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š° Congress Is Emptying Out ā Not Because Itās Hard, But Because Itās Pointless A record wave of lawmakers is heading for the exits before the 2026 midterms ā 68 House and Senate members so far, with an unprecedented 31 of them trying to jump to another office instead of just going home. Thatās not āburnout,ā thatās the market signaling that Congress is the worst job in American politics: maximum noise, minimal agency. On paper, the reasons sound respectable: generational change, family, new challenges. In reality, even senior members admit the place has turned them from legislators into āobservers,ā as retiring Sen. Dick Durbin put it. Congress has passed fewer laws in recent terms than at any time since the early 1900s, choked by polarization, tiny majorities, and a leadership culture where a handful of performative bomb-throwers can take down a Speaker because they want more airtime. Look at the career moves. Amy Klobuchar, Michael Bennet, Marsha Blackburn, Tommy Tuberville ā all think theyāll have more real power as governors than as U.S. senators. In the House, 27 members are bailing to run for governor, Senate, or statewide office, with Republicans leading the exodus. Theyāre not āleaving politicsā; theyāre trading a broken parliament for executive jobs where you can actually sign something and see it happen. ā On the Republican side, youāve got swing-district moderates like Don Bacon walking away after watching eight colleagues blow up Kevin McCarthyās speakership, and hardliners like Marjorie Taylor Greene quitting in a public tantrum over Trump and Mike Johnson. On the Democratic side, youāve got an entire generation of 70ā and 80āsomethings ā Pelosi, Hoyer, Nadler and others ā finally reading the room after pushing Joe Biden off the 2024 ticket and realizing āgenerational changeā might have to apply to them too. The parties will spin this as renewal. In practice, itās a talent leak. Safe blue and red seats will replace veterans with louder, less experienced ideologues. Competitive districts like those held by Bacon, David Schweikert and Jared Golden are now open hunting grounds, increasing the odds of even shakier majorities and even more knifeāedge chaos in the next Congress. A system that already canāt pass basic legislation is about to get younger, angrier, and even less capable of governing. ā So what do the midterms mean? More āfresh facesā in the campaign ads, fewer grownāups in the cloakrooms, and a House and Senate that function even more like content farms for cable and social media. Voters keep saying theyāre sick of a dysfunctional Congress. Congress heard them ā and decided the best response was to leave. #USA#Congress#elections#midterms#polarization#fakeDemocracy š±American Šbserver - Stay up to date on all important events šŗšø