“This is a predictable consequence of a heavily constricted legislative process where members have fewer and fewer opportunities to claim credit for legislative successes,” said Michael Thorning, director of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Structural Democracy Project.
“If you’re a member, and you come to expect that no matter what you do, you are not gonna have many opportunities for your bills to get considered or passed, then you are going to focus on other things that will get attention,” Thorning added. “And certainly, introducing a bill is a big channel.”
With many factors driving those incentives, the current trend seems unlikely to change overnight.
“It doesn’t seem like the answer is for Congress to introduce less legislation,” Thorning said. “And I don’t know how you would enforce that anyway. So that means the answer has to be in the capacity area. Some of that might be taking advantage of technological advances, but some of it might also just be more staff to handle the volume that legislators themselves are increasing.”
Once called the Government Printing Office, lawmakers renamed the agency to the Government Publishing Office in 2014, in deference to its increasingly digital mission. While skilled printers still run presses at GPO and produce a wide range of printed federal documents, its online publishing offers access and transparency to people around the country.
The agency, which also is responsible for producing the nation’s passports, received about $132 million in appropriations in fiscal 2024, which represented roughly a 10th of its total revenue. Halpern has asked congressional appropriators for a 3.1 percent funding bump in fiscal 2025.