Author Topic: Senate votes to deny pensions to convicted lawmakers  (Read 842 times)

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Amianthus

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Senate votes to deny pensions to convicted lawmakers
« on: January 12, 2007, 04:25:23 PM »
(It's about damn time.)

Friday, January 12, 2007

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Members of Congress convicted of serious crimes would lose their taxpayer-paid pensions, sometimes totaling more than $100,000 a year, under a measure unanimously approved by the Senate Friday.

The 87-0 vote to deprive lawbreaking lawmakers of their retirement benefits was part of a comprehensive ethics and lobbying bill that the Senate has taken up as its first piece of legislation in the new Democratic-controlled Congress.

"There's something that really grates in the notion that you can put the public's trust and the public's business up for sale and then walk away and have the people that you betrayed turnaround and pay for you to be able to have a fat pension," said Sen. John Kerry, D-Massachusetts, author of the amendment.

Kerry said there were at least 20 lawmakers convicted of serious crimes receiving pensions, some as high as $125,000 a year.

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