The Senate passed a resolution Thursday that will halt members’ paychecks during a government shutdown, a move intended to motivate them to pass funding bills to keep the country fully operational and federal workers paid. The measure is sponsored by Louisiana GOP Sen. John Kennedy, who argues senators need to face the same delays in pay like thousands of federal workers did during the last two shutdowns that happened this year, Fox News reported.
The resolution applies only to members of the Senate and won’t need to be approved by the House or signed by the president.
If triggered by a failure to fund federal agencies by the deadline, the senators’ pay would be put into an escrow account, meaning there would be no loss in pay. The senators just wouldn’t receive any of it until the shutdown ends.
The resolution won’t go into effect until after the upcoming election cycle in November.
Trending
- Alabama to choose candidates for Tuberville’s open Senate seat
- Political heavyweights look toward November in Silver State
- Virginia report flags financial risks at several rural hospitals
- Two Republicans to face off in redrawn California district
- Biden anti-fossil fuel Interior secretary runs to become governor of No. 2 oil-producing state
- Debt will balloon to 123% of entire US economy by 2036 without action from Congress: GAO
- Trump scores once-elusive peace deal with Iran, easing oil prices ahead of elections
- Biden DOJ targeted parents at school board meetings despite FBI, sheriffs’ objections, memos show