Even at its liveliest, the U.S. Senate isn’t known as a fast-paced place to work. By its very nature, the upper chamber was designed to be less passionate than the House, and the rules it has developed over the years — like the archaic filibuster — have only bolstered its intentionally sclerotic pace. But 2023 has been a real masterwork in how idle the Senate as a body can actually be.
Yes, that’s often the case in times of divided government. With Republicans in control of the House and President Joe Biden in the White House, Senate Democrats entered the year expecting to be on defense rather than offense. But as the House GOP descended further and further into a state of pure manic dysfunction, there’s been even less than expected for the Senate to actually do.
GOP control of the House has meant little amid the Republican infighting that’s repeatedly paralyzed the lower chamber. With Republicans having no interest in sending over bills that Democrats could support, the few bits of legislation that have cleared the House have been either intensely partisan or of the utmost necessity. As a result, a record low number of bills have been signed into law after the first year of the 118th Congress: a meager 27, according to NPR.
That wasn’t the case over the first half of the Biden administration. With Vice President Kamala Harris holding the tiebreaking vote in a 50-50 Senate, Democrats controlled of both houses of Congress. A dogged defense of the filibuster from a few key members made the Senate the fulcrum of all activity in Washington. Any deal had to include either two stubborn centrist Democrats or 10 Republicans — and the former often still insisted on the need for the latter.
Despite the drag on progress that caused, the number of bipartisan deals struck was impressive in hindsight. The Senate alone crafted bills providing for a massive investment in infrastructure, new funding for semiconductor production in the U.S. and major (if weak) gun violence prevention measures. (A bipartisan fix for the broken system that had hobbled the Postal Service originated in the House but cleared the Senate easily, as well.) The last months of 2022 in particular were a rush of last-minute deal-making, including an omnibus spending bill for fiscal year 2023, reform to the Electoral Count Act and repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act.
The same couldn’t be said about this year. The Senate stuck around slightly longer than the House ahead of the Christmas break to give negotiators room to try to negotiate a national security bill. But the two sides are still immensely far apart as Democrats try to unstick foreign aid for Ukraine and Israel and Republicans insist on including their preferred overhaul of the nation’s immigration system. These last 12 months, the bipartisan mavens who ran much of the show in 2021 and 2022 — often to the detriment of Biden’s sweeping agenda — have sat more or less idle.
What’s more, the Senate has been sort of shunted to the side at most major inflection points this year. Biden and former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy negotiated directly over raising the debt ceiling in the spring and early summer. The House was likewise in the driver’s seat both times the federal government nearly shut down under two different speakers. Republican senators who pride themselves on being more genteel than the rabble of the House could only look on in frustration as the caucus continually cannibalized itself.








