Similar to overpaid NFL “star” Jay Cutler’s reign of
terror as the starting quarterback for the Chicago Bears, the best
thing we can say about the 113th session of Congress is that
it’s over. Setting a new standard for lethargic mediocrity, the body passed just 200 bills over the last
two years. By comparison, the 80th session of 1947-1948, affectionately referred to as the “Do-Nothing Congress,”
shepherded a whopping 900 pieces of legislation. Harry Truman’s clever
branding of Washington’s stuffed shirts was accurate at the time, but
seems quaintly innocent from the vantage point of late 2014.
In an Associated Press piece entitled, 113th Congress Ends With More Fights Than Feats,
writer Alan Fram observes (somewhat poetically), “The tempestuous 113th
Congress has limped out of Washington for the last time, capping two
years of modest and infrequent legislating that was overshadowed by
partisan clashes, gridlock and investigations.” Limp is right. What
little paperwork did make it to the President’s desk did nothing to
address the nation’s broken immigration system, declining
infrastructure, archaic and biased tax code, unlivable minimum wage and a
host of other dire issues rendering America less functional.
Of course, despite maintaining a despotic
stranglehold on the House of Representatives, none of this should be
blamed on the repugican cabal. Just ask them:
Mitch McConnell:
“How many times did we have the point of the week?… It was designed to
make us walk the plank. It had nothing to do with getting a legislative
outcome.”
Michael Steel, spokesman for John Boehner: The repugicans passed “jobs bill after jobs bill…But Washington Democrats —
including President Obama and Senate Democratic leaders — have utterly
failed to act.”
Moira Bagley Smith, spokeswoman for Steve Scalise:
“Considering the Senate is sitting on over 350 pieces of House-passed
legislation from this Congress, I believe Senator Reid’s chamber
single-handedly has earned the title of ‘least productive…’The contrast
in productivity between these two chambers couldn’t be more obvious.”
Examples of these “350 pieces of House-passed legislation” include more than 50 votes designed to kill or weaken the now clearly successful Affordable Care Act.
And if you can’t recall the reported avalanche of awesome repugican
jobs bills, you are not alone. Meanwhile in the Democratic-led Senate,
legislation designed to raise the federal minimum wage, create equal pay
for women, improve the student loan morass and extend jobless benefits
for the long-term unemployed, proved DOA in the House.
So goodbye and good riddance 113th Congress, with your 15 percent approval rating. Better luck next year. Oh wait.
Per writer Aileen Graef of UPI, “When the
114th Congress enters its first session in January, it will be
controlled by the repugican cabal which has already vowed to fight the
White House on contentious issues including healthcare and immigration.
With President Obama waiting to meet the new Congress ready to veto, it
spells a grim future for productivity and approval ratings.”
As I suggested shortly after the November midterm thefts,
frustrated voters who thought they were sending President Obama and the
Democrats a message at the ballot box (“Do something!”) were speaking
to the wrong party. There’s no reason to believe that the 114th
session will be any more productive than the last. Stonewalling has
proven a successful repugican cabal ballot box-theft strategy. Nothing will change until we
demand it, and stop rewarding sandbaggers with additional terms in
office.
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