Congressional hopeful Liz May’s last legislative proposal was to double state legislator salaries with annual increases built in.

With her apparent entrance into the Congressional race, former State Representative Liz May, a former leader of the Conservative Republican Caucus would appear to be positioning herself to run to the right of incumbent Congressman Dusty Johnson.  But a cursory look at her legislative record would seem to give a different impression of the self-labeled conservative.

The last bill May was a prime sponsor of, 2018’s House Bill 1310, seems to have been anything but what many South Dakotans would consider conservative.

SD 2018 Legislative Session – HB1310P by Pat Powers on Scribd

Withdrawn by May before it could get a first hearing, Liz May’s final bill – House Bill 1310 – proposed to raise legislative salaries starting in 2019 from $6000 annually to 1/5 the median household income for South Dakotans:

2-4-2. The salary of each member of the Legislature is six thousand dollars equal to one-fifth of the most recent median household income in the state as published by the United States Census Bureau for every the regular legislative session in 2019. The salary shall be increased or decreased annually in accordance with the consumer price index for the preceding year as published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States Department of Labor. No increase in salary under this section may be in excess of three percent.

In 2018, that figure was somewhere in the neighborhood of $56,499, giving legislators under May’s proposal an increase to $11,299.80 annually, or a massive bump of $5299.80 – nearly doubling legislative salaries, along with an annual escalator built in based on the consumer price index, up to 3% annually.

There’s no information immediately available to note why May found a doubling of legislative salaries was to be justified, and no explanation had to be given, as the measure was withdrawn by May before it could be heard in the House State Affairs committee.

In the months that came after, May ran again for the legislature and lost her seat, coming in 4th out of the 4 House candidates in the race in a largely Democrat leaning district.

With her upcoming entrance into the race against incumbent Republican Congressman Dusty Johnson, Liz May might be expecting as part of her effort in the race to challenge Johnson’s record. But in joining the race, she also places her own legislative record under scrutiny.

And when the final bill she offered was to double her legislative salary, as part of her preparation for running for Congress she probably needs to be ready to explain to voters why.

15 thoughts on “Congressional hopeful Liz May’s last legislative proposal was to double state legislator salaries with annual increases built in.”

  1. Legislators are under paid.

    Mickelson got the last raise through. It was needed.

    I’m appreciative of their service for small compensation. The best legislators serve year round.

    1. Governor makes about 30-40k less than her entire cabinet…ridiculous

      AG makes right below the governor

      Both of these positions are severely underpaid.

      Executive director of Board of Regents…talk about overpaid

      Open.sd.gov

      1. Compare constitutional officers to cabinet positions and you can figure out that legislators and elected officials are the ones underpaid. Cabinet positions might not be overpaid but elected officials definitely are underpaid.

        1. I agree our governor and statewide officials do not get paid well in comparison to cabinet members.

          The AG is grossly underpaid for what his earning power is in the private sector.

          This should be addressed so the best people are able to continue to serve.

          Legislators should get paid more also.

  2. I’d be fine with paying them more on the condition that they reimburse us for the legal fees and attorneys fees we have to pay when their stupid laws are declared unconstitutional.

    1. Not until we get rid of these liberal federal judges….totally skew the rulings …no way dies a conservative judge grant all those attorneys fees for the tag along counsel

  3. Why should we pay more for legislators? At least one of them missed almost 25 % of the session in 2019.

  4. The pay should be commensurate to the job required. It might bring talent that would not sell our states rights away for the cost of hot dogs and beer.

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