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Why fast food workers are striking in 500 US cities

Fast food workers nationwide are protesting for $15 an hour wage, and the right to unionize. Organizers hope to push the agenda to the 2016 presidential campaign. 

A protester looks on at a rally for fair wages Wednesday, April 15, 2015, in Seattle. Across the U.S., fast-food and other low-wage workers are calling for protests for a $15 an hour wage in what organizers are calling the biggest ever mobilization of workers.

(AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

November 10, 2015

The quest for higher minimum wages took a higher profile Tuesday as fast-food workers staged protests in cities around the nation, pushing聽for $15 an hour and union rights.

Nationwide, organizers plan rallies in 500 cities hoping to catch the attention of presidential candidates in the 2016 elections. Republicans have a debate Tuesday night and Democrats have one Saturday.

According to the organizers, fast-food employees in some 270 cities will be joined by workers in another 230 cities from other industries that typically pay low hourly wages, including home and child care.

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In New York, where workers recently won a new $15 hourly wage by 2018 and statewide by 2021, a few hundred joined the protest in solidarity.

The workers carried banners reading "A living wage = quality care" and "On strike for work that sustains families," blocked traffic, and rallied outside a McDonald鈥檚 in downtown Brooklyn, the Associated Press reports.

"The money I bring home can barely take care of my rent," protester Alvin Major, 50, a Guyanese native who said he earns about $1,200 a month with his job at a Brooklyn KFC, according to AP. "We need a wage that could take care of our basic necessities."

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Already an influential political force, the workers plan to use their new-found muscle to sway local, state and national elections exactly 12 months from now and say they'll back any candidate of any party who聽supports their cause. The Fight聽for $15 group says it will hold voter registration drives and neighborhood parties to coax the workers to the polls.

Low-wage workers in the United States are 鈥,鈥澛燼ccording to Yannet Lathrop, a researcher at the pro-union National Employment Law Project (NELP).

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Citing by NELP that showed 65 percent of low-wage workers - groups that represents 48 million potential voters - "would be more likely to vote in the coming presidential race if a candidate supported a $15 minimum wage and unionization," Lathrop said.聽鈥淭he way that low-wage workers have been engaging in the fight for $15 is really suggestive of a low-wage population that was disengaged prior to that fight.鈥

Tuesday's protests come weeks after a poll by Quinnipiac University found that 62 percent of New York voters supported raising the minimum wage to $15 over the next few years.聽

But not every US city is ready for higher wages. Just last week, Portland, Maine, voted down a $15 per hour minimum wage 辫谤辞辫辞蝉补濒.听

This may have come as a surprise to some, especially in a city that is generally聽: 46.9 percent of voters in the city are registered Democrats, and only 13.9 percent are registered Republicans. 聽

Critics of the proposed bill said that their reasons were economic rather than political; many small business in and around the city said that they would聽.