Earning That
Congressional Raise
EDITORIAL, NYTimes on
the Web, July 13, 2006
Congress has just chopped a week off
what already is a notoriously skimpy work calendar so that lawmakers will have
extra campaign time at home this fall. The Capitol will recess at the end
of September, leaving a world of unfinished business. You’ll be relieved
to know, however, that among the House items already seen to was a pay increase
— 2 percent over the current base salary of $168,500.
Pay raises are a classic bit of passive-aggressive legislative behavior in
Washington: they’re automatic, unless Congress takes a vote to block them.
In the past 16 years, the two houses have passively accepted 11 of the
cost-of-living raises while actively rejecting five.
Although we have always believed that lawmakers should draw decent salaries, it
is hard to have patience with a body that allows its own pay to rise
automatically while systematically stonewalling any increase in the national
minimum wage. The private-sector workers who need a pay raise the most
have been waiting nine years and counting for some kind of increase to offset
the rising cost of living. But there has been no sign of mercy yet from
the Republican leaders. They warn of raising “the first rung of the
economic ladder” beyond a noble striver’s reach — as if that rung is securely
anchored at $5.15 an hour.
For a family of three, the minimum wage of $10,700, set in 1997, is now more
than $5,000 below the federal definition of poverty. In that same time, a
lawmaker’s salary rose $31,600— better than 20 percent — while the purchasing
power of a minimum-wage earner deteriorated by 20 percent.
Is it fair to make comparisons between working poor in the private sector and
the lawmakers with power over their salaries? Congress would be wise to
face that question before voters do. House leaders have thus far ducked it
in blocking floor votes on the minimum wage (with no comparable hesitation about
a tax break for estates left by the wealthy).
A rise in the minimum wage to $7.25 did get to the Senate floor, but fell short.
Democrats vow to fight the Congressional raise unless poor workers finally get a
boost. This is a debate well worth having before members of Congress hurry
off to brag to voters of the job they’ve done.
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