued the administration’s case for the Affordable Care Act before the Supreme Court, is mentioned more frequently than the other top candidates: Labor Secretary Thomas E. Perez, a progressive considered by the White House to be a Cabinet standout, and former White House Counsel Kathryn H. Ruemmler.

Perez was a lightening rod for Republican criticism when he headed the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and barely squeezed through his confirmation last year. His nomination as America’s top law enforcement official would provoke a major battle in the Senate.

White House officials say the president has not yet made a decision and no announcement is imminent, despite criticism that they should have been prepared to nominate someone immediately given Holder’s frequent signals that he planned to leave. Now, the administration will move swiftly to win confirmation in the current, Democratic-controlled Senate in case Republicans take over the chamber after the November election.

Each of the three top contenders has garnered Obama’s trust, although Verrilli and Ruemmler have a longer history and closer relationships with the president. Perez, on the other hand, could bolster Obama’s flagging support from the party’s Latino base, which has been frustrated by the White House’s slow progress on immigration reform.

Of the three, Verrilli would be the low-maintenance choice. He’s respected within the White House for his legal mind and grasp of issues. Most agree he would likely have the least contentious nomination process before a potentially hostile Congress because of his even temperament and professorial demeanor.

“They really need that steady hand,” said a former Justice Department official, who did not want to be identified speaking about the nomination process.

One question facing the president will be whether to use the appointment to add diversity to his Cabinet. Obama took heat last year for letting the number of women, blacks, Latinos and Asian Americans slide in his second-term Cabinet. Since then, Obama has pushed those numbers up. But naming Verrilli would leave Obama with all white men as his highest-profile department secretaries at State, Defense, Treasury and Justice.

A woman like Ruemmler, now working in private practice, would increase diversity. And perhaps more important for the White House, she would mark the return of a trusted adviser who is already up to speed on the legal issues. As the president’s lawyer for three years, Ruemmler was involved in nearly every major decision and crisis.

But Ruemmler, unlike Perez and Verrilli, has never been through the Senate confirmation, which could slow down a nomination that will have little time to spare if Republicans gain the six extra Senate seats they need to take control of the chamber in January. As White House counsel, she inevitably tangled with Republicans at times, which could make her a more difficult nominee to confirm than Verrilli.

Perez is undoubtedly the pick most likely to spark a standoff with the Senate, leaving some to assume his name was being floated primarily to appease the president’s liberal base. But a White House official insisted the Labor secretary is a viable candidate and noted that the president was impressed by how Perez handled his confirmation fight.

Holder has said he will stay in the job until his replacement is confirmed.

Some Republican senators have already signaled they are prepared for a battle over the nomination, which the White House expects to be handled during the post-election lame-duck session.

But there is political risk to delaying confirmation of a national-security-related post such as attorney general amid the ongoing conflict in Iraq and Syria. Republicans might also think twice before blocking a Latino nominee, particularly as the party is already waging a fight against the president’s plans to take executive actions to ease deportations of some immigrants.

As Obama’s assistant attorney general for civil rights, Perez was heavily criticized by Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, over what Grassley characterized as a “shady” deal in which the Justice Department allegedly dropped a lawsuit against the city of St. Paul, Minn., in exchange for the city’s dismissing separate civil rights litigation against the federal government.

Political analysts say another potential problem with a Perez nomination would be whether some moderate Democrats would support him. Democrats in March helped quash the nomination of Debo Adegbile, Obama’s nominee to head the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, because he was perceived by some as too liberal.

“The president saw that if he goes with a strong progressive, he is not necessarily guaranteed to pick up all the Democratic votes,” said Jim Manley, former spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), who worked in the Senate with Perez. “That is problematic.”

Several other names still on the “long list” for the nomination include former U.S. Attorney Neil MacBride of Virginia and Jenny Durkan, former U.S. attorney for the Western District of Washington.

Photo: cliff1066 via Flickr