'Working Class' Reps Say They Can't Afford D.C. Rents While Earning $174,000 a Year
Progressive politicians are irritated they have to make the same tradeoffs in their living situation as other high-income professionals.

When the federal government moved down to Washington, D.C., in 1800, lawmakers grumbled about leaving behind Philadelphia's plentiful accommodations for the new capital's limited housing stock of boarding houses and taverns.
Thus was established a tradition of politicians complaining about finding housing in D.C., which continues to this day.
Amongst the incoming 118th Congress are several freshmen progressive representatives who say that having to spend their $174,000 congressional salary on housing in the District is not just difficult but a deliberate effort to exclude them from the government.
"For those of us who are working-class, this is yet another reminder that this place wasn't designed for people who actually represent their communities," said freshman Rep. Delia Ramirez (D–Ill.) to The Cut yesterday.
Ramirez—herself a homeowner and landlord back in her district—said that D.C.'s housing costs are so high that she's had to give up on her plan of renting an apartment by herself. Instead, she is splitting the $3,000 rent on a Capitol Hill rowhouse with another congresswoman.
Some 34 percent of D.C. households, and 43 percent of renter households, are considered cost-burdened, meaning they spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing. Ramirez is certainly more fortunate than that. Per the numbers she gave The Cut, she's paying only 10 percent of her congressional salary on her D.C. accommodations.
The Cut nevertheless asserts that Ramirez "knows the housing struggle." She apparently isn't the only one.
In December last year, freshman Rep. Maxwell Alejandro Frost (D–Fla.), the country's first Gen Z congressman, garnered a lot of media attention when he said that his bad credit allegedly cost him an apartment and an application fee in the city's ritzy, Capitol-adjacent Navy Yard neighborhood.
"This ain't meant for people who don't already have money," he said on Twitter in December. He told the Washington Post he'd try his luck with "mom-and-pop" landlords and, if need be, rely on couch-surfing or Airbnb until something more permanent materialized.
Frost's struggle earned him a lot of headlines and the public sympathy of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.), who had likewise complained about her alleged inability, repeated credulously in the press, to afford housing in D.C. when she was first elected in 2018.
"Been there," she said on Twitter. "This is one of many ways Congress structures itself to exclude and push out the few working-class people who *do* get elected."
None of these "working class" representatives have been pushed out of office by D.C.'s admittedly high housing costs.
At most, they've had to settle for a housing situation that's somewhat less spacious, convenient, or solitary than they'd been hoping for. (Ocasio-Cortez doesn't seem to have had to make any such compromises. The Free Beacon reports she's settled in a luxury building in Navy Yard.)
In this light, the complaints from Ramirez, Frost, and Ocasio-Cortez come across as less than revolutionary. One might even consider them entitled. They certainly lack perspective.
All are trying to lay claim to a working-class political identity while demanding they be freed from having to make tradeoffs in their living situation that even well-salaried professionals in D.C. have to put up with.
A need for space might mean sacrificing proximity to the office. Economizing on rent might mean forgoing the privacy of living alone. Sometimes, when moving to a new city, you have to fill out more than one lease application or rent an Airbnb for a while.
Members of Congress having to do this doesn't seem like the biggest scandal in the world.
D.C. is indeed unaffordable to many people who earn well below $174,000 a year. Making the city more affordable to them would involve the elimination of, or at least easing of, zoning and height restrictions that limit how much new housing can be built.
To their credit, both Ocasio-Cortez and Frost call out these "exclusionary zoning" restrictions in their housing platforms. To their demerit, they propose some pretty heavy-handed federal interventions to eliminate them. They also combine their zoning reform proposals with destructive nationwide rent control.
In truth, outside of attaching some strings to federal grants, there's not much the U.S. Congress can do to reform state and local housing laws.
The one exception, of course, is D.C.
The District's home rule status means that Congress retains ultimate legislative authority over the city. If Frost, Ramirez, and others wanted to make their new home more affordable truly, they could put forward a bill eliminating the city's zoning restrictions. They could introduce legislation repealing the city's high Airbnb taxes, costing Frost a pretty penny while he looks for more permanent housing.
They might not fix all these freshman representatives' problems. Even if D.C. were turned into a YIMBY utopia freed from zoning, renters will still have to undergo credit checks and make tradeoffs between having a yard and walking to work.
But a more affordable city means more working-class people could live alongside highly paid members of Congress.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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They are just marxists demanding a free lunch at others expense, exactly the kind of thing you support and vote for Bitches.
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Congress should give them an advance on their graft so they can get settled.
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Boo fugging hoo.
Pathetic. I bet all the working class people who thought they were doing pretty well making $60k a year have a lot of sympathy for these assholes.
60k is considered working class these days? That's almost the median household income. Hardly what I would call "poor" for a single person's salary.
I wouldn't equate "working class" with "poor" but more with type of job. I picked a number that seems like a good salary for a blue collar job.
That's fair, but if we're going to talk about the types of jobs people are doing then congress critters are, absolutely by definition, not "working class".
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If they didn't know the salary and cost of living when they chose to run for office, maybe they should resign as too stupid for the house that creates all spending bills.
Oh, wait.
Just what I was going to say.
How about get executed? Seriously, if you take an oath of office that you plainly can’t and don’t intend to uphold, why not? It’s not like we all took an oath not to execute traitors and/or saboteurs.
They are just going to vote yes along party lines without reading anything. They might as well stay home and phone it in.
This article would have been a laugh riot back in the Tim Cavanaugh days.
It is still a laugh riot. I'm laughing.
The District's home rule status means that Congress retains ultimate legislative authority over the city. If Frost, Ramirez, and others wanted to make their new home more affordable truly, they could put forward a bill eliminating the city's zoning restrictions.
If politicians really thought sea level rise were imminent they wouldn't be buying expensive estates on the beach at Martha's Vineyard.
Watch what they do, not what they say.
This article, written by a clinger, mentions and criticizes plenty of Democrats.
Perhaps this author is too young to remember the right-wing legislators who not only whined about housing costs in D.C. but also freeloaded on taxpayers for years by residing in their government-provided workspaces.
Waaaaaaaa
citation please?
fuck off and die, asshole bigot/
but also freeloaded on taxpayers for years by residing in their government-provided workspaces.
Kirkles would charge deployed sailors rent.
This just means they haven't yet figured out how to leverage their legislative power to engage in insider trading, which is legal for Congress. Once they do that they'll be millionaires like the rest of our political class.
Some, like my former Rep. Cori Bush, are probably too stupid to ever figure it out.
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Guess we all know where all our money is going...
Yep; Washington D.C. the richest of the richest 'poor' working class reps.
Amazing how much wealth controllers of Gov-Guns can amass working so HARD bitching and whining for more THEFT...
$3k a month is not a stretch on a $174k salary.
Not if you add in the required 6x $20 cocktails per night. Also the hooker budget and the cocaine budget.
Only an idiot Congressman pays for his own drinks, hookers, and blow.
These are freshmen and freshwomen. They will learn the graft if they stick around a few terms.
If they cut taxes, they'd have more income available for housing.
The money flow into Washington IS the lobbying industry. The net payroll of the lobbying industry is 3 times the payroll of the civil servants in the metropolitan area. It is not a swamp, it is an inflated zoo. The craziest thing is that the whole shebang is tax deductible which puts the rest of us subsidizing the mess.
$3,000 rent per month times 12 is $36,000. Divide that by $174,000 and that's around 20% of your income for housing. Poor babies.
They were splitting the $3000
"To their credit, both Ocasio-Cortez and Frost call out these "exclusionary zoning" restrictions in their housing platforms. To their demerit, they propose some pretty heavy-handed federal interventions to eliminate them."
LOL careful, don't want to admit outright to readers the libertarian solution relies on voluntary actions that will never happen, and thus isn't a solution at all, merely an excuse to claim you have one, while the real policy is to continue to let the wealthy run roughshod over everyone and everything until human nature itself changes.
Voluntary actions that the government has to take….
A simple solution to this dilemma is to move the capital to the geographical center of the US, some place like Omaha. Then move all the bureaucratic headquarters to places that receive those bureaucratic functions, i.e. USDA to Cedar Rapids, IA and Land Management to Reno, NV.
For Departments that have no simple connection to a geographic location (Defense, Justice, etc), disperse them to places that are central to the US but DO NOT put any bureaucracy co-located in the capital. We don't want to make it easy for the swamp creatures to slither.
Simple, but painful.
Drag all three of these idiots into the street, put a bullet in the back of the head of each, and inform their districts that they will remain unrepresented in Congress until after the next decennial census, on the grounds that they demonstrated gross irresponsibility in the exercise of the franchise.
While AOC and her compadres were "working class" in the past, no one who is paid (regardless of whether they "earned" it) $174,000 a year to perform a white-collar job can be considered working class. That having been said, members of Congress do have the expense of maintaining two residences, unless they live in metropolitan Washington, or commute by Amtrak to and from Wilmington, Delaware.
I think it's outrageous that they can't afford to live in DC. If I were a progressive congressthing, I'd resign in protest.
Making the city more affordable to them would involve the elimination of, or at least easing of, zoning and height restrictions
Look, I don't like short people either, but I think height restrictions for housing goes too far.
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Rent will always rise to equal the bloated salaries of the area area. If they’re earning $174,000 a year and up, then you’re going to be competing with each other forcing your prices up. If we gave them each $1 million a year guess what would happen to rent? This is not just Congress critters, the entire government makes a great income at our expense. Do you think the voters would catch on when they see that government has the lowest attrition rate
“Making the city more affordable to them would involve the elimination of, or at least easing of, zoning and height restrictions”
Every city in this country has a process to change the zoning (and even request height variances) of a given property. Three guesses what usually stops someone from completing that process. As always, the libertarian solution is get the government out of the way as much as possible and let the market decide.
(This is not an outright endorsement of zoning laws, as many are overly burdensome and just downright authoritarian by trying to tell property owners the materials and even colors they’re allowed to use. However, I’m sure very few libertarians have a problem with the rules that keep a pig processing plant out of a residential neighborhood.)
I have a problem with such zoning laws. People should pay market value for housing far enough from a pig processing plant. Or the pig processing plant should be liable to residents for its noise and/or scent pollution. There is a libertarian solution to zoning, whereas the current system is pretty much communist.
Give me a post on a committee
Give me a chance to control
I'm just a poor Dem in the Progressive Caucus
Got here by selling my soul
I'll take the long night, impossible odds
Dialing up calls to my donors
If it takes all that to be just what I am
Well I'm gonna be a "working class" Dem
If they're middle class they should live in a middle class neighborhood instead of the ritzy places.
Exactly!
Welcome to you own economic polices. Now imagine the rest of us that make well under $100,000 a year!
Clearly, these people have not learned how to use their positions to get millions. They should ask AOC for advice.
Or better yet, Nancy Pelosi, probably the all time queen of insider trading.
Of couple of years of "investing" in America's premiere taxpayer-funded private innovators like Pfizer and Moderna should be enough to get you poor reps out of that shitty Capitol Hill condo.
Hang on for four of five terms, and who knows, you might even be able to buy one of those eight figure Kalorama McMansuons right down the street from Block Insane Yomomna himself!
Instead of making "DC affordable", let's just move Congress to cheap office buildings in distressed cities like Detroit: instant affordability. We can rotate and change the city every decade.
Get an apartment in Delaware and take the Amtrak in every day. Then you can trade "Joey, baby!" stories with the conductor even though hr's dead.
A rep is only there for 2 years. So they have to put cereers on hold. Travel expenses are high. Good ones get a lot of screen time and need nice clothes. But also, they have to have a place in their home district and so DC is a second home. Senators might be able to sell a home because 6 years may be enough to eat the transaction costs.
But seriously, their point is a good one and you all know it. DC is expensive and if we make it a hardship only the rich can afford to be reps or, like low-paid cops, they will be susceptible to bribes. They are also making a political point. If it is expensive for them at $174K imagine how hard it is for food service workers.
A good journalist would point this out. They might dig a bit deeper. Do they get travel expenses? Any help with food like a per diem? So many questions. Instead, Reason goes after the superficial piece because they just want to score points instead of doing some serious analysis.
Why should anybody give a f*ck? If you can't make ends meet in DC, don't take a job in DC.
Pooor loooter BAYBEEEZ! Izzat nasty old Reason magazine kicking sand in their wrinkled little faces?
Being a rep is usually a second job, and their job at home that they put "on hold" is probably a higher class job or business they will still be earning money from.
And for a second job that pays $174K a year, that is plenty to pay $3K per month rent. Being picky is not an excuse to say you can't find an apartment.
I would have liked to see that too. Legislators do have an unusual requirement that they more or less have to maintain two homes.
If cost-burdened is over 30% of income, that should include both of them.
That being said, I'm not crying about someone getting one of the most exclusive jobs in the world complaining they have a commute or a roommate. Join the crowd.
"Earning!" Looter politicians pelfered by subsidized soft machines to order the initiation of force against the very suckers robbed to pay the subsidies... are "earning"? Izzis Reason-stand-up Comedy Hour?
The "working class" don't own rental properties or earn $174,000! Bunch of whiners.
The working class has more skills than driving an Uber, skills like welding, woodworking, carpentry, etc. I doubt any of these young Democrats has such skills.
I think all representatives should be paid the median salary of the district they represent. We can convert some of the unused or minimal used federal buildings in the DC area to apartments and house each representative based on family needs. Maybe provide a small stipend to cover the added expense of food and transportation, otherwise, let them feel our pain. Maybe then they will be better legislators.
Welcome to how the non-'Political Aristocracy' lives, hand to mouth.
They can live in their office like Paul Ryan did.
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