I had previously worried, and apparently from the comments some of you had as well, that the “100 Hours” commitment the Democrats made was mostly lip service. It was nice to hear, but chances were we wouldn’t get most of it, and I was hoping chiefly for a blunting of the “rubber stamp” era.
Well slap my ass and call me Sally, so far the House Dems have 5 of 6 commitments taken care of, and they’ve got plenty of time to go.
According to Pelosi’s count, it has taken just over 34 hours to pass the first five bills, including a measure approved Wednesday to lower interest rates on some student loans.
The House actually has been in session for more than 72 hours since the 110th Congress was sworn in on Jan. 4. But the clock on Pelosi’s Web site suggested that 34 hours, 5 minutes had elapsed by the close of House business Wednesday.
Pelosi’s going by hours spent on legislation, but the fact that by ANY count they’ve still got at least a full 24 hours before they’re out of range to pass this one last bill is just amazing. Here are the bills, with links to the given stories.
make the government negotiate for lower Medicare prescription drug prices. It passed last Friday.
expand federally funded stem cell research. It passed Jan. 11.
raise the federal minimum wage. It passed Jan. 10.
seek to bolster terrorism-fighting efforts. It passed Jan. 9.
change rules governing ethics, lobbying and the budget. These changes were passed on Jan. 4-5.
Amazing. Maybe things actually WILL start to go in the right direction after all. There’s a ways to go, but honestly there’s little I can say to complain. They’ve hit on all the key areas I was hoping for. Science, economy, fighting terrorism, social services, responsibility in government.
And you know what? I’d like to raise a glass to every single Republican who voted alongside the Democrats on these bills. Here’s to an America where people vote for what’s right because they know it’s right. Here’s to the hope that this will continue, maybe not at the feverish pace, but progress will continue to be made.
Of course, Bush could start a veto spree and repeatedly shut these down, but given the massive support they’ve had I’d say most would easily get the 2/3 margin necessary to override.




Any chance we can get an update on how the equivalent bills are doing in the Senate?
I’ll update them as they come, but it seems that they’re all currently mulling around (though you can see what the Senate’s doing with their ethics reforms in the latest post).
The Senate moves glacially. I’m sure they’re going to muck up at least half of those bills.
I don’t know, the glaciers have been moving pretty quickly – what with global warming and all…
[...] It seems that the whole Democrats-sweeping-into-Congress thing has been paying off after all. It’s still only January, and they’ve already delivered on five of their six “first 100 hours” promises, with the sixth just about ready. And that’s not even including the huge rollback of oil subsidies that’s being used to encourage alternative energy. [...]