LA CROSSE, Wis. – Winding up two of the most momentous weeks of his presidency, which saw court victories on gay marriage and his health care law, a legislative win on a major trade pact and an emotional eulogy for the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, President Obama turned his attention Thursday to an ongoing theme of his presidency: economic fairness.
"America has always done better economically when we're all in it together, when everybody gets a fair shot," he said at a packed fieldhouse here at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.
Far from a dispirited lame duck, Obama was loose and cracked wise, often sounding like he was running for a third term against presumptive presidential candidate Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.
Although he didn't mention Walker by name, Obama seemed intent on helping the next Democratic nominee by alluding to the Republican Walker and knocking his economic policies, while extolling the gains made under DFL policies in neighboring Minnesota.
Obama made the case for his economic proposals that are going nowhere in the Republican-controlled Congress — a higher minimum wage, affordable college, sick pay, child care and infrastructure investment — but with a new wrinkle. Obama said salaried workers should have an easier time getting overtime pay following years — decades even — of stagnant wages for low- and middle-income Americans.
"If you work longer, if you work harder, you should get paid for it," he said.
On overtime rules, Obama can act without the approval of Congress, where his proposals have largely died since the 2010 election.
Federal rules require businesses to pay time-and-a-half wages for any work over 40 hours to those earning a salary of less than $23,660. Obama has asked the U.S. Department of Labor to raise the threshold to $50,440, a level that, in purchasing power, would be equivalent to what the rule was for salaried American workers in the 1970s.