An op-ed piece on both the liberal-leaning
Brookings website and the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute website
titled "Five Myths about the 112th Congress" which expired (seemingly literally) on January
3rd, 2013 by Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein takes a brief look at some
of the "achievements" of the last Congress and where thing went so
wrong. Here's a look at one of his arguments, the inaction of Congress.
Many
"experts" feel that the 112th Congress was as bad as the 80th
Congress (1947 - 1948) under President Harry Truman. Here's his address to the first
Republican-dominated Congress in 14 years:
The 80th
Congress is widely viewed as a "do nothing Congress" and was labeled
such by President Truman because they opposed many of the bills passed during
the preceding Roosevelt Administration. Inflation was running rampant and
there was a drastic shortage in post-World War II housing. Here is a list
of President Truman's recommendations that were given in a message to a Special Session of Congress in
July 1947 and broadcast on nationwide radio:
"First, I recommend that an excess profits
tax be reestablished in order to provide a Treasury surplus and to provide a
brake on inflation.
Second, I recommend that consumer credit
controls be restored in order to hold down inflationary credit.
Third, I recommend that the Federal Reserve
Board be given greater authority to regulate inflationary bank credit.
Fourth, I recommend that authority be granted to
regulate speculation on the commodity exchanges.
Fifth, I recommend that authority be granted for
allocation and inventory control of scarce commodities which basically affect
essential industrial production, or the cost of living.
Sixth, I recommend that rent controls be
strengthened, and that adequate appropriations be provided for enforcement, in
order to prevent further unwarranted rent increases.
Seventh, I recommend that standby authority be
granted to ration those few products in short supply which vitally affect the
health and welfare of our people. On the basis of present facts, and unless
further shortages occur, this authority might not have to be used.
Eighth, I recommend that price control be
authorized for scarce commodities which basically affect essential industrial
production or the cost of living. I have said before, and I repeat, that many
profit margins have been adequate to absorb wage increases without the price
increases that have followed. Rising wages and rising standards of living,
based on increasing productivity and a fair distribution of income, is the
American way. Noninflationary wage increases can and should continue to be made
by free collective bargaining. Where the Government imposes a price ceiling,
wage adjustments which can be absorbed within the price ceiling should not be
interfered with by the Government. The Government should have the authority,
however, to limit wage adjustments which would force a break in the price
ceiling, except where wage adjustments are essential to remedy hardship, to
correct inequities, or to prevent an actual lowering of the living standards."
Here are the
closing paragraphs of his speech:
"The
vigor of our democracy is judged by its ability to take decisive
actions--actions which are necessary to maintain our physical and moral
strength and to raise our standards of living. In these days of continued stress, the test of that vigor becomes more
and more difficult. The legislative and executive branches of our Government
can meet that test today. (my bold)
The American people rightfully expect us to meet
it together. I hope that the American people will not look to us in vain."
Apparently,
Washington could learn lessons from the past.
Despite
President Truman's chiding, in mid-August 1947, the White House announced that
Congress had not acted on implementing a tax on excess profits, regulating
speculation in commodities, allocation and inventory of scarce commodities,
stronger rent controls, authority to ration, authority for price controls and
only partly acted on consumer and bank credit controls along with further inaction
on the additional issues of civil rights, aiding education and reforming
Federal pay scales.
Given the
80th Congress's inaction on these key issues and their reputation as "do
nothings", according to the Office
of the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, the 80th Congress passed a total of 906 public
House and Senate Bills and 458 private House and Senate Bills into law during
its two year tenure in 254 days of sitting for the House and 257 days for the
Senate.
Now, let's
look at the modern day "equivalent", America's most recent 112th
Congress. In its First and Second Sessions, the gentlemen and ladies of
the 112th managed to "work/sit/do little" for a total of 309 days for
the House and 303 days for the Senate, a reasonable number and quite comparable
to other sittings. Where the problem lies is in what they accomplished
during that three hundred odd day period. In the First Session, the 112th
Congress enacted 90 public bills into law followed by only 110 in the Second
Session for a total of 200 bills. That’s
a tiny fraction of what was passed by the 80th Congress. Looking back to the stellar-by-comparison 111th Congress, it passed a more reasonable 383 bills in total.
Just in case
you were wondering how just how critical some of the Bills are that will soon
be pondered by the brilliant minds of Washington and the partly newly
minted/partly recycled 113th Congress, here's a gem sponsored by Rep. Michelle
Bachman, not particularly atypical of the issues that Congress deals with on a
daily basis:
This one has
been referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, typical for this sort of Bill.
Looks like we're off to a great start; nothing done, nothing lost.
Apparently,
when the elite of Washington have to deal with critical issues like Post Office
renaming, it's expecting a bit too much of them to solve dilemmas like the
fiscal cliff and the debt ceiling. Unfortunately, it looks like the 113th
Congress is starting off where the 112th left off. It's no wonder that
Congressional job approval numbers look like this:
Just in case
you thought that it was just the left-leaning Obama supporters that were pissed
off, here's a link from an op-ed piece in the
Washington Post by the same Thomas E. Mann and his counterpart at the
right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, Norman
J. Ornstein, who can agree on one thing; in forty years, Washington
and Congress have never been this dysfunctional.
No comments:
Post a Comment