| Wilson before Congress, 4/20/12 (LOC) (Photo credit: The Library of Congress) | 
Not unpopular like a shy kid in junior high. Unpopular like the Ebola 
virus, or zombies. Held in near-universal contempt, like TV shows about 
hoarders with dead cats in their kitchens. Or people who get students to
 call you up during dinner and ask you to give money to your old 
university.        
The latest Gallup poll gave Congress a 10 percent approval rating. As 
Senator Michael Bennet of Colorado keeps pointing out, that’s lower than
 BP during the oil spill, Nixon during Watergate or banks during the 
banking crisis.        
On the plus side, while 86 percent of respondents told Gallup that they disapproved of the job Congress was doing, only 4 percent said they had no opinion. That’s really a great sense of public awareness, given the fact that other surveys show less than half of all Americans know who their member of Congress is.
So little attention, yet so much rancor. We’re presuming that this is 
because of the dreaded partisan gridlock, which has made Congress 
increasingly unproductive in matters that do not involve the naming of 
post offices.        
And Congress is listening! Lately, we have been seeing heartening new 
signs of bipartisan cooperation. For instance, the House and Senate are 
near an agreement on the payroll tax cut, namely that it will continue 
and not be paid for.        
This is actually sort of a tradition. No matter who is in power in 
Washington, Congress has always shown a remarkable ability to band 
together and pass tax cuts that are not paid for. It’s like naming post 
offices, only somewhat more expensive.        


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