Congress still gets paid by our tax money. it's in the Constitution. Economy still sucks
Eric Kuvykin on Economy.
updated 1:26 AM EDT, Wed October 2, 2013
Lawmakers get cash even if you don't
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Some in Congress say they're planning on giving their pay to charity during shutdown
- Thousands of federal workers have been furloughed and will lose pay in the shutdown
- Members of Congress will still get paid, as mandated by the 27th Amendment
- Some lawmakers say they will give their paychecks to the Treasury or to charity
"That is disgraceful in
my view," said freshman Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, told CNN.
"Basically the only people who get paid in a shutdown are members of
Congress, and that is irresponsible."
Gabbard plans to send any
pay she receives during a shutdown back to the Treasury. The combat
veteran said she was shocked to find out recently that members' pay is
protected.
It is -- by the Constitution.
The 27th Amendment to the
Constitution restricts any Congress from changing its own pay. The
measure was proposed in the first days of the Republic but was not
ratified until 1992, after a grass-roots movement promoted the idea and
the necessary number of state legislatures approved it.
While many may have
wanted to restrain Congress from increasing its pay, the amendment also
blocks Congress from freezing or cutting its compensation.
The result? Congress gets paid no matter what. Gabbard is not the only member surprised.
Rep. DeSantis: Don't pay me
"I don't even know whether it stops or not," Rep. John Fleming, R-Louisiana, said when asked about his pay during a shutdown.
When told that the
Constitution mandates congressional paychecks stay as-is, Fleming
responded that he hadn't thought through what he would do yet but would
likely donate his pay during a shutdown to charity.
"Obviously we need to share the pain of the American people," he concluded.
The offices for the top
two members of Congress -- House Speaker John Boehner and Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid -- wouldn't respond to specifics about their
pay.
According to a report by the Lexington Herald-Leader newspaper, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, plans to donate his salary to charity during the shutdown.
Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Texas, told CNN he is urging his fellow members of Congress to donate their pay to charitable causes.
"I don't think we should
get paid until (the shutdown) is resolved," Rep. Pete DeSantis, R-Fla,
told CNN's Jake Tapper on Tuesday. "I've asked the clerk to withhold any
pay for me until we get this up and running. I just think that that's
fair for the folks involved who've been negatively affected by this."
House Minority Whip
Steny Hoyer, D-Maryland, disagreed with DeSantis. "I think that's
another game (House Republicans) want to play, appealing to a demagogic
approach to this," Hoyer told Tapper on Tuesday.
"Members of Congress
ought to be on the job working hard," Hoyer added, "getting this job
done to the American people, getting their government opened, getting
federal employees back to work and serving the public, serving the
growth of our economy, serving our national security ends."
While members will get paid, they must decide which of their own office staff have to go home.
Members of Congress run
their own office payroll and will decide who is essential and non
essential. But even congressional staff members who work during a
shutdown would not get paid until later -- only their bosses will get
paid on time.
"My staffers are working with pay. Right now," Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, said Tuesday on "Crossfire."
"They're doing oversight on the federal government. ... They're continuing to work on the waste."
Coburn also said he's
keeping his salary earned during the shutdown. "I'm going to keep my
salary and going to make sure I spend it and tithe it and give to it
charities and do the thing that I've always done. ... I'm not going to
stop working."
But Democratic Sen.
Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, who appeared alongside Coburn on
"Crossfire" on Tuesday, is taking a different approach.
"Eighty percent of my
staff, unfortunately, is on furlough," she said, "I'm going to be
contributing [my salary] on a daily basis. For every day we are not
seeing an open -- a government that's open, I'm contributing."
If I shutdown my business, I will not get paid.
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