The parade of indignities has not yet ended for former House Speaker John Boehner, who resigned in October after nearly five years of trying to lead the most polarized and least productive Congress in history. But that wasn’t enough for two conservative congressmen who, having helped show the teary-eyed Republican the door, are now hoping to slam it rudely on his back.

According to a congressional rule dating to 1970, the former Speaker is allowed to keep an office on Capitol Hill for up to five years at taxpayers’ expense—including a budget for up to three highly paid staffers. That doesn’t sit well with Representatives Walter Jones Jr. and Thomas Massie, who held a press conference Wednesday to announce their bill to strip Boehner (and future ex-Speakers) of the privilege.

“I guess there was a time in Congress where plans maybe lasted five years, and the incumbent needed to stick around to see the plan through,” Massie, a Kentucky Republican, told the Huffington Post, which was the only media present at the poorly attended event. (“This is already better attended than most of my Capitol Hill fundraisers,” Massie joked.) “But none of John Boehner's plans have lasted more than six months. I mean, we have managed from crisis, to crisis, to crisis.”

“I guess they’re going to pay for his toilet tissue, too,” Rep. Jones Jr., of North Carolina, added.

Boehner, who was so happy to be resigning that he literally sang “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” on his way out the door, has a net worth of around $2 million, according to Roll Call, so he doesn’t have much to cry about either way. For a man who was once third in line to the presidency, plum lobbying gigs and a book deal are always just a phone call away.

Still, a final slap in the face from members of his own party must sting. And even if Jones Jr. and Massie’s bill doesn’t win much support, the message to the new House Speaker, Rep. Paul Ryan, is clear: tread lightly.