After the 2022 midterm elections, expectations were low about the Congress that would soon follow. Voters increased the size of the narrow Democratic majority in the Senate, but they also handed a narrow majority to far-right Republicans in the House, leaving little doubt that very little would get done.
The question wasn’t whether the 118th Congress would be awful, it was just how awful the Congress would prove to be.
Now we know: To a historic degree, it was a cover-your-eyes debacle.
Around this time a year ago, The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank wrote a column with a memorable headline that read, “Worst. Congress. Ever.” As 2023 neared its end, the columnist wrote that members were wrapping up “the most ineffective session of Congress in nearly a century — and quite possibly in all of American history.”
A year later, federal lawmakers can’t exactly boast that they turned things around in the second year of the session: Legislative productivity slowed to a generational low, which was far worse than other modern Congresses that were divided between the parties.
HuffPost recently described this as the “dumbest” Congress ever and ran a striking assessment from the Brookings Institution’s Sarah Binder, whose expertise on such matters has few rivals.
So, how crazy was the 118th, historically speaking? “It’s fair to say it was one of the craziest ever,” Binder said.
To be sure, the fact that lawmakers passed such a paltry number of bills would automatically get this Congress included in a worst-ever conversation. But let’s not forget what else Capitol Hill has produced over the last couple of years:








