KEY POINTS
  • Advocates say the election and the coronavirus pandemic offer a new opportunity to push for a higher minimum wage.
  • Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden supports a $15 an hour minimum wage and he's polling ahead of President Trump, according to the RealClearPolitics national polling average. 
  • Tsedeye Gebreselassie of nonpartisan think tank National Employment Law Project said Americans better appreciate low-wage workers after seeing them care for the elderly, deliver food and stock grocery shelves during the pandemic.
  • Yet economists caution that restaurants and retailers, hobbled by the pandemic, may not be able to absorb additional labor costs.
Tiffany Lowe speaking in favor of the Raise the Wage Act, on Capitol Hill in January 2019.

Fast-food cashier Tiffany Lowe says a higher wage would allow her to save up for a home of her own. It would also give her greater peace of mind. 

The 34-year-old single mom of four works as a cashier for a franchise of KFC in Memphis, Tennessee, making $7.85 an hour.