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BumRushDaShow

(163,962 posts)
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 05:56 PM 12 hrs ago

Marjorie Taylor Greene will qualify for a congressional pension - by a matter of days - after she resigns from office

Source: The Independent

Friday 28 November 2025 14:51 EST


Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene will be eligible for her congressional pension after she steps down in January, by a matter of days. The Republican firebrand announced last week that she would prematurely exit her job as the House representative for Georgia’s 14th congressional district.

“I will be resigning from office with my last day being January 5, 2026,” she wrote at the end of a four-page statement. According to the National Taxpayers Union, members of Congress qualify for a congressional pension if they have served five full years in Congress.

Greene arrived in Congress on January 3, 2021, meaning that she will be just over the five-year minimum when she leaves. This does not mean that Greene, 51, would receive her pension immediately. Members of Congress are eligible for their pensions once they hit the age of 62.

The annual congressional salary is $174,000 and members of Congress receive 1 percent of their salary annually as part of their pension. If a member has 20 years of service, and serves until the age of 62, they receive 1.1 percent of their salary as a pension.

Read more: https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/us-politics/mtg-congressional-pension-resignation-house-b2874557.html



I think a number of people have already noted that about her timing (and I have chimed in that in contrast to MTG, George Santos was booted before getting the eligible number of years, meaning serving at least 2.5 terms).

But what the article left out, is that since the more recent crop of members are on FERS (which was only mentioned later in the article), like the more recent civil service employees who were on-boarded since around the mid-80s when FERS first rolled out, she is ALSO going to get Social Security (assuming she has accumulated 40 quarters based on past and future work history, by the time she has the age), because they pay into that too. So their retirement is a little bit "annuity", and the rest is from whatever they invested into the TSP (Thrift Savings Plan) + Social Security.
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TexLaProgressive

(12,631 posts)
7. I don't disagree with that, but
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:30 PM
12 hrs ago

I don't know anyone who would leave their job a couple of months before vesting. She will get $8,700 per month starting at age 62. That's in 11 years.

3catwoman3

(28,305 posts)
10. Not a fortune, to be sure, but some handy pocket change...
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:42 PM
12 hrs ago

...for 5 years of doing nothing.

Hope22

(4,364 posts)
11. Her net worth jumped by over 10 million while she was in office.
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:43 PM
12 hrs ago

And I use that term loosely. A grifter and an active participant in planning the insurrection! She doesn’t deserve a penny. If they count the days the government was shut down and she did zero work she would be short of the requirement.

Irish_Dem

(78,301 posts)
3. Some articles report Marge did a lot of insider trading while in office.
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:00 PM
12 hrs ago

Got rich on the public payroll.

Silent Type

(12,188 posts)
4. Glad she's gone, but any Democrat would do the same. Less than $9K ain't much for a pension.
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:02 PM
12 hrs ago

stopdiggin

(14,796 posts)
6. not much 'underhanded' or nefarious in this. NOR (even in blue collar terms) much of a windfall
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:29 PM
12 hrs ago

The reason this hasn't, and won't gain a lot of traction ... Is mostly because it doesn't deserve much.

Aussie105

(7,470 posts)
13. There is too much money in US politics.
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 10:52 PM
7 hrs ago

The pay, the pension, the ability to grift.

Attracts the bottom feeders, not the Leaders of the Future.

niyad

(128,888 posts)
16. I wish people would go read the congressional pension plan rules.
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 11:00 PM
7 hrs ago

That last quoted paragraph is poorly written, to say the least.

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