The bill ( and ) was defeated in April 2008 by Republicans in the
Senate who cited the possibility of frivolous lawsuits in their opposition of the bill and criticized Democrats for refusing to allow compromises. The bill was reintroduced in the 111th Congress (as and ) in January 2009. It passed in the House of Representatives with a vote of 250–177. The vote was split along party lines, with three Republicans voting in favor (
Ed Whitfield,
Leonard Lance, and
Chris Smith) and five Democrats voting against (
Travis Childers,
Dan Boren,
Allen Boyd,
Parker Griffith, and
Bobby Bright). The Senate voted 72–23 to invoke
cloture on S. 181 on January 15, 2009. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act passed the Senate, 61–36, on January 22, 2009. Those in favor included every Democratic senator (except
Ted Kennedy, who was absent from the vote because of health issues), two independents who caucused with Democrats, and five Republican senators, including all four female Republicans in the senate:
Susan Collins,
Olympia Snowe,
Kay Bailey Hutchison, and
Lisa Murkowski. Senator
Arlen Specter was at the time a Republican and also voted in favor of the bill. Shortly thereafter, Senator Spector
switched parties, joining the Democratic caucus in April 2009. President Obama actively supported the bill. The
official White House blog said: President Obama has long championed this bill and Lilly Ledbetter's cause, and by signing it into law, he will ensure that women like Ms. Ledbetter and other victims of pay discrimination can effectively challenge unequal pay. House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer announced that the House would vote on S. 181 (the bill passed by the Senate) during the week of January 26, getting the bill to President Obama's desk sooner rather than later. On January 27, the House passed S. 181 by a 250–177 vote. On January 29, 2009, nine days after he took office, Obama signed the bill into law. It was the first act he signed as president, and it fulfilled his campaign pledge to nullify
Ledbetter v. Goodyear. However, by signing it only two days after it was passed by the House, he incurred criticism by newspapers, such as the
St. Petersburg Times which mentioned his campaign promise to give the public five days of notice to comment on legislation before he signed it. The White House through a spokesman answered that they would be "implementing this policy in full soon", and that, currently they were "working through implementation procedures and some initial issues with the congressional calendar". In 2017, the Trump administration announced it was ending an Obama-era rule that required businesses with over 100 employees to collect wage data by gender, race, and ethnicity. ==References==