Obama Works Overtime to Interfere With Business
Obama Works Overtime to Interfere With Business · The Fiscal Times

The Roman Empire notoriously distracted its citizenry by providing bread and circuses to mollify and distract them from the real problems of their lives and the failures of their government. Washington DC kept up that hoary tradition this week, starting with an all-night Senate session on global warming, conducted by Senate Democrats protesting the lack of action by the US government on the issue.

That protest had two big problems for Democrats’ credibility. First, they control the upper chamber, so they can introduce legislation any time they wish – and they offered no legislation during the all-nighter. Second, climate change falls far down the list of priorities for Americans; according to Gallup, it’s second to last on a non-exclusive list of concerns overall, and near the bottom even among Democrats. The top priorities on Gallup’s list are the economy and unemployment, for voters of both parties.

Related: Dems Move to Force Unemployment Insurance Vote

With the failure of the circus on Capitol Hill, the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue focused on the bread. The White House told The New York Times and other media outlets that President Obama would take executive action to redefine salaried employment in order to expand overtime payment from employers. As usual, this top-down and unforeseen change in regulation will create more problems than it solves, and likely result in lowered compensation rather than the explosion of riches for the working class the Obama administration will claim.

Critics of the administration will object to the unilateral nature of this change, but this does fall within the purview of the executive branch, unlike the minimum-wage demand from Obama. Congress sets the federal minimum-wage level in statute, but the distinction between exempt and non-exempt payroll comes from Department of Labor regulation. Executive-branch agencies can change regulations based on their own authority within the statutory jurisdiction approved by Congress and the President--and this falls well within that authority.

That doesn’t mean it’s great policy, though. Currently, Labor sets the lowest pay level for exemption from overtime at $455 per week, which requires that the job entail some kind of “executive” function, such as supervision of other employees. For a full-time job, that equates to about $11.38 an hour or an annual salary of $23,660. Under current rules, employers do not have to quantify what part of the job entails “executive” responsibilities, which White House officials claim leads to exploitation of low-income workers.