A study has shown that not only is this a "do-nothing" Congress, it's a Congress that
doesn't even show up at the office anymore:
House members have been
in Washington for 56% of all non-holiday weekdays -- essentially, fewer
than three days a week. Senators have walked into the Capitol for 61% of
weekdays.
The weeks are not just
shorter, but consistently so. The Senate did not have a single five-day
work week in Washington for the first seven months of the year. The
House had two.
Of course some have tried to dress this up as you know, more time to speak with "the folks":
The office of House
Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Virginia, which schedules the calendar in
that chamber, defended the time away from Washington.
"It's critical for
members to have district work periods to hear from their constituents on
a variety of matters," said Cantor spokeswoman Megan Whittemore,
"including chronic unemployment, the next steps toward addressing
immigration and our debt crisis."
Which,
as you have long known via moi, is complete bullshit:
9) I love when politicians say that they’re going to go home to “talk to
my constituents.” Really? Has anyone ever seen these people just
wandering around, getting thoughts from the people that voted them into
office? I don’t know anyone who knows anybody that’s been like “...yeah,
so at Arby’s our Senator walked in and we had a long talk....” So far
it seems that the only people these guys talk to in their home states
are their families and hookers. Yet they talk on tv as if they’re going
home and literally setting up a box at an intersection and talking to
“the folks.” The last politician to ride in a car without a roof and
genuinely tried to make eye contact with “the folks” had his brains
sprayed all over Jackie Kennedy’s lap, and don’t think for a second I
didn’t spend the last ten minutes sitting here trying to think of a joke
finishing with “sprayed all over Jackie Kennedy’s lap.”
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