Sentinel & Enterprise

2023 was the year of the do-nothing House

- By Jackie Calmes

It’s a new year but the same old mess in Congress. Instead of a fresh start, lawmakers return next week to their stale, dead- end arguments and legislativ­e gridlock.

And by now the reason they’re mired in the mess is an old story: Repeatedly in 2023, we saw the dysfunctio­n of the MAGA Republican­s who narrowly took control of the House last January, making that chamber virtually ungovernab­le and yielding one of the least productive years in Congress’ history. Just a couple dozen mostly minor bills became law, a fraction of the usual number.

The House and Senate broke for the holidays still bloodied from the unfinished sausage-making. To borrow another lawmaker metaphor, they kicked the can down the road — cans, plural — into 2024.

Yet agreement on lingering issues — spending, Ukraine aid, immigratio­n — hardly comes more easily in an election year; the distractio­ns of the presidenti­al primaries start this month, in Iowa and New Hampshire. Then there is the House Republican­s’ greatest distractio­n of all: their top- priority push to impeach President Joe Biden, on grounds still TBD.

What we’re in for in 2024 is more of the misrule that results when one of our two major parties morphs from a small-government party into an unabashedl­y antigovern­ment bloc.

The federal fiscal year is already three months old and still Congress hasn’t completed the spending bills to cover the government’s annual operations. In 2023, House Republican­s provoked two near- shutdowns over four months. This year we’ll get such threats twice just within the next month.

That’s because Congress, at the insistence of House Republican­s and their neophyte leader, Speaker “MAGA Mike” Johnson, illogicall­y extended stopgap funding for federal programs in separate bills with separate cutoff dates. One measure, including money for farm, transporta­tion, energy and veterans’ programs, expires Jan. 19; the second package, for other large domestic programs and the Pentagon, lapses Feb. 2.

That means the House and Senate will have just 10 days when they return (including a break for the long Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend) to reach agreement before their first budget deadline. Here’s a New Year’s prediction: House Republican­s’ antics will force Congress to miss its first deadline, triggering a partial government shutdown even as the second funding deadline looms.

The hapless House Republican­s say they won’t support another stopgap bill or the typical “omnibus” package combining all government funding, but they’re too divided to

pass the 12 spending bills separately. Their already thin majority shrank further with the yearend resignatio­n of dethroned Speaker Kevin Mccarthy and the expulsion of fabulist fraudster George Santos; a third Republican, Ohio Rep. Bill Johnson, is resigning Jan. 21. And yet House hard-liners are upping their demands for more spending cuts and culture-war add-ons against abortion, drag shows and the like, oblivious to other House Republican­s’ opposition, let alone that of the Democrat- controlled Senate.

In short, the two houses of Congress are farther apart than ever. They haven’t even agreed on the bottom-line figures for the spending bills, a prerequisi­te for setting funding levels for programs within them.

And virtually no one has confidence that the new speaker can corral his caucus. Johnson hails fromamong the anti-government hard-liners, not the pragmatist­s; he counts the Bible as his legislativ­e manual and follows Donald Trump as his North Star.

As a fellow Louisianan, popular outgoing Gov. John Bel Edwards, told Politico recently, “I would feel better about Mike Johnson being speaker of the House if I felt he was someone who really believed in making government work.”

Not being able to pass essential bills is just one aspect of Republican­s’ dysfunctio­n. Blocking bills is another, and they’re good at that.

So it is that Congress hasn’t approved additional aid for Ukraine since the end of 2022, when Democrats controlled thehouse. With the second anniversar­y of Russia’s unprovoked invasion approachin­g, bipartisan majorities in the House and Senate still favor continued Ukraine support as critical to our national security and Europe’s. Yet House Republican leaders echo Trump, Vladimir Putin’s pal, in opposition.

They’re joined by Senate republican­s, including Ukraine supporters, in insisting that Biden and Democrats support an immigratio­n crack down in return formore aid. Yet they can’t agree on what the new immigratio­n measures should be. House Republican­s want far more punitive changes for asylum, deportatio­ns, detentions and border security than their Senate counterpar­ts.

A bipartisan group of senators continued negotiatio­ns for an immigratio­n compromise over the holidays. Any deal, however, would likely draw opposition in the House from both right and left. Meanwhile, shunning compromise, Johnson and about 60 other House Republican­s opted for a photo op, traveling to the U.s.-mexico border Wednesday.

Democrats are no less divided than Republican­s on border issues, between progressiv­es opposed to tough restrictio­ns and centrists eager for Biden to cut just about any immigratio­n deal, to bluntwhat’s become a perilous election-year issue for their party.

For all Congress’ challenges — funding the government, confrontin­g decades- old migration problems and responding to the worst war in Europe sinceworld War II and another engulfing the Mideast — House Republican­s signaled last month that their focus for 2024 is what? Impeaching Biden.

They’d reportedly like to draft articles of impeachmen­t as soon as this month, perhaps for bribery. But they have neither the goods on Biden nor the votes.

“I haven’t seen any [evidence] yet, to date, that shows me that the president did anything wrong,” Ohio Rep. Dave Joyce, a Republican former prosecutor, told NBC News just before Christmas.

No matter — the Javerts among his party colleagues will keep claiming otherwise. And they’ll keep digging for proof, as they have for over a year.

As if they didn’t have anything else to do.

 ?? KEVIN DIETSCH — GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson speaks at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023.
KEVIN DIETSCH — GETTY IMAGES U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson speaks at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023.

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