S. 86119th CongressSenate Bill

Eliminates automatic increases to pay for Members of Congress, beginning with the 120th Congress.

Official title: A bill to repeal the provision of law that provides automatic pay adjustments for Members of Congress.

Introduced in the SenateDead

This bill appears to be dead.

No action recorded in 1 year, 5 months. The structural status reflects an earlier milestone, not current activity.

This bill eliminates automatic increases to pay for Members of Congress, beginning with the 120th Congress. Current law automatically increases Member pay according to a formula. The annual increase is (1) based on the percentage change in private sector wages as measured by the Employment Cost Index (ECI); and (2) capped at the percentage increase to General Schedule (GS) employees' base pay. The annual adjustment automatically goes into effect unless Congress modifies the increase in legislation.

Introduced Jan 14, 2025
1
Introduced

Filed in the Senate

2
Passed Senate
3
Passed House
4
Became Law

This senate bill has been filed and is working its way through Congress. It will need to pass both the Senate and the House, then be signed by the President to become law.

Who introduced this

Rick Scott

Rick Scott

Republican

U.S. Senator · FL

Introduced solo — no cosponsors joined.

Ask AI About This Bill

Get plain-language answers with direct quotes from the bill text.

to ask questions about this bill.

Your Representatives

Enter your address to see how your representatives voted on this bill.

Your address is only used to find your district and is never saved. See how it works

Votes

Public Opinion

No votes yet — be the first to weigh in.

to cast your vote

Your voice matters — let representatives know where you stand.

Comments

No comments yet. to be the first to weigh in.