Even if lawmakers manage to patch together a limited, short-term deal to avoid the most immediate economic effects of the fiscal cliff, Congress may have already fallen off a political cliff.
The 112th Congress will adjourn as the least productive Congress on record. Just 219 bills passed by the 112th Congress have been signed into law. The last Congress passed 383 bills.
The Congress before that shepherded 460 bills into law. President Harry Truman‘s “Do-Nothing Congress” passed more than three times as much legislation as this year’s House and Senate managed; 906 bills became law in 1947-48.
Some conservatives, who believe the role of government should be limited, like it that way. But Congress is not just unproductive, it’s unpopular. The last time the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll measured Congress’ approval rating, it was barely in double digits at 12%. 82% disapproved of Congress—the highest percentage in the history of the poll.
In Washington, old hands are used to eleventh-hour deals, but now even striking deals on issues that used to be routine is no longer a given.
Case in point: the “dairy cliff.” Milk prices could double to between $6 and $8 dollars a gallon in January because Congress has failed to agree on a new farm bill. If nothing is done, the rules governing dairy price supports revert to a law passed 63 years ago in 1949. Congress has not been able to agree to reforms to the Postal Service which would keep it solvent.









