The Price of Perspective: Why Politicians Need a Pay Cut
There is a dangerous form of cognitive dissonance that occurs when the people writing the laws for the "common man" haven't lived like one in decades. In 2026, a UK Member of Parliament (MP) earns roughly £98,600—slated to hit £110,000 soon. Meanwhile, the median full-time salary for the people they represent sits at approximately £39,000. We are effectively paying our leaders to be out of touch.
The Empathy Gap
Human nature is a fickle thing; comfort breeds complacency. When an MP debates the "cost of living crisis," they do so from the safety of the top 5% of earners. They don't worry about the price of eggs, the crushing weight of a 6% mortgage rate, or the specific panic of an empty fuel tank on a Tuesday morning. By decoupling an MP’s income from the median, we have created a political class that views poverty as an abstract policy problem rather than a lived reality.
Walking with the Commoners
If we truly want a representative democracy, we should mandate that an MP’s gross income never exceeds the national median. Why?
Skin in the Game: If the median wage stagnates, so does theirs. If the economy tanks, they feel the bite at the checkout line just like everyone else. Suddenly, "economic growth" isn't a line on a chart—it’s the difference between a holiday and a staycation.
Filtering for Vocation: High salaries attract high-fliers and careerists. Capping the pay ensures that those who run for office do so because they actually care about public service, not because they want a six-figure stepping stone to a consultancy gig.
The "Sane" Representative: A leader who takes the bus because petrol is too expensive is a leader who will fix the bus network. A leader who survives on £39,000 a year is a leader who understands why a 2% tax hike is a catastrophe for a family of four.
History shows that elites who drift too far from the base eventually lose the ability to govern. It’s time to bring our MPs back to earth—or at least back to the median.