This article was originally published on abajournal.com.
Despite tumultuous times and contentious political backdrop, the ABA Governmental Affairs Office scored major victories during the 117th Congress by working successfully with ABA leadership, entities and grassroots advocates to advance the association's positions on multiple significant policy issues affecting the legal profession, access to justice and the rule of law.
The 117th Congress, which began on Jan. 3, 2021, ushered in a two-year period of unified government with the Democratic party in control of the executive and legislative branches. Despite the slim majorities by which the Democrats controlled the House and the Senate (with Vice President Kamala Harris serving as the tiebreaker in her constitutional role as president of the Senate), this should have set the stage for easily won congressional victories. But intervening events rapidly altered that expectation.
From the start, tensions on the Hill were high, with some members of Congress challenging election results. But they soared on Jan. 6, 2021, when a mob attacked the U.S. Capitol building, seeking to prevent the joint session of Congress from counting and certifying the Electoral College vote to formalize the presidential election results. In response to the January 6 attack, the House of Representatives convened a select committee to investigate the assault in July 2021. Its proceedings dominated discourse throughout both sessions of the 117th Congress, further elevating political tensions.
During the 117th Congress, President Joseph R. Biden and Congress were preoccupied and divided over how to respond to the ever-changing pandemic, face-mask mandates, a strained health care system, failing businesses, supply chain disruptions, spiraling inflation, worker shortages, the Russian invasion of Ukraine and other contentious issues.