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DEMOCRACY IN ACTION
Congress
Helps Self to $3,100 Pay Raise By DAVID ESPO
On another major issue, a renewal of the Patriot Act remained in limbo as an unlikely coalition of liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans sought curbs on the powers given law enforcement in the troubled first days after the 2001 terrorist attacks. The cost-of-living increase for members of Congress—which will put pay for the rank and file at an estimated $165,200 a year—marked a brief truce in the pitched political battles that have flared in recent weeks on the war and domestic issues. So much so that the issue was not mentioned on the floor of either the House or Senate as lawmakers worked on legislation whose passage will assure bigger paychecks. Lawmakers automatically receive a cost of living increase each year, unless Congress votes to block it. By tradition, critics have tried to block increases by attaching a provision to the legislation that provides funding for the Treasury Department. One such attempt succeeded in the Senate earlier in the year, but the provision was omitted from the compromise measure moved toward final approval. House and Senate
negotiators announced a tentative agreement earlier in the week to
pass a seven-year extension of the Patriot Act. Key senators lawmakers
involved in the talks balked at the terms, and officials said they
would resume compromise efforts when Congress returns to work in December.
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