Congressman Jack Kingston voted to “raise his pay seven times.”
David Perdue, Kingston’s GOP challenger in the U.S. Senate race, in a television ad now airing
U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston of Savannah and millionaire businessman David Perdue are stepping up their attacks as decision day rapidly approaches in the GOP primary runoff for the U.S. Senate.
One of the charges being leveled by Perdue is that Kingston has wasted tax dollars on earmarks “all while voting to raise his own pay seven times.”
PolitiFact has already examined the claim about Kingston's record on earmarks.
Now, we’ll delve into the second part of the claim that’s currently airing on television and radio: Did Kingston, a member of Congress since 1993, vote to raise his own congressional pay seven times?
With public opinion of Congress in the tank, House and Senate members have been loath to raise their own pay. That’s likely why congressional raises are a campaign issue. That also may explain why fact-checking the claim is more complicated than simply pulling legislation and checking individual House and Senate members’ votes.
First, a little history.
The Constitution requires members of Congress to set their own pay.
But since passage of the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, members of the House and Senate have been eligible for annual raises without having to be on-record voting for them.
The raises are calculated by a formula that involves changes in private-sector wages and salaries. They are automatic each Jan. 1 unless Congress votes to reject the adjustment or votes to change the amount.
According to the Congressional Research Service, lawmakers have let their pay be increased automatically 13 times.
They’ve also voted to decline or delay their raises during 11 years. Kingston voted with the majority eight times. That is, Kingston voted to limit his pay, not increase it.
So how can Perdue say Kingston voted to raise his own pay seven times when automatic pay raises were established in 1989 and Kingston’s only been in Congress since 1993?
Here’s the simple answer: Perdue’s not counting Kingston’s votes in favor of raising congressional salaries. Instead, Perdue’s counting procedural votes Kingston cast. Those votes block Congress from nixing the automatic pay raises.
The procedural votes by Kingston took place in 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007, Perdue spokesman Derrick Dickey said.
Here’s how it goes.
A member of Congress pushes for an up-or-down vote on continuing the automatic pay raises. In most years, a procedural vote is used to effectively block that effort.
Pete Sepp, executive vice president of the National Taxpayers Union and Foundation, said it’s important to understand that any efforts on the pay raises are always tied to larger bills dealing with appropriations. “People of varying ideologies and causes would have numerous reasons for supporting or opposing the bill,” Sepp said.
In 1999, for instance, Rep. Ernie Fletcher, R, Ky., argued that lawmakers shouldn’t take a $3,800 raise, boosting their pay to $145,000 a year, saying: “I have a hard time voting to increase my pay when people in my district are earning an average income of $25,000 a year.”
According to press reports from the time, Fletcher’s move was defeated on a procedural vote, 250-173. House journals show Kingston voting with the majority.
The journals also show Kingston voting “Yes” with the majority on similar procedural votes in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007. Those votes blocked efforts to put forth an amendment to stop the pay raise. The amendment would still have had to make it to the floor vote and be passed by a majority, several congressional experts told us.
So, did Kingston vote seven times to give himself a raise? No. He didn’t have to because the raises are automatic unless Congress votes to turn them down as they have for five years.
Did he vote to stop a push for an up-or-down vote on accepting or rejecting the raises? Yes. He did that seven times. But he also voted with the majority to deny or delay the raises eight times.
Greg Dolan, Kingston’s congressional spokesman, said: “Representative Kingston was not ‘voting to increase his pay’ any more than he was voting against renaming the moon.”
“Just because a potential amendment may have been introduced, voting to get on with the work of the House is not equivalent to voting against any and all other extraneous issues,” he said.
Dickey, Perdue’s spokesman, said the pay raises were inappropriate and Kingston knew that as far back as 1992 when he told a Savannah paper that congressional raises should be tied to performance and passage of a balanced budget.
“In the private sector, pay raises are based on good performance,” Dickey said. “ From 1999 to 2007, the range of years Congressman Kingston was voting to raise his own pay, the national debt increased $5.5 trillion to over $9 trillion.”
Our ruling
Congress has created a system that allows its members to receive annual raises without having to vote on them.
Perdue is off base to say Kingston voted to raise his pay seven times. Kingston cast procedural votes — with the majority — that effectively allowed Congress’ automatic pay raises to stand in some years. Kingston did not cast direct votes to raise his pay as Perdue’s ads imply.
When there was a direct vote to decline pay increases, Kingston voted with the majority to do just that eight times.
There’s a bit of truth to Perdue’s claim. But there’s even more context missing.
We rate Perdue’s claim Mostly False.
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