AP Laments 'Productive' Congress 'Gets No Respect From Voters'

October 18th, 2010 11:22 AM

To Associated Press writer Jim Abrams, the 111th Congress seems to be the Rodney Dangerfield of American politics.

It just gets no respect.

This despite the fact, Abrams laments in an October 18 story, that it's been a thoroughly "productive" Congress.

Apparently to the AP writer, American voters are just ingrates who don't appreciate the "historic" nature of the Obama/Pelosi/Reid partnership the past two years:

WASHINGTON – The public panned it. Republicans obstructed it. Many Democrats fled from it. Even so, the session of Congress now drawing to a close was the most productive in nearly half a century.

 

Not since the explosive years of the civil rights movement and the hard-fought debut of government-supported health care for the elderly and poor have so many big things — love them or hate them — been done so quickly.

 

[...]

 

In terms of legislative successes, the current session of Congress is "at least on a par with the 89th Congress" of 1965-1966, said Norman Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.


But, he added, Republicans have done all they could to discredit Congress and Democrats have failed to sell their agenda. Moreover, it will take years to fully feel the effects of the health care law and financial regulation.

 

"A world dominated by bickering and epithet-throwing and bomb tossing in Washington obscures accomplishments," Ornstein said.

 

[...]

 

The two other landmark acts of this session were the health care overhaul, a giant step toward universal coverage that had eluded presidents back to Franklin Roosevelt if not Teddy Roosevelt, and the Wall Street accountability act.


Obama has also signed into law at least a dozen other pieces of legislation of significance. They include:


_Making college loans more affordable.

 

_The Cash for Clunkers program that helped rejuvenate the auto industry.

 

_New consumer protections for credit card users.

 

_Making it easier for women to challenge pay discrimination.

 

_Increasing federal regulation of tobacco products.

 

_Cracking down on waste in Pentagon weapons acquisition.

 

_Making attacks based on sexual orientation a federal hate crime.

 

_Giving businesses tax incentives to hire unemployed workers.

 

_Tax credits for first-time homeowners.

 

So where is the love?

 

Polls suggest three-fourths of Americans disapprove of Congress.