In late spurt of activity, Congress avoids ‘least productive’ title
An unusually active lame duck session enabled the 113th Congress to avoid its predecessor’s record for legislative unproductivity.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
An unusually active lame duck session enabled the 113th Congress to avoid its predecessor’s record for legislative unproductivity.
If history is any guide, well under half of eligible voters will come out to vote in Tuesday’s midterms.
Most eligible voters — typically 8-in-ten or more — live in House districts with little or no real competition between candidates and parties.
Lame duck congressional sessions have become more common in recent years, but their actual legislative productivity has varied considerably.
Women now make up 20% of Congress, a record high. But women have more representation in most countries’ national legislatures.
Only nine major-party candidates have won a second presidential nomination after losing a previous election, and only four of those won the second time around.
The current Congress remains on pace to be one of the least legislatively productive in recent history.
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