“It’s difficult to call somebody a nasty name when your kid and their kid are in the Cub Scouts together,” Cleaver said.
But sometime in the 1980s and 1990s, gentleman politics gave way to populist zeal. Newer, younger representatives with anti-elitist sensibilities began nudging the House into permanent campaign mode.
Democrat Cleaver blames Republicans, who took control of the lower chamber in the 1994 mid-term election. Democrats until then had been in the majority for all but four of the preceding 72 years.
The new House Speaker, Newt Gingrich, encouraged members to spend more time back home and accused those who didn’t of having “Potomac fever” – shorthand for falling out of touch with constituents. Several high-profile members of Congress did subsequently lose their seats amid criticism that they lived in Washington instead of the places they represented.
But the notion of a permanent political class entrenched in Washington had already begun to smell to many voters by the time Gingrich came to power. In a widely publicized 1990 House campaign in Pennsylvania, Republican challenger Rick Santorum defeated six-term incumbent Democrat Doug Walgren by casting him as a creature of Washington. Santorum told voters Walgren, who had moved his family to D.C., no longer had his finger on the pulse back home.
Two years later, headlines screamed that hundreds of House members had overdrawn their checking accounts at the legislative body’s members-only bank without penalty. No taxpayer money was involved, but the free overdraft protection for roughly 20,000 bad checks – some of them for very large amounts -- amounted to secret, interest- free, personal loans. It was the kind of perk most mere mortals couldn’t dream of, and with the news came righteous anger.
Dozens of House members linked to the scandal retired, lost their re-election bids or failed in campaigns for other offices in 1992 elections.
The changes in the culture of Congress made living full-time in Washington a political liability for House members who must seek re-election every two years. It’s not the 20th Century anymore, for one thing. Control of the House does change hands.
For the most part, Congress doesn’t live here anymore.
“Twenty to 30 years ago, most members of Congress would move their families here and go back home 20-30 times a year,” said Fitch, who worked as an aide to four members of Congress in the late 80s and 90s. “Now, 80 percent of members go back 40-50 times a year because their families are there.”
‘How close your election is’
The transition from a collegial stay-at- home Congress to a fly-away Congress hasn’t significantly affected how much of the actual work gets done in Washington.
Even Gingrich’s ascension to power didn’t have much impact on the number of days House members worked in the Capitol. In 1994, the year before the Georgia Republican became speaker, the House recorded 123 days in session. The number rose to 167 in 1995, but it went right back down to 122 the following year.