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Reading: NYC Council’s 16% Self-Raise Blocked: Inside the Power Play That Saved Taxpayers $24K Per Politician
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NYC Council’s 16% Self-Raise Blocked: Inside the Power Play That Saved Taxpayers $24K Per Politician

Last updated: January 12, 2026 5:11 am
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NYC Council’s 16% Self-Raise Blocked: Inside the Power Play That Saved Taxpayers K Per Politician
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A 16% salary bump for 51 council members—worth $1.2 million a year—was quietly crushed by new Speaker Julie Menin, exposing a rift inside the progressive caucus and setting up a proxy war with Mayor Zohran Mamdani over who controls the city’s purse strings.

The Bill That Died in Silence

Intro 1493—sponsored by Queens Democrat Nantasha Williams—would have lifted every council member’s base pay from $148,500 to $172,500, an instant $24,000 windfall. The 16% leap would have cost taxpayers $1.22 million annually before fringe benefits.

Williams quietly circled the bill among allies in the progressive caucus last month, betting that a lame-duck speaker would let it slide through. Instead, Julie Menin, sworn in January 5, slammed the brakes within days, telling colleagues the body “has never done their own pay raise” and would not start under her watch, a source close to the speaker confirmed.

Newly minted City Council Speaker Julie Menin
Newly minted City Council Speaker Julie Menin squashed council’s plan to give themselves a pay raise. Matthew McDermott

Why Menin Killed It—And Who Benefits

Menin’s veto was strategic: approving a self-raise weeks after a budget squeeze and subway-fare hikes would have handed Mayor Eric Adams—and every fiscal conservative challenger—an election-year cudgel. Instead, she pivoted to a Quadrennial Commission, a three-member panel appointed by the mayor that last delivered raises in 2016.

The maneuver shields the council from direct blame while keeping the raise possibility alive. Progressives get political cover; Menin asserts authority; taxpayers temporarily dodge a bullet.

Historical Pattern: 1987-2016, Five Raises, Zero Votes

Since the commission system launched in 1987, council salaries have climbed 126%—from $55,000 to today’s $148,500—without a single public floor vote. Each jump followed a mayoral panel recommendation, insulating lawmakers from backlash, a timeline tracked by City & State.

What Progressives Want Next

Williams and co-sponsor Shaun Abreu will introduce a replacement bill within weeks, sources said. The new language deletes the direct-raise clause and instead compels Mayor Mamdani to convene a commission “expeditiously.”

The goal: fast-track a 2026 recommendation before the next budget cycle, locking in higher pay ahead of 2027 elections. Progressives argue the raise is overdue to match inflation and retain talent; critics call it tone-deaf when median household income in the Bronx remains $40,000.

Nantasha Williams, primary sponsor of the blocked pay-raise bill
Nantasha Williams, the bill’s primary sponsor, thanked Menin for her leadership. Gerardo Romo / NYC Council

The Taxpayer Math

  • Current salary: $148,500 × 51 members = $7.57 million
  • Proposed salary: $172,500 × 51 members = $8.80 million
  • Annual extra cost: $1.23 million
  • Four-year cost: $4.92 million—before pension spikes

Political Fallout: A Progressive Split

The failed coup exposes a fracture inside the 24-member progressive caucus. Moderates feared voting for a self-raise would appear on GOP attack ads in swing districts; hard-liners insisted fiscal justice applies to lawmakers too. Menin’s compromise keeps both factions united—at least until the commission releases its number.

City Hall source confirms Speaker Menin's transparency stance
“She wants to do it in a way that is accountable and transparent,” a source close to Menin told The Post. Robert Miller

Bottom Line: Raise Delayed, Not Denied

Taxpayers won this round, but the game is procedural, not principled. A mayoral commission can still recommend—and likely will—the same 16% bump by summer. The only difference: lawmakers won’t cast a public vote, shielding them from accountability while pocketing the extra cash.

Watch the mayor’s appointments: if he stacks the panel with labor-friendly allies, the raise resurfaces as an “independent” necessity. If he stalls, progressives will blame him for starving public service. Either way, $24,000 per council member is still on the table—just wrapped in prettier paper.

Stay ahead of City Hall’s next move. For the fastest, most authoritative analysis of every NYC power play, keep reading onlytrustedinfo.com.

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