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Congress on Vacation: What Gets Left Undone

Congress on Vacation: What Gets Left Undone
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Credit: The New York Times

The 535 members of Congress are about to take a break for summer recess, free from the rigors of government. Some argue it is an undeserved repose. Beginning on August 9th, the legislators of our nation will leave the capitol, not to return for five weeks. So what do the members of Congress do while on recess? Put in long days at the district office? Host campaign fundraisers? Trips to the Bahamas?

A recent Gallup poll measured public approval of Congress at just 16 percent, a fact that hasn’t deterred Congress from taking its lengthy vacation. No doubt, reelection concerns are at the forefront of the minds of all congressional incumbents with elections only few months away. They will likely spend the majority of the recess securing their seats come November instead of facing legislation in Washington.

Critics accuse Congress of successfully giving the impression of being more concerned with reelection campaigns than reaching decisions about the important legislation looming on the horizon. Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) has spoken out against the August recess, saying that Congress should cancel all or some of it in order to stop $500 billion in defense cuts. This is just one of the matters that will have to wait while congress is on vacation. Pending issues, ranging from taxes to postal service reform will be put on hold until Congress heads back to Washington refreshed from its lengthy vacation.

Here is a brief description of some key issues that may be put on hold while Congress is away.

The August recess conveniently coincides with the Republican National Convention (Aug 27th through Aug 30th), and the Democrat National Convention (Sept 3rd through Sept 6th) giving lawmakers the opportunity to attend the events.

As dissatisfaction with Congress grows and criticism toward its long recess increases, the days of five week vacations for our legislators might be coming to a close.

Heather Rogers

BA in World Literature from UC San Diego. Studied Literature and International Relations in Spain. Interned with Congressman Darrell Issa's district office in 2011. IVN contributor covering environmental issues.

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