113th Congress ends with more fights than feats

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Tuesday. McConnell will take over as the new Senate majority leader when the 114th Congress convenes in January.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Tuesday. McConnell will take over as the new Senate majority leader when the 114th Congress convenes in January.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The tempestuous 113th Congress has limped out of Washington for the last time, capping two years of modest and infrequent legislating that was overshadowed by partisan clashes, gridlock and investigations.

"Thank God it's over," Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said as he left the Capitol late Tuesday.

How's this for a legacy? More than 200 bills became law during the past two years, according to congressional data. That was the fewest since at least 1947 and 1948, when what President Harry Truman dubbed "the do-nothing Congress" enacted more than 900 laws.

This Congress did less than the do-nothing one.

Each party accused the other of scuttling bills for political purposes ahead of November's midterm elections, which gave Republicans firm House and Senate control next year.

"How many times did we have the point of the week?" Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said about Democratic tactics Wednesday in an interview with the Associated Press. "It was designed to make us walk the plank. It had nothing to do with getting a legislative outcome."

No. 2 Senate Democratic Leader Richard Durbin of Illinois blamed the GOP.

"We have a president who was facing a headwind, Republicans opposing him in Congress and a decline in popularity," Durbin said. "Republicans saw no reason to give us any legislative help."

Efforts to revamp the immigration system, tighten gun buyers' background checks and force work on the Keystone XL oil pipeline all foundered as the Republican-run House and Democratic-led Senate check-mated each other's priorities. Across-the-board spending cuts designed to be so painful that they would force the two parties to negotiate deficit reduction took effect anyway, attempts to overhaul the tax code went nowhere, and each chamber passed a budget that the other ignored.

The partisan impasse was complicated by conservative tea party lawmakers whom GOP leaders often found unmanageable. That helped spark a 16-day partial government shutdown that was hated by voters and became one of this Congress' hallmarks.

On the last day, the Democratic-controlled Senate confirmed a dozen of President Barack Obama's judicial appointees and sent the White House legislation extending tax breaks for working-class people and special interests alike.

But an 11th-hour attempt to renew a federal program covering part of the cost of losses from terrorism was sidetracked by retiring Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who called it a giveaway to the private insurance industry. And while Obama signed 30 more bills into law Tuesday, they were mostly minor - including one honoring golfer Jack Nicklaus with a congressional gold medal for his "excellence and good sportsmanship."

Through two years, the bar for accomplishments dipped so low that routine functions like averting a federal default and keeping government agencies open seemed like crowning achievements.

As if to underscore the turmoil around him, Senate Chaplain Barry Black opened one session last year by praying, "Rise up, O God, and save us from ourselves."

Republicans led congressional investigations of the IRS' mistreatment of conservative groups and the deadly 2012 attacks on Americans in Benghazi, Libya. Both parties decried poor medical care by the Veterans' Affairs Department.

Democrats unilaterally weakened filibusters, the Senate's century-old rule that helps the minority party block action it opposes. Unimpeded, Democrats then confirmed a pile of Obama's stalled judiciary and executive branch nominees.

Before leaving, Congress approved legislation financing federal agencies through September, but not without revolts in both parties. Conservatives bolted because the bill didn't halt Obama's executive actions deferring deportations of millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally, while liberals rebelled against its eased restrictions on banks and big political donors.

Other accomplishments included a modest budget deal that capped spending and rolled back some government-wide cuts. Lawmakers provided $60 billion for victims of Hurricane Sandy, passed a farm bill and eased flood insurance costs for homeowners.

They provided billions to improve veterans' medical care, linked student loan interest rates to market prices and voted to arm and train Syrian rebels. They renewed curbs on undetectable guns, but didn't tighten them.

The House voted more than 50 times to kill or weaken Obama's 2010 health care law, perhaps his proudest achievement. It voted to block the administration from curbing carbon emissions from coal-fired plants and protecting streams and wetlands from pollution, to deport many immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally and to ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

None of these bills cleared the Senate.

The Senate voted on bills raising the federal minimum wage, pressing employers to pay women the same as men, letting students refinance college loans and extending jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed.

All died.

Upcoming Events