“I believe we’re going to win. As many times as we have to do it, we’re going to to do it,” she said.

In addition to fast food and health care workers, contractors joined in the strikes, including those who work in federal buildings like the Capitol and the Pentagon, as well as the Smithsonian Museum and Union Station.

“We deserve more,” one organizing group wrote in a statement. “Our bosses pay us poverty pages, while we work hard every day to make them millions. It’s not right.”

Tens of thousands of airport workers also joined in the protests, writing a letter to the executives of American Airlines, Delta, Southwest, United Airlines, JetBlue, and Alaska Airlines that they “pledged to stand together” with protesters from other industries. About 40,000 airline workers were expected to join in the strike.

Efforts to institute higher wages have seen fruitful returns in San Francisco and Seattle, where city governments voted to make the full jump to $15; in other cities, like Washington, D.C., plans are underway to raise the minimum wage to $11.50 by 2016, while Chicago will see theirs at $13 by 2019. And President Barack Obama in February signed an executive order that would raise contractors’ wages to $10.10.

But none of the fast food chains that were specifically called on by the protesters to raise wages have committed to the demands; in fact, as one man pointed out at the Chicago rally, the owner of the McDonald’s targeted by workers on Thursday had lobbied aldermen in the area not to vote to increase minimum wage in the city. In 2013, the average pay for restaurant workers was $8.74 an hour.

“When they were planning to strike and ask for $15 an hour in 2012, people thought they were crazy,” said organizer Kendall Fells. “Two years later, it doesn’t sound so crazy.”

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