Jim DeMint has built a reputation as perhaps the Senate’s foremost small government champion. So, will he save taxpayers money by declining to cash in the roughly $37,000-per-year federal pension he’ll be in line to start receiving next year? He won’t say.
DeMint’s office hasn’t responded to multiple inquiries since Thursday from msnbc.com about whether he’ll accept his pension, now that he’s announced he’s leaving the Senate to run the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank.
It’s not likely DeMint, a South Carolina Republican, will need the money. Ed Feulner, the man DeMint will replace as Heritage’s president, earned a salary of more than $1 million in 2010, records show.
Declining the payout would be consistent with DeMint’s concern about government debt. A 2010 Congressional Research Service study found that U.S. government pension programs had a shortfall of $674.2 billion, and the program has been eyed as a cost-cutting target.
DeMint has been at the forefront of the movement to raise concerns about other debt-burdened government pension systems, leading the opposition to efforts to bail out underfunded state pension programs.
“Out of political self-interest, state and local politicians have given public sector unions much higher wages and more generous benefits than their private sector counterparts, all at the expense of current and future taxpayers,” noted a 2011 report by the Republican Joint Economic Committee, authored by DeMint and Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas).









