A Pro-Hamas Clown Vandalized a Restaurant Over Its Israeli Flags. There Was Just...
An International Incident Develops As Emmanuel Macron Feuds With Italy Over…Netflix???
It's Not Your Father's Pot Anymore
One's Presence Near a Crime Doesn't Make Them an Expert on Gun Policy
Where Were These 230 Doctors Wanting Medical Records Four Years Ago?
Anti-Gun Organization Shocked to Learn Criminals Break Laws
Kamala Offers Black Men Bribe to Get Their Votes
Trump Vows to 'End All Sanctuary Cities Immediately'
CNN May Have Confirmed Reports of Harris' Plagiarism, but Did You See How...
Look Who Finally Agreed to Campaign for Kamala
Fani Willis Begs Appeals Court to Reinstate Charges Against Trump
Elder Abuse: They're Still Trotting Out Biden to Campaign for Kamala
Apartments in Another City Are Being Taken Over by Tren de Aragua
The CBS News Scandals Keep Getting Worse
A Reality TV Star Admitted That He Pretended to Be Transgender. Here's Why.
Tipsheet

Study: Current Congress Actually Most Productive in Decades

A recent analysis of Library of Congress data by the Pew Research Center revealed that the 115th Congress is “tied with the 110th (2007-08) for the fifth-highest count of substantive laws among the past 16 Congresses at this point in their respective first sessions.”

Advertisement

Pew analyzed measures passed and signed into law up through August 23rd. They grouped as substantive “any legislation other than renaming buildings, awarding medals, commemorating historic events or taking other purely ceremonial actions.”

The 115th Congress has passed 55 measures with 46 of those qualifying as “substantive” and nine categorized by Pew as “ceremonial.”

Of the 46 laws classified as substantive 14 of them were solely “to overturn various rules adopted by the Obama administration, under the 1996 Congressional Review Act,” which, Pew says, “is by far the heaviest use Congress has ever made of the CRA. Before this year, in fact, only one regulation had ever been undone via the procedure specified in that law. Those 14 ‘resolutions of disapproval’ account for about 30% of the substantive laws, and a quarter of all the laws, enacted so far by this Congress.” 

The last time that the House, Senate and White House all were controlled by the same party was the 111th Congress in 2009-10. That Congress, under Obama, enacted 63 laws by this point of its first session, 39 of which were “substantive.”

Advertisement

“Although the current Congress has passed more bills we count as substantive,” Pew notes, “it has been somewhat light on signature accomplishments so far. Besides funding the federal government for the rest of fiscal 2017 and avoiding a potential shutdown, Congress has enacted a sanctions bill targeting Russia, Iran and North Korea; passed the first comprehensive NASA authorization bill in more than six years; and approved a measure intended to improve weather forecasting.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement