The Albatross
Member
every state has at least one major urban area. i live in texas, which uses the federal minimum wage, and we have a population of about 27 million people. roughly 60% of that is urban, which comes to 16 million.
the other problem is that most red states will react harshly if any cities within them try to raise their minimum wage. north carolina's HB2 is best known for the transgender bathroom ban but it also reversed charlotte's minimum wage hike and might never have passed if that hadn't been a consideration.
Yes, every state has urban centers, but there is a reality that the standard of living index is very different throughout the United States, even in urban centers in different states.
I'm not saying that Texas doesn't need a higher minimum wage, or what have you, but just that applying minimum wage laws with Los Angeles, New York, Washington DC, and Boston in mind might not work as effectively for Lubbock Texas.
This is why the system we have now where states can set their own minimum wage can work pretty well. California, Massachusetts, Oregon, and other wealthy coastal areas can raise their minimum wage to $15/hr (or more) and tie it to the price index, and they can do so a lot quicker than waiting for federal legislation to pass.