The newly elected firebrand Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., could be in hot water after Federal Election Commission filings show she paid herself thousands of dollars in salary from her successful midterm campaign.

The filing shows the Michigan lawmaker taking more than $17,000 in two disbursements as a salary nearly a month after the conclusion of the 2018 midterm elections.

A candidate can only draw a salary from the official campaign for the duration of their candidacy. The FEC specifies that a candidate no longer qualifies for salary payments from the day after the general election. The two salary disbursements were made on Nov. 16 for $2,000 and on Dec. 1 for $15,500.

"Salary payments may continue until the date when the candidate is no longer considered a candidate for office or until the date of the general election or general election runoff," the FEC states.

In total, Tlaib drew a salary upwards of $45,000 during her eight months as a candidate, with biweekly recurring disbursements of $2,000 and the final sum of $17,500 after the election had concluded.