A profound disparity in compensation between Suriname’s political elite and its public sector workers has ignited widespread social discontent. While teachers with 35 years of experience barely net SRD 13,000 monthly, nurses remain systematically underpaid, and civil servants survive on minimal allowances, members of De Nationale Assemblee enjoy compensation packages increasingly indefensible to the populace they represent.
The controversial legislation enabling these benefits was passed in the previous parliament shortly before May 2025 elections. The National Democratic Party (NDP), then in opposition, stood alone in principled opposition, condemning the increases as unjust, antisocial, and irreconcilable with the nation’s economic reality. Today, that same party sits in the coalition government, not only accepting but defending the very law they once rejected.
Financial disclosures reveal staggering figures: The President receives SRD 130,364 monthly, while the Assembly Chairperson gets 85% of that amount (approximately SRD 110,000). Regular assembly members earn 60% of the presidential salary (roughly SRD 66,485 gross), but with additional allowances and provisions, their net monthly income approaches SRD 95,000—totaling approximately SRD 132,000 gross.
Beyond base compensation, parliamentarians receive comprehensive medical coverage for themselves and their families—including dental, vision care, and overseas treatment when necessary. Additional benefits include vehicle, housing, communication, and representation allowances; travel and accommodation expenses; domestic travel reimbursements including vehicle rentals; VIP airport facilities; diplomatic passports; and potentially a forthcoming 20% management allowance.
This privileged existence contrasts sharply with a nation where parents struggle to afford public transportation for their children, where healthcare and education sectors must repeatedly strike to be heard, where many work two or three jobs to stay afloat, and where consecutive economic reforms have decimated the middle class.
Proponents argue that assembly members must maintain full-time availability—a reasonable requirement in principle. While formally barred from holding additional government positions, they face virtually no restrictions on private sector activities. Many serve as entrepreneurs, exporters, or consultants, while others enjoy continuous income from previous ministerial, advisory, or civil service roles. The emerging portrait reveals a political class securing itself while demanding sacrifices from the rest of society.
Poetini Atompai (NPS) during the election campaign pledged to amend this law—a promise he now renews with commitment to legislative initiative. While positive, words alone no longer suffice. Society has moved beyond trusting intentions to demanding action: submit the proposal, gather co-sponsors, place it on the agenda, force a vote, and show the nation who supports correction versus who clings to privileges at the treasury’s expense.
Labor unions observe closely while negotiating, recognizing that calls for wage restraint ring hollow while leadership makes no concessions. Negotiations concern not merely percentages but exemplary conduct. Officials frequently claim “no space” exists for increasing civil servant salaries, yet apparent abundance remains for luxury, official travel, and expanding benefits for those in power—a contradiction the public both sees and remembers.
Social media anger appears raw and sometimes unrefined but not unfounded. Terms like “puppet show,” “theater,” and “self-enrichment” emerge from years of disappointment. Cynicism isn’t innate but learned through repeated behavioral patterns.
Nobody claims assembly members should serve without compensation, but remuneration must correspond to level, responsibility, performance, and social context. Those receiving top compensation must deliver excellence: substantive work, attendance, legislation, oversight, and integrity.
“Feeling together,” asserts Atompai—a powerful phrase. But feeling together without sacrificing together constitutes rhetoric, not solidarity. If seriousness exists, it must begin where power resides, not with the populace. Submit the amendment law. Place it on the agenda. Demonstrate who truly wishes to feel together—and who merely wishes to enjoy together.
