The House of Representatives is back in Washington this week to resolve some of the myriad issues that face Congress before the end of the year.
But the lower chamber isn’t giving itself much time. The House and Senate are in session together for just four more days in 2013. That’s four days to broker a budget deal before the December 13 deadline—not to mention other efforts like immigration reform or workplace discrimination, both of which have stalled in the Republican-controlled House.
Even a small-scale deal would have to pass through the GOP-controlled House—a near-Sisyphean task in today’s Congress. As Greg Sargent reports, Republican negotiators have resisted an extension of unemployment benefits for 1.3 million Americans.
And December 13 is not the only deadline looming. If the parties fail to reach a deal—or, more likely, if the House GOP rejects any deal that’s reached—the government will again shutdown on January 15. Less than a month later, on February 7th, the country once again hits the debt ceiling.









