MSN
Congressman
laments $172,000 salary
Georgia
Republican Phil Gingrey is under fire for complaining about his
compensation at a closed-door meeting.
Man,
Congress is a dead-end job. You're surrounded by fat-cat lobbyists
making twice as much as you, you hear nothing but complaints from
your constituents and you take home a measly $174,000 a year.
It's
enough to get one Congressman, Phil Gingrey of Georgia, tied up in
knots. He complained about it in a closed-door meeting Wednesday, and
his comments have spread like wildfire.
Gingrey
observed that poorly paid Congressional aides have a future on K
Street -- a street in Washington D.C. known for the lobbying
companies headquartered there.
Aides
"may be 33 years old now and not making a lot of money,"
Gingrey said, according to two aides who relayed his comments to The
National Review. "But in a few years they can just go to K
Street and make $500,000 a year. Meanwhile I'm stuck here making
$172,000 a year."
It
just tugs on the heartstrings, doesn't it? Gingrey was actually off
by a couple thousand. Members of Congress have made $174,000 annually
since 2009.
The
median household income in Gingrey's home state of Georgia,
meanwhile, is $49,736 a year.
Gingrey's
comments were first reported by The National Review, a conservative
news publication. His words "incensed some of the GOP aides in
the room," writes Jonathan Strong.
Gingrey
made the comments during a discussion about an Obamacare rule
requiring congressional staffers to buy their health insurance in the
exchange markets. The Office of Personnel Management has said that
the government can continue to contribute money to the health care
premiums of Congress and their aides, but critics have deplored what
they see as special treatment.
In
the closed-door session, lawmakers discussed reversing the ruling.
Some were uncomfortable doing so. Rep. Joe Barton of Texas said the
change would cost him $12,000. "That's a burden. And it’s a
burden on our staff, too," he said, according to National Review
Online…
Read the rest of the
article at MSN
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