After a chaotic Congress, lawmakers head home to ask voters: How about
another term?
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[September 28, 2024]
By LISA MASCARO and KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress is off for the campaign season, as lawmakers
from one of the most chaotic and unproductive legislative sessions in
modern times try to persuade voters to keep them on the job.
The House Republicans led the tumult — painstakingly electing their
speaker in a bitter public feud then swiftly booting him from office,
something never before seen. But the deeply divided Senate was not
immune from the inaction, lumbering through a modest agenda.
Taken together, the lack of big-ticket accomplishments is underscoring a
volatile November election season with control of Congress a toss-up.
“The good thing is Congress didn’t allow much to go through law," said
Ryan Zinke, a former Trump administration Cabinet secretary who is now
running for re-election to his House seat in Montana. “But what it
didn’t do, either, is it didn’t reach its potential.”
House Republicans blocked not only the Biden-Harris priorities of the
Democrats, he said, but “in many ways, we blocked our own agenda.”
The situation the lawmakers find themselves in, particularly the House
Republicans trying to preserve their slim majority control, is not
academic. The House Republicans now have to face the voters who sent
them to Washington on their “Commitment to America” two years ago having
come up well short.
New House Speaker Mike Johnson remains upbeat that Republicans will not
only stay in control but win more seats to bolster their ranks, but it’s
been an uphill slog for him during a tight election year.
“It’s almost impossible,” said Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker,
adding he would have little patience for hearing out the “idiots” he
said Johnson has to contend with in leading a slim four-seat majority.
“You had a group grow up in the House Republican Party who think that
voting no and getting nothing done is a victory," Gingrich said Friday
at the Capitol. “You’ve got to find a way to break up this idea that
being a nihilist and getting nothing done is a success. It’s not.”
Congress has passed fewer substantive bills than is normal, putting this
two-year session on track to be among the least productive sessions
ever. The representatives and senators returned to Washington for a
brief three-week September work period and essentially punted one of
their most important tasks, funding the federal government, for a few
more months, to December.
While Congress succeeded in avoiding a federal shutdown — which Johnson
said would have been “malpractice” so close to the November election —
it left town mid-week, several days earlier than scheduled, as a
hurricane bore down on the Southern Gulf states. It won't return until
mid-November.
“Can anyone in America name a single thing that House Republicans have
done on their own to make life better for the American people?" asked
Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, who is in line to become House
speaker if his party wins majority control. “The answer is no.”
Many lawmakers bristled at being lumped together with what transpired in
their House GOP majority. There was the weeklong fight in January 2023
to elect Kevin McCarthy as House speaker. And the nearly month-long
spectacle when a small number of far-right Republicans booted him from
the speaker's office. And failed bills that never got off the House
floor.
Those seeking re-election in some of the most hard-fought House
districts offered a preview of the conversations they will have with
voters.
Rep. Aaron Bean, R-Fla., said he would emphasize his work on constituent
services and his voting record.
“I don’t know if you’re going to judge an individual member on how the
body does collectively,” said Bean, a freshman. “I don’t think that’s a
fair comparison. That is apples to apricots.”
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A U.S. Capitol Police officer stands watch as lawmakers leave the
House of Representatives after voting on an interim spending bill to
avoid a government shutdown next week, at the Capitol in Washington,
Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., said the House has been a “firewall”
against spending.
“What we’ve been able to stop is very significant,” he said.
“We haven’t necessarily gotten everything passed,” he added. “But
what we have done is set a template for what needs to be done to fix
these problems, whether it’s the border, the economy, national
security, investing in our military, cutting taxes, reducing
spending.”
Republican Rep. Mike Lawler, who is in a competitive race in New
York, pointed to work he has done to secure needed infrastructure
money for his district as well as his own various bills. One that
passed the House and Senate this past week directs the U.S. Secret
Service to protect Donald Trump and other major party presidential
nominees by the same standards it does the president.
“So I have a record to run on that I’m certainly proud of," he said.
Besides, Lawler asked, what about the Senate?
“I mean there’s always a focus on the House," he said. "But if
anybody looked down the hallway, Chuck Schumer and Senate Democrats
have done what? What exactly are they running on?"
The Senate, historically a slower-moving body designed that way by
the founders, plodded along at an even more leisurely pace this
year, staying away from Washington many Mondays and almost all
Fridays.
Narrowly led by Democrats under Majority Leader Schumer, the Senate
has succeeded in confirming a number of Biden’s judicial nominees,
particularly women and people of color, to create a judiciary more
representative of the nation. But senators have not been able to
land many other big priorities.
In fact, one of the most talked about pieces of legislation in the
campaign — the Senate's bipartisan effort to secure the U.S.-Mexico
border and update some immigration laws — collapsed when Trump
declined to support it.
“This has been a very, very unproductive Congress,” said Senate
Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, mentioning the appropriations
bills and a farm bill reauthorization that are stalled. There's
“plenty of blame to go around.”
Oddly, as the Capitol emptied out, it briefly refilled Friday for
the 30th anniversary of another Republican milestone — the 1994
Contract with America, the campaign promises that brought Gingrich
and his party to power after four decades in the minority.
Two years ago, McCarthy, who was in line to become speaker, gathered
House Republicans at a manufacturing plant along the Monongahela
River in Pennsylvania to unveil their own “Commitment to America”
agenda that gave a nod to the Gingrich era. Rising stars of the GOP,
including firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, were in the front
row.
McCarthy, Johnson and many others from today's House GOP were not
around for Friday's ceremony, with its reception in the Capitol
basement.
Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, who was among the eight Republicans
who led the vote to oust McCarthy last year, said this was the House
GOP majority's biggest accomplishment: "Not wrecking the country any
further. We don’t need any more laws."
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Associated Press writer Stephen Groves contributed to this report.
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