Accomplishments of the current 111th Congress

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
This would, of course, be the Congress that began Jan. 3, 2009, and is led by Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House, and Harry Reid, Senate Majority Leader. Just to refresh all people's memories, of course.

Norm Ornstein, a Congressional scholar at the DC-based think tank American Enterprise Institute recently called the 111th the best Congress Americans will ever hate. I have to agree with him. Depsite its low job approval ratings, Americans don't seem to know how good they have it.

1. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 was the first signed into law. It reversed a 2007 US Supreme Court decision which stated that pay discrimination lawsuits have strict statutes of limitations. Now thanks to the Act the statute of limitations for such laws are tied to each discrimitory paycheck received.

2. The Children's Health Insurance Reauthorization Act of 2009 was the second law, and it expanded the Childrens Health Insurance Program to include about 4 million uninsured poor children and pregnant women. This law is funded completely by increases in tabacco taxes, so it's also know in the States as "the reason cigarettes cost more than they used to".

3. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (aka the stimulus package) was the third law of this Congress. It's such a massive bill that covers so many policy proposals that it is a Congress's worth of legislation in one act. Very broadly speaking, it contains tax cuts; infrastructure spending and aid to states; and the expansion of a safety net/welfare. The tax cuts come in the form of tax credits offered for everything from energy conservation to home buying to college tuition. The infrastucture spending was mostly scheduled to begin at the start of FY 2010 (October 2009) and last several years thereafter. Also contained in the stimulus is funds for a new electrical grid; medical information technology; medial research; public school districts; and clean water programs. Even this paragraph is a simplification of the stimulus, and I am, after all, typing using just my own memory.

4. Not necessarily in order now, but another of my favorite acts of the 111th Congress is the Edward M. Kennedy Serving America Act, which expanded the AmeriCorps and created five new volunteer public service corps: Veterans Corps; Education Corps; Clean Energy Corps; Opportunity Corps; and one last one I'm forgetting. The idea of a volunteer service corps for veterans especially has been a proposal in Congress for years but never managed to get done.

5. Another one of my favorite acts is the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009 which expanded federal hate crime laws to cover sexual oreintation, gender identity and disability.

There's a lot more that this Congress has passed that I'm forgetting. I'll probably post more when I think about it. Some other poster here made a thread about "US politics at is best", but all these great laws being passed is really US politics at its best. It's just that, for some reason, all the positive accomplishments don't get talked about that much.
 
  • Like
Reactions: gopher

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
Every law passed takes away someone's liberty.

Or, gives liberty. Take for example the health care reform law. Because of it, 32 million uninsured mostly poor Americans will have the liberty to get health insurance.
 
  • Like
Reactions: eh1eh

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
"all these great laws being passed is really US politics at its best. It's just that, for some reason, all the positive accomplishments don't get talked about that much."

Excellent topic - excellent point. The USA news media wants President Obama to fail so that this is why they refuse to emphasize accomplishments such as these on a nightly basis.
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
"all these great laws being passed is really US politics at its best. It's just that, for some reason, all the positive accomplishments don't get talked about that much."

Excellent topic - excellent point. The USA news media wants President Obama to fail so that this is why they refuse to emphasize accomplishments such as these on a nightly basis.

Nobody is going to seriously claim that the Lilly Ledbetter Act or the Children's Health Insurance Reauthorization Act or the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Act got the media attention that they properly deserved. These laws have been longstanding promises and proposals from Democrats going back years. And the Dems got them passed the way it's supposed to happen: through the democratic process. They patiently waited years until they were elected to majorities in Congress and then waited longer until a Dem was elected President so that he could sign them. What a novel concept: a political party has ideas they think are right; they work to get them selves into power by promising to implement these ideas; and then they implement them.

Whatever love affair some US media has with Obama obviously doesn't extend to covering these accomplishments.
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
6. The Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 is another massive bill along the lines of the stimulus or health care reform. It consists of 159 previously existing land conservation bills (some going back numerous Congresses) that have been tacked together in one giant bill. It adds about 2 million acres of land to federally preserved wilderness areas and reforms the national parks, wilderness, and trails administration.

7. The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009 expands eligibility for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, gives judges the power to change the terms of individual mortgages, expands the HOPE for Homeowners programs, and reforms the federal government's programs that address homelessness. It also sets a federal goal of 30 days between the time a family becomes homeless because of the recession to the time they get back into a permanent residence.
 

YukonJack

Time Out
Dec 26, 2008
7,026
73
48
Winnipeg
Passing of the Heath Care Bill is THE feather in Obama's cap.

No other legislation in history, ever, needed bribes and buyouts (with an overwhelming MAJORITY) to pass.

Those who are so enthusiastic about it, probably would be perfectly happy to buy a car, but not able drive it for four more years, or renting an apartment, but told hold off moving for another four years.

Is the small matter of sanity in question with these blind acolytes?
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
Passing of the Heath Care Bill is THE feather in Obama's cap.

No other legislation in history, ever, needed bribes and buyouts (with an overwhelming MAJORITY) to pass.

Those who are so enthusiastic about it, probably would be perfectly happy to buy a car, but not able drive it for four more years, or renting an apartment, but told hold off moving for another four years.

Is the small matter of sanity in question with these blind acolytes?

Just my opinion, but I do think the health care reform bills are the greatest Acts of Congress the US has seen in decades. We really have to go back to the 1960s to find Congressional action that is truly comparable to it. So yeah, I do think all this other stuff from the current Congress isn't as great as HCR (although they're still really good).

And it's really hard for me to see how any supposed bribes or corruption diminish that. Heck, I even think some of the stuff that gets called bribery are great ideas on the merits. For example, the provision in HCR that gets derided as the "Louisiana Purchase" is a provision that says any states that had all of their counties declared disaster areas get more federal money for Medicaid, an excellent idea. I support giving states more Medicaid money if they are victims of major disasters.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
"No other legislation in history, ever, needed bribes and buyouts (with an overwhelming MAJORITY) to pass."


As always, you conveniently forgot Bush's coalition of the willing - he bribed other countries to join in his war campaign through the promise of aid and payments to the UN. A listing of those bribes was presented on this forum when he discussed the war.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Every law passed takes away someone's liberty.


Funny how conservatives never said that when the Patriot Act was passed or when every excuse was made to torture people at Abu Ghraib or Gitmo.
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
8,252
19
38
Edmonton
Passing of the Heath Care Bill is THE feather in Obama's cap.

No other legislation in history, ever, needed bribes and buyouts (with an overwhelming MAJORITY) to pass.

Those who are so enthusiastic about it, probably would be perfectly happy to buy a car, but not able drive it for four more years, or renting an apartment, but told hold off moving for another four years.

Is the small matter of sanity in question with these blind acolytes?

In the US system such "bribes and buyouts" as you call them are part and parcel of the US system and have been for over 200 years. It is common for members of the US government to offer their support for legislation in return for concessions that will help the region they represent. Members of the House and Senate frequently make deals in which they promise to support one another's legislation. It does not make for a very efficient system, but it is the way Congress has worked almost from the first day of its existence. G.W, Bush and pretty much every US president has made use of such "horse trading" techniques and will continue to do so until the US decides to restructure its system of government.
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
Passing of the Heath Care Bill is THE feather in Obama's cap.

No other legislation in history, ever, needed bribes and buyouts (with an overwhelming MAJORITY) to pass.

Speaking of the alledged bribes and buyouts in the health care reform bills, the following link goes through an entire list of the cases and debunks every one. Sometimes people can be too cynical for their own good and falsely suspect that there must be bribery going on, instead of just thinking that what gets included in the bill gets included on its own merits.

Coincidentally, one of the cases of alledged bribery that my link leaves out perfectly illustrates my point. There is a provision in the health care laws that single out the city of Libby, Montana, to receive federal assistance. Some critics suggested this must be some a bribe to get Montana Democratic lawmakers on board, but in fact Libby gets singled out because it deserves to be singled out. It's most infamous for being an entire town sickened by asbestos. According to critics of health care reform, it couldn't possibly be that the merits of Libby's situation earns it special assistance. No, it has to be a bribe to lawmakers for their support.

Source: Right-wing media smear Democrats with allegations of "special deals" in health bill | Media Matters for America
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
"With the Senate's passage of financial regulation, Congress and the White House have completed 16 months of activity that rival any other since the New Deal in scope or ambition. Like the Reagan Revolution or Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, the new progressive period has the makings of a generational shift in how Washington operates."

Source: NYT: Obama's Progressive Project Is





It's more of that opinion similar to Norm Orstein's, as paraphrased in the OP.
 

ironsides

Executive Branch Member
Feb 13, 2009
8,583
60
48
United States
Yes, and the "New Deal" took more rights from the citizens than ever before, and added to that this so called progressive period (which is really regressive, suppressive) period may lead to chaos in the not to distant future. You don't want to get 300 million people to angry.