While leaders of both parties in the U.S. House have made clear they are open to giving members of Congress their first pay raise in ten years, the Senate's top Republican said Thursday that his side of the Capitol will not go along with such a plan, throwing a rather large hurdle in the way of the effort to raise the current lawmaker salary of $174,000 for the first time since 2009.
"We’re not doing a COLA adjustment in the Senate," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said, referring to the 'Cost-of-living-adjustment' which lawmakers are supposed to receive each year under current law, but have been blocked routinely for the last ten years.
But even as McConnell made clear his opposition, the top Republican in the House wasn't giving up on the change in lawmaker pay.
"My position on this is the same," said House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). "I do not believe Congress should be a place only for millionaires."
At a news conference, McCarthy acknowledged to reporters that McConnell's opposition 'does complicate the path' for a Congressional pay raise, as House leaders may bring the issue to the floor as early as next week.
Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell says the GOP-controlled chamber won't go along with a bipartisan plan by House leaders to have lawmakers receive their first cost-of-living pay increase in a decade. https://t.co/a4oxc2aNsr
— AP Politics (@AP_Politics) June 20, 2019
McCarthy not backing down on cost-of-living increase for Congress -- even after McConnell comes out against it this morning.
— Sarah Ferris (@sarahnferris) June 20, 2019
"My position on this is the same," he says. On McConnell's opposition, "It does complicate the path."
"This is good news," Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) said of the public opposition to a pay raise by the Senate Majority Leader.
"No reason Congress should get a pay raise. Now it’s time to pass my bill that would end automatic pay raises entirely," Scott tweeted.
House leaders had planned earlier this month to bring forward a funding bill for the Congress - with no language to block the yearly pay raise - but the bill was yanked from a package of spending bills after concerns were raised by rank-and-file lawmakers.
The plan for now is to try that maneuver next week, which would force all House members to go on the record about pay increase.
Did you know Congress receives an automatic annual pay raise? It goes through unless we affirmatively vote to stop it. Every year since 2009, Congress has voted to freeze pay. I want to hear your thoughts. Should Congress receive a pay raise? Let me know:https://t.co/WelAhTOfdA
— U.S. Rep. Bob Latta (@boblatta) June 20, 2019
Lawmakers earn $174,000 a year; under the plan for a COLA increase, their pay would go up by around $4,500 under this plan.
If they had received yearly increases as provided for under current law for the past ten years, their salaries would be over $200,000.
Cox Media Group