New poll shows 71% of Capitol Hill and other City Council District 3 voters back $15 minimum wage; workers here call for boycott 2/20

A new poll conducted by EMC Research finds a remarkable 71% level of support for a $15 minimum wage among likely voters in Seattle City Council District 3 (Capitol Hill, First Hill). Overall support reaches an overwhelming 68% citywide and is incredibly robust across all seven council districts. (Specific highlights available online; EMC Research has also made their full polling memo publicly available.)
These remarkable results come little more than a week before "Boycott McPoverty”, the February 20th one-day citywide boycott of the big burger chains (McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's) in Capitol Hill, First Hill, and citywide called by Seattle fast food workers.
"I'm a 22-year-old minimum-wage worker at the First Hill McDonald’s,” explained Martina Phelps, who has joined the call to Boycott McPoverty on February 20th, "and I'm fighting for a $15 minimum wage because everyone deserves a living wage. I hear that people are excited about $15. If you support us in fighting for $15, will you join us on February 20 for a boycott?"
The First Hill McDonald's is the only burger outlet in District 3 which will be affected by Boycott McPoverty on February 20th, though a total of 25 big burger chains across the city are part of the call.

A citywide map of every burger chain outlet affected by the boycott is available here.

Who: Seattle fast-food workers and other supporters of $15 for Seattle
What: Call on the city to "Boycott McPoverty" in a one-day citywide boycott of the big burger chains (McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's) to support $15 for Seattle.
When: Thursday, February 20, 2014, breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Where: All 25 big burger chain outlets inside city limits.
In less than 9 months, the Seattle fast food strikes have given birth to a wildly popular movement to boost the economy by ensuring workers are paid enough to support themselves. On May 30th, the day of the first strikes, the call for $15 was received as a quixotic aspiration destined for failure. But on Election Day, voters in SeaTac and Seattle made moved the issue dramatically forwards, and as Mayor Murray's task force discusses the best way to implement a $15 minimum wage, a broad consensus has coalesced in support of the call initially articulated by fast food workers.
Highlights:
* 68% of likely Seattle voters support a $15 minimum wage vs. just 25% who oppose
* Support is strong in every council district:
* District 1 (West Seattle): 58% - 37%
* District 2 (South Seattle): 74% - 17%
* District 3 (Capitol Hill): 71% - 20%
* District 4 (U District/Wallingford/Ravenna): 76% - 14%
* District 5 (Northgate/North Seattle): 75% - 23%
* District 6 (Ballard/Greenwood): 68% - 25%
* District 7 (Queen Anne/Downtown): 60% - 32%
* Strong enforcement rules (including fines) win 86% support
* Three in four voters agree that "If workers in Seattle earn higher wages, our entire community benefits"
* 71% agree that "A higher minimum wage helps local businesses because more workers making more money means they will have more money to spend"
About the poll:
* The poll was conducted by EMC Research, a leading public opinion & market research firm, thought a January 14 - 22 telephone survey of 805 likely November 2014 voters in Seattle, with a margin of error of 3.5%.
* Polling was funded by a coalition of organizations & individuals supporting $15 for Seattle, including Working Washington, UFCW 21, Nick Hanauer, SEIU 1199NW, the Teamsters, and the MLK County Labor Council.
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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org, 206-227-6014