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WashingtonBy TOM LITTLEWOOD |
Savoring a pay raise, swallowing an ethics code
POLITICS may be the only vocation
that does not openly reward those who
are the most successful with financial
treasure in the same proportions.
Clergymen and classicists, basketball
players and bassoonists, are able to cash
in on their fame, and the public approves. But the American people seem
comfortable with an unstated arrangement that inspires those public officials
who are so inclined to enrich themselves
out of public sight.
About the only way state legislators
have been able to make their pay raises
politically palatable is to swallow some
bitter along with the sweet. This year,
Congress made the same trade-off by
increasing the salaries of its members (to
$57,500 a year) and then tightening the
restrictions on outside moneymaking
conflicts. The House and Senate both
agreed to limit the additional "earned"
income of their members to no more
than 10 per cent of their salaries, thus
setting the current individual earnings
ceiling at $66,125.
Before the new ethical rules were
adopted, several of the more economically deprived senators and representatives grumbled about the unfairness of
applying different standards to "unearned" income from investments of a
privileged class — those who were rich
when they entered office. Sen. Charles
H. Percy is often cited, as an example.
The new code places no limits on income
from dividends, rent, interest, land
speculation or shares in a family business.
Representatives, who run every two
years, are especially reluctant to sever
their professional and business ties,
should their return to private life occur
unexpectedly. Beyond any question,
service in the modern Congress is, or
ought to be, a full-time job. Nevertheless, Rep. Otis Pike, Democrat, of New
York reflects a point of view that is still common among congressmen whose
districts are within easy weekend commuting range of Washington. Pike said
he promised himself that he would never
"get in a position where I needed a
political job to feed my family, because I
knew that very important people would
come to me with unethical propositions,
and I wanted to be able to say, 'Stuff it.'
They did and I did."
The grumbling was even louder back
home when the pay raise was accepted
through the back door, without a
recorded vote. Whereupon the strong
code of ethics became unavoidable. The
House gulped down the earned income
limitation, 344 to 79. Among the 79
opponents were a surprisingly large
number of lawyer-congressmen from
Illinois. Rep. Morgan F. Murphy, a
Democrat from Chicago, has supplemented his salary with over $50,000 a
year from his law firm. He said he
continued his law practice "to support
my family." Rep. Robert McClory,
Republican from Lake County, questioned the division of members into two
classes: the very rich, who can continue
to receive supplemental income, and the
others, who cannot. He said he thought
the "infringement on personal liberty"
might "discourage people of substance
from careers in the House." Rep. Henry
J. Hyde, Republican from Park Ridge,
echoed Pike's plea for financial independence, which he called an "indispensable ingredient" of political independence and good government. Other
Illinoisans who were recorded against
the earned income limitation (Hyde
spoke against it but voted for it) were
Cardiss Collins, Democrat; Philip
Crane, Republican; John Erlenborn,
Republican; John Fary, Democrat; George O'Brien, Republican; Dan
Rostenkowski, Democrat; and Martin
Russo, Democrat.
Senators, with their six-year terms, were more concerned about the speaking fees that the better known among
them can command than they were with
law firm ties. An organization that can
buy influence by retaining a congressman's law firm presumably can try to do
the same by inviting a senator to give a
speech for a big fee. Sen. Adlai E.
Stevenson supported the limitation on
earned income, but opposed its extension to unearned income. Percy voted
against limitations of either kind, saying
he preferred full disclosure of all sources
of outside income.
The Pike-Hyde contention is that
paying a congressman $57,500 a year —
on condition that he not pocket almost
as much from a law firm connection on
the side — somehow deprives him of
needed independence by making him
vulnerable to unscrupulous influence
peddlers. That logic would lead Congress to a condition many state legislatures have been struggling to escape
from. Instead of paying a reasonable
wage for something at least approaching
full-time career service, we would return
to an imagined ideal of citizen-legislators who are somehow thereby in closer
touch with their constituents; who are
paid only token salaries and are given
free rein to engage in occupational
ventures that cannot help but conflict
with their public responsibilities.
Properly executed, $57,500 worth of
congressional service is a full-time
activity, requiring not just attendance at
the Capitol but other time spent in
committee rooms, being available to
individuals and groups in the district,
and keeping a closer watch over how
government programs are functioning
_ a responsibility that is now neglected
by most members of Congress. The need
for strict limitations on outside income
may be even greater in the future if
congressional campaigns are financed
with public funds.
July 1977 / Illinois Issues / 31