Submitted by Collin Berglund on March 23, 2012
CONGRESSIONAL REFORM PASSES: A bill banning insider trading passed the Senate yesterday and is only waiting on President Obama's signature. "The message that lawmakers hope that the public takes away from the Senate vote comes down to this: Congress can work. Even amid stark partisan divisions, bills with bipartisan support can rocket through Congress, if members conclude that notching minor legislative achievements for both sides outweighs heading into an election season where voters, enraged by gridlock, throw all the bums out."
Read more: David Grant for The Christian Science Monitor: Insider trading bill: A model to end gridlock on Congress
HIGH FIVE: "No Labels is high-fiving Congress for working together for the common good and for the country by passing the STOCK Act in a bipartisan manner -- the vote was 96-3 in the Senate. The bill is ready for the president’s signature. We haven’t had a lot to high-five Congress for over the past year, so this bill -- and the way it was passed -- is a refreshing change and a step in the right direction."
Read more: No Labels Blog: High-Fiving Congress
NO COMPROMISE, NO RETREAT, NO LEGISLATING: In spite of this step forward, concern over congressional gridlock remains high. "America sorely needs Washington teamwork to lower ruinous federal deficits -- but political polarization in Congress is so poisonous that cooperation seems impossible, and so does progress. Any solution passed by the Democrat-controlled Senate probably will be killed by the Republican-controlled House, and vice versa. This election year will be 'mostly a lost year for Congress,' the
Dallas Morning News predicts. 'No compromise, no retreat, no legislating.'"
Read more: Editorial for The Charleston Gazette: Gridlock: Futility in Congress