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- <text id=89TT3133>
- <title>
- Nov. 27, 1989: Give A Little, Get A Little
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 27, 1989 Art And Money
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- Give a Little, Get a Little
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Congress finally finds a way to hand itself a raise
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Traver
- </p>
- <p> For a show that had flopped in its last tryout, The
- Pay-Raise Follies enjoyed a remarkably rapid revival. There was
- House Speaker Tom Foley last week, a bipartisan cast gathered
- around him, calling earnestly for more money. Here again came
- consumer advocate Ralph Nader, stirring up rabid radio talk-show
- hosts to bash Capitol Hill for insatiable greed. George Bush,
- once more standing in the wings, sent his best wishes.
- </p>
- <p> But the House members had learned from their pay-hike
- fiasco of last January, when they were seeking a raise from
- $89,500 to $135,000. This time they voted for a smaller increase
- in two stages: to $96,600 next year (when they must stand for
- election), then to nearly $125,000 by 1991. More important, they
- offered a swap: they would take the pay raise in exchange for
- passing a much needed package of reforms, including the gradual
- elimination of outside income. Even though the Senate refused
- to go along, Congressmen can argue that taxpayers will be
- getting something for the extra money they will be paying their
- legislators.
- </p>
- <p> Credit for the smoother performance goes to Foley and
- Minority Leader Robert Michel. Last winter Foley watched former
- Speaker Jim Wright fumble painfully as he tried to sneak a raise
- through the House without a vote. Wright's clumsiness on the
- issue helped push him from power in May. Foley took office
- promising his rank and file he would bring the pay raise to the
- House floor again this year. But he was determined to do things
- differently.
- </p>
- <p> Foley and Michel began by appointing a bipartisan task
- force to craft an ethics package that would combine the salary
- increase with real reform. With the raise stalled as a
- hoped-for Thanksgiving adjournment approached, Foley and Michel
- closed ranks again. They limited partisan bickering and promised
- not to use the pay hike as a campaign issue next year. On
- Thursday they won a hasty 252-174 vote in favor of the increase.
- After the victory, task force chairman Vic Fazio of California
- declared, "We have decided to reinvest in this institution and
- take the responsibility for its future."
- </p>
- <p> Along with senior Government officials and judges, House
- members will receive a 7.9% salary increase in 1990 and a 25%
- hike in 1991. Tacked onto the raise was a ban on outside
- speaking fees or honorariums, which enable House members to
- boost their salaries by as much as $26,850 a year by giving pep
- talks to lobbyists and industry groups.
- </p>
- <p> Lawmakers who retire after 1993 will also be forbidden to
- transfer campaign contributions into personal funds; such
- transfers can total hundreds of thousands of dollars.
- Congressmen will not be allowed to accept gifts worth more than
- $200, and where some members now spend several weeks or more on
- expenses-paid voyages around the globe, their paid junkets will
- be limited to four days in the U.S. and seven overseas. It was
- the most extensive revision of ethics rules in more than a
- decade.
- </p>
- <p> For some, that was not enough to justify a nearly 40%
- salary increase. "We come forward with ethics reform, and we
- instead sneak in a pay raise," said Democratic Congressman James
- Traficant of Ohio. "With the huge budget deficit we face, now
- is not the time." Nader spokesman Bob Dreyfuss pointed out that
- while Congress was looking after its own interests, it had
- delayed action on a federal child-care plan and failed to pass
- a budget -- leaving servicemen, Medicare recipients, farmers and
- other federal beneficiaries vulnerable to the automatic
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings cutbacks. "If the issue were based on
- merit alone," he said, "Congress would be forced to take a pay
- cut."
- </p>
- <p> Others saw the ethics package as an important first step.
- The reforms, said Common Cause President Fred Wertheimer,
- established the principle "that public officials should be paid
- by the public and not by private interests." The President too
- chose to focus on the positive aspects of the deal. In his
- carefully crafted message of support, Bush told Congress, "I
- fully support the reforms you are prepared to bring before the
- House of Representatives this week."
- </p>
- <p> Matters were more complicated for the Senate, whose members
- earn the same $89,500 salary as Representatives but rake in
- more from speaking fees. They were able to bury the plan by
- speaking up for reform: first they added a provision to prohibit
- retired congressional and Executive Branch employees from
- lobbying their former colleagues for one year. Then they left
- the pay-for-ethics package in place for the House (along with
- the raises for judges and bureaucrats), but rejected it for
- themselves. At week's end, after three attempts by Republican
- Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina to scuttle the raise,
- Majority Leader George Mitchell realized he did not have the
- votes to win approval of the House plan.
- </p>
- <p> As a substitute, Mitchell offered a 9.9% cost of living
- raise for Senators on Jan. 1. That will put Senate salaries at
- $98,400 next year, temporarily greater than those in the House.
- In exchange, the limit on honorariums was trimmed to $26,568
- from $35,800, so Senators' potential incomes were left
- virtually unchanged. When the larger congressional pay hike
- takes effect in 1991, Senators would be paid less than members
- of the House. While Congressmen must return to their districts
- to convince skeptical constituents of the wisdom of their
- actions, Senators have decided that the appearance of virtue is
- its own reward.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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