“It is crucial that employees, especially low-wage workers, have the protections of unemployment insurance, regardless of the identity of their employer,” said Larry Dupuis, director of litigation and advocacy at Legal Action of Wisconsin. The law firm joined with groups including the Economic Policy Institute, the Century Foundation and the National Employment Law Project on a friend of the court brief supporting the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling.
Wisconsin Examiner
June 9, 2025
Samantha Sanders, Director of Government Affairs and Advocacy at the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) (https://www.epi.org/) , joined the America’s Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the Trump administration’s actions against workers in its first 100 days, highlighting the administration’s attacks on collective bargaining rights, diversity initiatives and worker safety regulations.
Union Workforce Podcast
June 9, 2025
HORSLEY: Well, there are legal challenges that could undo a lot of these tariffs. Congress might get involved at some point. And Trump himself keeps changing the tariffs from week to week, sometimes day to day. So Adam Hersh of the Economic Policy Institute says it would be unwise to expect the tariff picture is going to just hold steady for 10 full years.
ADAM HERSH: It’s not a source of revenue that the government can really rely on, particularly when the president is aiming to use it as a bargaining chip that could go away the moment that the president decides to cut a deal or just to walk back on his threats.
NPR All Things Considered
June 9, 2025
When wages aren’t paid, they aren’t spent, and they aren’t taxed. That shrinks the economy, reducing buying power for consumers and municipalities alike. According to the Economic Policy Institute, research shows that minimum wage violations increase poverty among workers experiencing wage theft by 40.6% in New York.
My Twin Tiers
June 9, 2025
Adam Hersh of The Economic Policy Institute and John Whiten of The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy are our guests.
The Rick Smith Show
June 9, 2025
Data largely supports her perspective. The National Association of Realtors found the median existing-home price in the U.S. reached $414,800 in April 2025—up from just over $170,000 in 2012. Meanwhile, real wages for most American workers have remained largely stagnant since the 1970s, as shown in a recent analysis by the Economic Policy Institute.
Newsweek
June 9, 2025
According to the Economic Policy Institute, more than half of all Black children under age 19 rely on public health insurance like Medicaid. For some, this means coverage outside of school — doctor’s visits, prescriptions, and other care. But for many Black students in under-resourced schools, school is often the only place they can get health services at all.
Word in Black
June 9, 2025
“By increasing penalties, New York is taking a critical step toward ensuring that employers who violate the law are held accountable and that illegally employing minors isn’t just the cost of doing business,” said Nina Mast, a policy and economic analyst at the Economic Policy Institute.
City Limits
June 9, 2025
Starbucks has a long history of resisting union efforts. The Economic Policy Institute reports the company has previously attempted to shut down stores with unionization efforts and retaliated against unionized workers to deter organization.
The Daily Cardinal
June 9, 2025
If the current bill becomes law, annual cuts to Medicaid would average over $70 billion over the coming years — the same amount millionaires and billionaires would gain in tax cuts each year, according to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI).
Even with those cuts to critical health care programs, the budget package is projected to increase the national debt by $3.1 trillion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. In an open letter to the Senate on Monday, EPI and six Nobel laureate economists said the nation’s structural deficits are already too high, and the bill would put upward pressure on inflation and interest rates while reducing incomes for the bottom 40 percent of earners. Taken together, the economists wrote, “the House budget constitutes an extremely large upward redistribution of income” while adding to the national debt.
Truthout
June 9, 2025