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-
- HOW OUR LAWS ARE MADE
-
-
- Revised and Updated by Edward F. Willett, Jr., Esq.
- Law Revision Counsel
- United States House of Representatives
-
- Presented by Mr. Brooks
- November 20, 1989 - Ordered to be printed.
-
-
- I.Introduction
-
- II.The Congress
-
- III.Sources of legislation
-
- IV.Forms of Congressional action
- Bills
- Joint resolutions
- Concurrent resolutions
- Simple resolutions
-
- V.Introduction and reference to committee
-
- VI.Consideration by committee
- Committee meetings
- Public hearings
- Business meetings
- Committee action
- Public inspection of results of rollcall vote in committee
- Proxy voting
- Points of order with respect to committee procedure
- Broadcasting committee hearings and meetings
-
- VII.Reported bills
- Contents of reports
- Inflationary impact and cost estimates in reports
- Filing of reports
- Availability of reports and hearings
-
- VIII.Legislative review by standing committees
-
- IX.Calendars
- Union Calendar
- House Calendar
- Private Calendar
- Consent Calendar
- Calendar of Motions to Discharge Committees
-
- X.Obtaining consideration of measures
- Special resolutions
- Consideration of measures made in order by previous
- resolution
- Motion to discharge committee
- Motion to suspend the rules
- Calendar Wednesday
- District of Columbia business
- Privileged matters
-
- XI.Consideration
- Committee of the Whole House
- Second reading
- The Committee "rises"
- House action
- Motions to recommit
- Quorum calls and rollcalls
- Voting
- Electronic voting
- Pairing of Members
- System of lights and bells
- Broadcasting live coverage of floor proceedings
-
- XII.Congressional budget process
-
- XIII.Engrossment and message to Senate
-
- XIV.Senate action
- Committee consideration
- Chamber procedure
-
- XV.Final action on amended bill
- Request for a conference
- Authority of conferees
- Meetings and action of conferees
- Conference reports
- Custody of papers
-
- XVI.Bill originating in Senate
-
- XVII.Enrollment
-
- XVIII.Presidential action
- Veto message
-
- XIX.Publication
- Slip laws
- Statutes at Large
- United States Code
-
-
-
-
- HOW OUR LAWS ARE MADE
-
- I. INTRODUCTION
-
- This handbook is intended to provide a readable and
- nontechnical outline of the background and the numerous steps
- of our Federal lawmaking process from the origin of an idea
- for a legislative proposal through its publication as a
- statute. This is a matter about which every citizen should be
- well informed so as to be able to understand the everyday
- news reports and discussions concerning the work of Congress.
-
- It is hoped that this handbook will enable every citizen to
- gain a greater understanding of the Federal legislative
- process and its role as one of the bulwarks of our
- representative system. One of the most practical safeguards
- of the American democratic way of life is this legislative
- process that, with its emphasis on the protection of the
- minority, gives ample opportunity to all sides to be heard
- and make their views known. The fact that a proposal cannot
- become a law without consideration and approval by both
- Houses of Congress is an outstanding virtue of our
- legislative system. Open and full discussion provided for
- under our Con stitution frequently results in the notable
- improvement of a bill by amendment before it becomes law, or
- the defeat of a bad proposal.
-
- Because the large majority of laws originate in the House of
- Representatives, this discussion will be directed principally
- to the procedure in that body.
-
-
- II. THE CONGRESS
-
- Article I, Section 1, of the United States Constitution,
- provides that--
-
- All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a
- Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a
- Senate and House of Representatives.
-
- The Senate is composed of 100 Members--2 from each State,
- irrespective of population or area--elected by the people in
- conformity with the provisions of the 17th Amendment to the
- Constitution. That amendment changed the former
- Constitutional method under which Senators were chosen by the
- respective State legislatures. A Senator must be at least 30
- years of age, have been a citizen of the United States for 9
- years, and, when elected, be a resident of the State for
- which the Senator is chosen. The term of office is 6 years
- and one-third of the total membership of the Senate is
- elected every second year. The terms of both Senators from a
- particular State are so arranged that they do not terminate
- at the same time. Of the 2 Senators from a State serving at
- the same time the one who was elected first--or if both were
- elected at the same time, the one elected for a full term--is
- referred to as the "senior" Senator from that State. The
- other is referred to as the "junior" Senator. If a Senator
- dies or resigns during the term, the governor of the State
- must call a special election unless the State legislature has
- authorized the governor to appoint a successor until the next
- election, at which time a successor is elected for the
- balance of the term. Most of the State legislatures have
- granted their governors the power of appointment.
-
- Each Senator has one vote.
-
- As constituted in 1989--the 101st Congress--the House of
- Representatives is composed of 435 Members elected every 2
- years from among the 50 States, apportioned to their total
- populations. The permanent number of 435 was established
- following the Thirteenth Decennial Census in 1910, as
- directed in Article I, Section 2, of the Constitution, and
- was increased temporarily to 437 for the 87th Congress, to
- provide for one Representative each for Alaska and Hawaii. It
- seems undesirable to make a considerable increase in the
- number of Members, because a larger body, similar to the
- British House of Commons, consisting of 650 members, would be
- too unwieldy. The Constitution limits the number of
- Representatives to not more than one for every 30,000 of
- population, and, under a former apportionment in one State a
- particular Representative represented more than 900,000
- constituents, while another in the same State was elected
- from a district having a population of only 175,000. The
- Supreme Court * has since held unconstitutional a Missouri
- statute permitting a maximum population variance of 3.1
- percent from mathematical equality. The Court said that the
- variances among the districts were not unavoidable and,
- therefore, were invalid. This is an interpretation of the
- Court's earlier decision that "as nearly as is practicable
- one man's vote in a Congressional election is to be worth as
- much as another's".
-
- * Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U.S. 526 (1969).
-
- A law enacted in 1967 abolished all "at-large" elections
- (that is, Representatives elected by the voters of the entire
- State rather than in a Congressional district within the
- State) except, of course, in States entitled to only one
- Representative.
-
- A Representative must be at least 25 years of age, have been
- a citizen of the United States for 7 years, and, when
- elected, be a resident of the State in which the
- Representative is chosen. If a Representative dies or resigns
- during the term, the governor of the State must call a
- special election for the choosing of a successor to serve for
- the unexpired portion of the term.
-
- Each Representative has one vote.
-
- In addition to the Representatives from each of the States,
- there is a Resident Commissioner from the Commonwealth of
- Puerto Rico and Delegates from the District of Columbia,
- American Samoa, Guam, and the Virgin Islands. The Resident
- Commissioner and the Delegates have most of the prerogatives
- of Representatives, with the important exception of the right
- to vote on matters before the House.
-
- Under the provisions of Section 2 of the 20th Amendment to
- the Constitution, Congress must assemble at least once every
- year, at noon on the 3d day of January, unless by law they
- appoint a different day.
-
- A Congress lasts for 2 years, commencing in January of the
- year following the biennial election of Members, and is
- divided into 2 sessions.
-
- Unlike some other parliamentary bodies, both the Senate and
- the House of Representatives have equal legislative functions
- and powers (except that only the House of Representatives may
- initiate revenue bills), and the designation of one as the
- "upper" House and the other as the "lower" House is not
- appropriate.
-
- The Constitution authorizes each House to determine the
- rules of its proceedings. Pursuant to that authority the
- House of Representatives adopts its rules on the opening day
- of each Congress. The Senate, which considers itself a
- continuing body, operates under standing rules that it amends
- from time to time.
-
- The chief function of Congress is the making of laws. In
- addition, the Senate has the function of advising and
- consenting to treaties and to certain nominations by the
- President. In the matter of impeachments, the House of
- Representatives presents the charges--a function similar to
- that of a grand jury--and the Senate sits as a court to try
- the impeachment. Both Houses meet in joint session on the 6th
- day of January, following a presidential election, to count
- the electoral votes. If no candidate receives a majority of
- the total electoral votes, the House of Representatives
- chooses the President from among the 3 candidates having the
- largest number of votes, and the Senate chooses the Vice
- President from the 2 candidates having the largest number of
- votes for that office.
-
-
- III. SOURCES OF LEGISLATION
-
- Sources of ideas for legislation are unlimited, and
- proposed drafts of bills originate in many diverse quarters.
- First of these is, of course, the idea and draft conceived by
- a Member. This may emanate from the election campaign during
- which the Member had promised to introduce legislation on a
- particular subject, if elected. The entire campaign may have
- been based upon one or more such proposals. Or, through
- experience after taking office the Member may have become
- aware of the need for amendment or repeal of existing laws or
- the enactment of a statute in an entirely new field.
-
- In addition, the Member's constituents--either as
- individuals or by corporate activity such as citizen groups
- or associations, bar associations, labor unions,
- manufacturers' associations, and chambers of commerce--may
- avail themselves of the right to petition, which is
- guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution, and
- transmit their proposals to the Member. Many excellent laws
- have originated in this way inasmuch as some of those
- organizations, because of their vital concern with various
- areas of legislation, have considerable knowledge regarding
- the laws affecting their interests and have the services of
- expert legislative draftsmen at their disposal for this
- purpose. If favorably impressed by the idea, the Member may
- introduce the proposal in the form in which it has been
- submitted or may first redraft it. In all events, the Member
- may consult with the Legislative Counsel of the House or the
- Senate, as the case may be, to frame the ideas in suitable
- legislative language and form for introduction.
-
- In modern times the "executive communication" has become a
- prolific source of legislative proposals. This is usually in
- the form of a letter from a member of the President's Cabinet
- or the head of an independent agency--or even from the
- President--transmitting a draft of a proposed bill to the
- Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of
- the Senate. Despite the system of separation of powers,
- Article II, Section 3, of the Constitution imposes an
- obligation on the President to report to Congress from time
- to time on the "State of the Union" and to recommend for
- consideration such measures as the President considers
- necessary and expedient. Many of these executive
- communications follow on the President's message to Congress
- on the State of the Union. The communication is then referred
- to the standing committee having jurisdiction of the subject
- matter embraced in the proposal because a bill may be
- introduced only by a Member of Congress. The Chairman of that
- committee usually introduces the bill promptly either in the
- form in which it was received or with changes the Chairman
- considers necessary or desirable. This practice prevails even
- when the majority of the House and the President are not of
- the same political party, although there is no constitutional
- or statutory requirement that a bill be introduced to
- effectuate the recommendations. Otherwise, the message may be
- considered by the committee or one of its subcommittees to
- determine whether a bill should be introduced. The most
- important of the regular executive communications is the
- annual message from the President transmitting the proposed
- budget to Congress. This, together with testimony by
- officials of the various branches of the Government before
- the Appropriations Committees of the House and Senate, is the
- basis of the several appropriation bills that are drafted by
- the Committee on Appropriations of the House.
-
- Several of the executive departments and independent
- agencies have staffs of trained legislative counsels whose
- functions include the drafting of bills to be forwarded to
- Congress with a request for their enactment.
-
- The drafting of statutes is an art that requires great
- skill, knowledge, and experience. In some instances a draft
- is the result of a study covering a period of a year or more
- by a commission or committee designated by the President or
- one of the Cabinet officers. The Administrative Procedure Act
- and the Uniform Code of Military Justice are only 2 of many
- examples of enactments resulting from such studies. In
- addition, Congressional committees sometimes draft bills
- after studies and hearings covering periods of a year or
- more. Bills to codify the laws relating to crimes and
- criminal procedure, the judiciary and judicial procedure, the
- armed forces, and other subjects, have each required several
- years of preparation.
-
-
- IV. FORMS OF CONGRESSIONAL ACTION
-
- The work of Congress is initiated by the introduction of a
- proposal in one of 4 principal forms. These are: the bill,
- the joint resolution, the concurrent resolution, and the
- simple resolution. By far the most customary form used in
- both Houses is the bill. During the 100th Congress (1987
- -1988), there were introduced in both Houses, 8,515 bills and
- 1,073 joint resolutions. Of this number 5,585 bills and 678
- joint resolutions originated in the House of Representatives.
-
- For the sake of simplicity this discussion will be confined
- generally to the procedure on a House of Representatives
- bill, but a brief comment will be made about each of the
- forms.
-
- BILLS
-
- A bill is the form used for most legislation, whether
- permanent or temporary, general or special, public or
- private.
-
- The form of a House bill is as follows:
-
- A BILL
-
-
-
- For the establishment, etc.
- [as the title may be].
-
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
- the United States of America in Congress assembled, That,
- etc.
-
- The enacting clause was prescribed by law in 1871 and is
- identical in all bills, whether they originate in the House
- of Representatives or in the Senate.
-
- Bills may originate in either the House of Representatives
- or the Senate, with one notable exception provided for by the
- Constitution. Article I, Section 7, of the Constitution,
- provides that all bills for raising revenue shall originate
- in the House of Representatives but the Senate may propose or
- concur with amendments, as on other bills. General
- appropriation bills also originate in the House of
- Representatives.
-
- There are 2 types of bills--public and private. A public
- bill is one that affects the public generally. A bill of a
- private character, that is, a bill that affects an individual
- rather than the population at large, is called a private
- bill. A private bill is used for relief in matters such as
- immigration and naturalization and claims by or against the
- United States.
-
- Article I, Section 8, prescribes the matters concerning
- which Congress may legislate, while Section 9 of the same
- Article places certain limitations on Congressional action.
-
- A bill originating in the House of Representatives is
- designated by the letters "H.R." followed by a number that it
- retains throughout all its parliamentary stages. The letters
- signify "House of Representatives" and not, as is sometimes
- supposed, "House resolution". A Senate bill is designated by
- the letter "S." followed by its number. The term "companion
- bill" is used to describe a bill introduced in one House of
- Congress that is similar or identical to a bill introduced in
- the other House of Congress.
-
- A bill that has been agreed to in identical form by both
- bodies becomes the law of the land only after--
-
- (1) Presidential approval; or
-
- (2) failure by the President to return it with objections to
- the House in which it originated within 10 days while
- Congress is in session; or
-
- (3) the overriding of a Presidential veto by a two-thirds
- vote in each House.
-
- It does not become law without the President's signature if
- Congress by their adjournment prevent its return with
- objections. This is known as a "pocket veto".
-
- JOINT RESOLUTIONS
-
- Joint resolutions may originate either in the House of
- Representatives or in the Senate--not, as may be supposed,
- jointly in both Houses. There is little practical difference
- between a bill and a joint resolution and, although the
- latter are not as numerous as bills, the 2 forms are often
- used indiscriminately. Statutes that have been initiated as
- bills have later been amended by a joint resolution, and vice
- versa. Both are subject to the same procedure--with the
- exception of a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the
- Constitution. When a joint resolution amending the
- Constitution is approved by two-thirds of both Houses, it is
- sent directly to the Archivist of the United States for
- submission to the several States for ratification. It is not
- presented to the President for approval.
-
- The form of a House joint resolution is as follows:
-
- JOINT RESOLUTION
-
-
-
- Authorizing, etc. [as the title may be].
-
- Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives
- of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
- That all, etc.
-
- The resolving clause is identical in both House and Senate
- joint resolutions, having been prescribed by statute in 1871.
- It is frequently preceded by one or more "whereas" clauses
- indicating the necessity for or the desirability of the joint
- resolution.
-
- The term "joint" does not signify simultaneous introduction
- and consideration in both Houses.
-
- A joint resolution originating in the House of
- Representatives is designated "H.J. Res." followed by its
- individual number which it retains throughout all its
- parliamentary stages. One originating in the Senate is
- designated "S.J. Res." followed by its number.
-
- Joint resolutions become law in the same manner as bills.
-
- CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS
-
- Matters affecting the operations of both Houses are usually
- initiated by means of concurrent resolutions. In modern
- practice, these normally are not legislative in character but
- are used merely for expressing facts, principles, opinions,
- and purposes of the 2 Houses. They are not equivalent to a
- bill and their use is narrowly limited within these bounds.
-
- The term "concurrent" does not signify simultaneous
- introduction and consideration in both Houses.
-
- A concurrent resolution originating in the House of
- Representatives is designated "H. Con. Res." followed by its
- individual number, while a Senate concurrent resolution is
- designated "S. Con. Res." together with its number. On
- approval by both Houses, they are signed by the Clerk of the
- House and the Secretary of the Senate and transmitted to the
- Archivist of the United States for publication in a special
- part of the Statutes at Large volume covering that session of
- Congress. They are not presented to the President for action
- as in the cases of bills and joint resolutions unless they
- contain a proposition of legislation, and that, of course, is
- not within their scope in their modern form.
-
- SIMPLE RESOLUTIONS
-
- A matter concerning the operation of either House alone is
- initiated by a simple resolution. A resolution affecting the
- House of Representatives is designated "H. Res." followed by
- its number, while a Senate resolution is designated "S. Res."
- together with its number. They are considered only by the
- body in which they were introduced and on adoption are
- attested to by the Clerk of the House of Representatives or
- the Secretary of the Senate, as the case may be, and are
- published in the Congressional Record.
-
-
- V. INTRODUCTION AND REFERENCE TO COMMITTEE
-
- Any Member, the Resident Commissioner, and the Delegates in
- the House of Representatives may introduce a bill at any time
- while the House is actually sitting by simply placing it in
- the "hopper" provided for the purpose at the side of the
- Clerk's desk in the House Chamber. Permission is not required
- to introduce the measure or to make a statement at the time
- of introduction. Printed blank forms for use in typing the
- original bill are supplied through the Clerk's office. The
- name of the sponsor is endorsed on the bill. A public bill
- may be sponsored by an unlimited number of Members. On
- request, a Member may be added as a sponsor no later than the
- day the bill is reported to the House. (For a discussion of
- "Reported bills", see Part VII.) In addition, a Member listed
- as a sponsor (other than the first sponsor) may have the
- Member's name deleted as a sponsor no later than the day the
- bill is reported to the House. To forestall the possibility
- that a bill might be introduced in the House on behalf of a
- Member without that Member's prior approval, the sponsoring
- Member's signature must appear on the bill before it is
- accepted for introduction. When there are multiple sponsors
- of a bill, the signature must be that of the Member first
- named thereon. In the Senate, unlimited multiple sponsorship
- of a bill also is permitted. Occasionally, a Member may
- insert the words "by request" after the Member's name to
- indicate that the introduction of the measure is in
- compliance with the suggestion of some other person.
-
- In the Senate, a Senator usually introduces a bill or
- resolution by presenting it to one of the clerks at the
- Presiding Officer's desk, without commenting on it from the
- floor of the Senate. However, a Senator may use a more formal
- procedure by rising and introducing the bill or resolution
- from the floor. A Senator usually makes a statement about the
- measure when introducing it on the floor. Frequently,
- Senators obtain consent to have the bill or resolution
- printed in the body of the Congressional Record, following
- their formal statement.
-
- If any Senator objects to the introduction of a bill or
- resolution, the introduction of the bill or resolution is
- postponed until the next day. If there is no objection, the
- bill is read by title and referred to the appropriate
- committee.
-
- In the House of Representatives it is no longer the custom
- to read bills--even by title--at the time of introduction.
- The title is entered in the Journal and printed in the
- Congressional Record, thus preserving the purpose of the old
- rule. The bill is assigned its legislative number by the
- Clerk and referred to the appropriate committees by the
- Speaker (the Member elected to be the Presiding Officer of
- the House) with the assistance of the Parliamentarian. These
- details appear in the daily issue of the Congressional
- Record. It is then sent to the Government Printing Office
- where it is printed in its introduced form, and printed
- copies are available shortly thereafter in the document rooms
- of both Houses.
-
- One copy is sent to the office of the Chairman of the
- committee to which it has been referred, for action by that
- committee. The clerk of the committee enters it on the
- committee's Legislative Calendar.
-
- Perhaps the most important phase of the Congressional
- process is the action by committees. That is where the most
- intensive consideration is given to the proposed measures and
- where the people are given their opportunity to be heard.
- Nevertheless, this phase where such a tremendous volume of
- hard work is done by the Members is sometimes overlooked by
- the public, particularly when complaining about delays in
- enacting laws. There are, at present, 22 standing committees
- in the House and 16 in the Senate, as well as several select
- committees. In addition, there are several standing joint
- committees of the 2 Houses.
-
- Each committee has jurisdiction over certain subject matters
- of legislation and all measures affecting a particular area
- of the law are referred to that committee that has
- jurisdiction over it. For example, the Committee on the
- Judiciary has jurisdiction over measures relating to judicial
- proceedings (civil and criminal) generally, and 18 other
- categories, of which Constitutional amendments, immigration
- and naturalization, bankruptcy, revision and codification of
- statutes, civil liberties, antitrust, patents, copyrights and
- trademarks, are but a few. In all, the rules of the House and
- of the Senate each provide for approximately 200 different
- classifications of measures that are to be referred to
- committees.
-
- Membership on the various committees is divided between the
- 2 major political parties. The proportion of the Members of
- the minority party to the Members of the majority party is
- determined by the majority party, except that one-half of the
- Members on the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct are
- from the majority party and one-half from the minority party.
- The respective party caucuses nominate Members of the caucus
- to be elected to each standing committee at the beginning of
- each Congress. Membership on a standing committee during the
- course of a Congress is contingent on continuing membership
- in the caucus that nominated the Member for election to the
- committee. If the Member ceases to be a Member of the caucus,
- the Member automatically ceases to be a Member of the
- standing committee.
-
- A Member may serve on more than one committee. However, the
- rules of the caucus of the majority party in the House
- provide that the Chairmen of certain committees may not serve
- on another committee and that a Member may be Chairman of
- only one subcommittee of a committee or select committee with
- legislative jurisdiction, excepting certain committees
- performing housekeeping functions and joint committees.
-
- A Member usually seeks election to the committee that has
- jurisdiction over a field in which the Member is most
- qualified and interested. For example, the Committee on the
- Judiciary traditionally is composed entirely of lawyers. Many
- Members are nationally recognized experts in the specialty of
- their particular committee or subcommittee.
-
- Members rank in seniority in accordance with the order of
- their appointment to the committee, and usually the ranking
- majority Member is elected Chairman. The rules of the House
- require that committee Chairmen be elected from nominations
- submitted by the majority party caucus at the commencement of
- each Congress.
-
- Most committees have 2 or more subcommittees that, in
- addition to having general jurisdiction, specialize in the
- consideration of particular classifications of bills. Each
- standing committee of the House, except the Committee on the
- Budget, that has more than 20 Members must establish at least
- 4 subcommittees.
-
- Each committee is provided with a professional and clerical
- staff to assist it in the innumerable administrative details
- and other problems involved in the consideration of bills.
- For the standing committees, the professional staff
- (consisting of not more than 18, 6 of whom may be selected by
- the minority) is appointed on a permanent basis solely on the
- basis of fitness to perform the duties of their respective
- positions. The clerical staff (consisting of not more than
- 12, 4 of whom may be selected by the minority) is appointed
- to handle correspondence and stenographic work for the
- committee staff and the Chairman and ranking minority Member
- on matters related to committee work. All staff appointments
- are made by a majority vote of the committee without regard
- to race, creed, sex, or age. The minority staff provisions do
- not apply to the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct
- because of its bipartisan nature. The Committee on
- Appropriations and the Committee on the Budget have special
- authority under the rules of the House for appointment of
- staff and assistants for the minority.
-
- Under certain conditions, a standing committee may appoint
- consultants on a temporary or intermittent basis and also may
- provide financial assistance to members of its professional
- staff for the purpose of acquiring specialized training,
- whenever the committee determines that such training will aid
- the committee in the discharge of its responsibilities.
-
-
- VI. CONSIDERATION BY COMMITTEE
-
- The rules adopted by the caucus of the majority party in
- the House provide that the Chairman of the committee to which
- a bill has been referred must refer the bill to the
- appropriate subcommittee within 2 weeks, unless a majority of
- the Members of the majority party on the committee vote to
- have the bill considered by the full committee. One of the
- first actions taken is the transmittal of copies of the bill
- to the departments and agencies concerned with the subject
- matter and frequently to the General Accounting Office with a
- request for an official report of views on the necessity or
- desirability of enacting the bill into law. Ample time is
- given for the submission of the reports and when received
- they are accorded serious consideration but are not binding
- on the committee in determining whether or not to act
- favorably on the bill. Reports of the departments and
- agencies in the executive branch are submitted first to the
- Office of Management and Budget to determine whether they are
- consistent with the program of the President.
-
- COMMITTEE MEETINGS
-
- Standing committees are required to have regular meeting
- days at least once a month, but the Chairman may call and
- convene additional meetings. Three or more Members of a
- standing committee may file with the committee a written
- request that the Chairman call a special meeting. The request
- must specify the measure or matter to be considered. If the
- Chairman fails, within 3 calendar days after the filing of
- the request, to call the requested special meeting, to be
- held within 7 calendar days after the filing of the request,
- a majority of the Members of the committee may call the
- special meeting by filing with the committee written notice
- specifying the time and date of the meeting and the measure
- or matter to be considered.
-
- With the exception of the Committees on Appropriations, on
- the Budget, on Rules, on Standards of Official Conduct, on
- Ways and Means, and on House Administration, committees may
- not, without special permission, meet while the House is
- reading a measure for amendment under the "five-minute rule".
- (See first paragraph under heading "Second Reading" in Part
- XI.) Special permission to meet will be given unless 10 or
- more Members object. The rules of the House also provide that
- House committees may not meet during a joint session of the
- House and Senate or during a recess when a joint meeting of
- the House and Senate is in progress. Committees may meet at
- other times during a recess up to the expiration of the
- constitutional term.
-
- PUBLIC HEARINGS
-
- If the bill is of sufficient importance, and particularly if
- it is controversial, the committee will usually set a date
- for public hearings. Each committee (except the Committee on
- Rules) is required to make public announcement of the date,
- place, and subject matter of any hearing to be conducted by
- the committee on any measure or matter at least one week
- before the commencement of that hearing, unless the committee
- determines that there is good cause to begin the hearing at
- an earlier date. If the committee makes that determination,
- it must make a public announcement to that effect at the
- earliest possible date. Public announcements are published in
- the Daily Digest portion of the Congressional Record as soon
- as possible after the announcement is made by the committee,
- and are often noted in news papers and periodicals. Personal
- notice, usually in the form of a letter, but possibly in the
- form of a subpena, is sent frequently to individuals,
- organizations, and Government departments and agencies that
- are known to be interested.
-
- Each hearing by a committee and subcommittee is required to
- be open to the public except when the committee or
- subcommittee, in open session and with a majority present,
- determines by rollcall vote that all or part of the remainder
- of the hearing on that day shall be closed to the public
- because disclosure of testimony, evidence, or other matters
- to be considered would endanger the national security or
- would violate a law or a rule of the House. The committee or
- subcommittee by the same procedure may vote to close one
- subsequent day of hearing, except that the Committees on
- Appropriations and on Armed Services and the Permanent Select
- Committee on Intelligence, and subcommittees of those
- committees, by the same procedure may vote to close up to 5
- additional consecutive days of hearings. When a quorum for
- taking testimony is present, a majority of the Members
- present may close a hearing to discuss whether the evidence
- or testimony to be received would endanger national security
- or would tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person.
-
- Hearings on the budget are required to be held by the
- Committee on Appropriations in open session within 30 days
- after its transmittal to Congress, except when the Committee,
- in open session and with a quorum present, determines by
- rollcall vote that the testimony to be taken at that hearing
- on that day may be related to a matter of national security.
- The Committee may by the same procedure close one subsequent
- day of hearing.
-
- On the day set for the public hearing an official reporter
- is present to record the testimony in favor of and against
- the bill. The bill may be read in full at the opening of the
- hearings and a copy is inserted in the record. After a brief
- introductory statement by the Chairman and often by the
- ranking minority Member or other committee Member, the first
- witness is called. Members or Senators who wish to be heard
- are given preference out of courtesy and because of the
- limitations on their time. Cabinet officers and high-ranking
- civil and military officials of the Government, as well as
- interested private individuals, testify either voluntarily or
- at the request or summons of the committee.
-
- Committees require, so far as practicable, that witnesses
- who appear before it file with the committee, in advance of
- their appearance, a written statement of their proposed
- testimony and limit their oral presentations to a brief
- summary of their arguments.
-
- Minority party Members of the committee are entitled to call
- witnesses of their own to testify on a measure during at
- least one day of the hearing.
-
- All committee rules in the House must provide that each
- Member shall have only 5 minutes in the interrogation of
- witnesses until each Member of the committee who desires to
- question a witness has had an opportunity to do so.
-
- A typewritten transcript of the testimony taken at a public
- hearing is made available for inspection in the office of the
- clerk of the committee and frequently the complete transcript
- is printed and distributed widely by the committee.
-
- BUSINESS MEETINGS
-
- After hearings are completed, the subcommittee usually will
- consider the bill in a session that is popularly known as the
- "markup" session. The views of both sides are studied in
- detail and at the conclusion of deliberation a vote is taken
- to determine the action of the subcommittee. It may decide to
- report the bill favorably to the full committee, with or
- without amendment, or unfavorably, or suggest that the
- committee "table" it, that is, postpone action indefinitely.
- Each Member of the subcommittee, regardless of party
- affiliation, has one vote.
-
- All meetings for the transaction of business, including the
- markup of legislation, of standing committees or
- subcommittees must be open to the public except when the
- committee or subcommittee, in open session with a majority
- present, determines by rollcall vote that all or part of the
- remainder of the meeting on that day shall be closed to the
- public. This requirement does not apply to any meeting that
- relates solely to internal budget or personnel matters.
- Members of the committee may authorize congressional staff
- and departmental representatives to be present at any
- business or markup session that has been closed to the
- public.
-
- COMMITTEE ACTION
-
- At committee meetings reports on bills may be made by
- subcommittees. Reports are fully discussed and amendments may
- be offered. Committee amendments are only proposals to change
- the bill as introduced and are subject to acceptance or
- rejection by the House itself. A vote of committee Members is
- taken to determine whether the full committee will report
- favorably or "table" the bill. If the committee votes to
- report the bill favorably to the House, it may report the
- bill with or without amendments or report a "clean bill". If
- the committee has approved extensive amendments, the
- committee may decide to report a new bill incorporating those
- amendments, commonly known as a "clean bill". The new bill is
- introduced (usually by the Chairman of the committee), and,
- after referral back to the committee, is reported favorably
- to the House by the committee. Because tabling a bill
- normally is effective in preventing action on it, adverse
- reports to the House by the full committee ordinarily are not
- made. On rare occasions, a committee may report a bill
- without recommendation or unfavorably.
-
- Generally, a majority of the committee constitutes a quorum,
- the number of Members who must be present in order for the
- committee to act. This ensures adequate participation by both
- sides in the action taken. However, a committee may vary the
- number of Members necessary for a quorum for certain actions.
- For example, a committee may fix the number of its Members,
- but not less than 2, necessary for a quorum for taking
- testimony and receiving evidence. Except for the Committees
- on Appropriations, on the Budget, and on Ways and Means, a
- committee may fix the number of its Members, but not less
- than one-third, necessary for a quorum for taking certain
- other actions. The absence of a quorum is the subject of a
- point of order--that is, an objection that the proceedings
- are out of order--that is, that the required number of
- Members is not present.
-
- PUBLIC INSPECTION OF RESULTS OF ROLLCALL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
-
- The result of each rollcall vote in any meeting of a
- committee must be made available by that committee for
- inspection by the public at reasonable times in the offices
- of that committee. Information available for public
- inspection includes (1) a description of each amendment,
- motion, order, or other proposition, (2) the name of each
- Member voting for and each Member voting against the
- amendment, motion, order, or proposition, and whether by
- proxy or in person, and (3) the names of those Members
- present but not voting.
-
- With respect to each rollcall vote by a committee on a
- motion to report a bill or resolution of a public character,
- the total number of votes cast for, and the total number of
- votes cast against, the reporting of the bill or resolution
- must be included in the committee report.
-
- PROXY VOTING
-
- A vote by a Member of a committee with respect to a measure
- or other matter may not be cast by proxy unless that
- committee adopts a written rule that permits voting by proxy
- and requires that the proxy authorization (1) be in writing,
- (2) assert that the Member is absent on official business or
- is otherwise unable to be present at the meeting of the
- committee, (3) designate the person who is to execute the
- proxy authorization, and (4) be limited to a specific measure
- or matter and any amendments or motions pertaining to the
- measure or matter. A Member may authorize a general proxy
- only for motions to recess, adjourn or other procedural
- matters. A proxy must be signed by the Member and must
- contain the date and time of day that it is signed. A proxy
- may not be counted for a quorum.
-
- POINTS OF ORDER WITH RESPECT TO COMMITTEE PROCEDURE
-
- A point of order does not lie with respect to a measure
- reported by a committee on the ground that hearings on the
- measure were not conducted in accordance with required
- committee procedure. However, certain points of order may be
- made by a Member of the committee which reported the measure
- if, in the committee, that point of order was (1) timely made
- and (2) improperly overruled or not properly considered.
-
- BROADCASTING COMMITTEE HEARINGS AND MEETINGS
-
- It is permissible to cover open committee hearings and
- meetings in the House by television, radio, and still
- photography. This permission is granted under well defined
- conditions as provided in the rules of the House. Similarly,
- the rules of the Senate permit broadcasting of open hearings
- of a Senate committee under such rules as the committee may
- adopt.
-
-
- VII. REPORTED BILLS
-
- If the committee votes to report the bill favorably to the
- House, one of the Members is designated to write the
- committee report. The report describes the purpose and scope
- of the bill and the reasons for its recommended approval.
- Generally, a section-by-section analysis is set forth in
- detail explaining precisely what each section is intended to
- accomplish. All changes in existing law must be indicated in
- the report and the text of laws being repealed must be set
- out. This requirement is known as the "Ramseyer" rule; a
- similar rule in the Senate is known as the "Cordon" rule.
- Committee amendments also must be set out at the beginning of
- the report and explanations of them are included. Executive
- communications regarding the bill usually are quoted in full.
-
- If at the time of approval of a bill by a committee (except
- the Committee on Rules) a Member of the committee gives
- notice of an intention to file supplemental, minority, or
- additional views, that Member is entitled to not less than 3
- calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
- holidays) in which to file those views with the clerk of the
- committee and they must be included in the report on the
- bill. Committee reports, with certain exceptions, must be
- filed while the House actually is sitting unless unanimous
- consent is obtained from the House to file at a later time.
-
- The report is assigned a report number when it is filed, and
- it is delivered to the Government Printing Office for
- printing during that night. Beginning with the 91st Congress,
- in 1969, the report number contains a prefix-designator which
- indicates the number of the Congress. For example, the first
- House report in 1969 was numbered 91-1.
-
- The bill is reprinted when reported and committee amendments
- are indicated by showing new matter in italics and deleted
- matter in line-through type. The report number is printed on
- the bill and the calendar number is shown on both the first
- and back pages of the bill. However, in the case of a bill
- that was referred to 2 or more committees for consideration
- in sequence, the calendar number is printed only on the bill
- as reported by the last committee to consider it. See Part
- IX, "Calendars".
-
- Committee reports are perhaps the most valuable single
- element of the legislative history of a law. They are used by
- courts, executive departments and agencies, and the public
- generally, as a source of information regarding the purpose
- and meaning of the law.
-
- CONTENTS OF REPORTS
-
- The report of a committee on a measure that has been
- approved by the committee must include (1) the committee's
- oversight findings and recommendations, (2) the statement
- required by the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, if the
- measure provides new budget authority (other than continuing
- appropriations), certain new spending authority, new credit
- authority, or an increase or decrease in revenues or tax
- expenditures, (3) the cost estimate and comparison prepared
- by the Director of the Congressional Budget Office whenever
- the Director has submitted that estimate and comparison to
- the committee prior to the filing of the report, and (4) a
- summary of the oversight findings and recommendations made by
- the Committee on Government Operations whenever they have
- been submitted to the legislative committee in a timely
- fashion to allow an opportunity to consider the findings and
- recommendations during the committee's deliberations on the
- measure. Each of these items are set out separately and
- clearly identified in the report. For a discussion of the
- Congressional budget process, see Part XII.
-
- INFLATIONARY IMPACT AND COST ESTIMATES IN REPORTS
-
- In addition, each report of a committee on a bill or joint
- resolution of a public character reported by the committee
- must contain a detailed analytical statement as to whether
- the enactment of the bill or joint resolution into law may
- have an inflationary impact on prices and costs in the
- operation of the national economy.
-
- Each report also must contain an estimate, made by the
- committee, of the costs which would be incurred in carrying
- out that bill or joint resolution in the fiscal year reported
- and in each of the 5 fiscal years thereafter or for the
- duration of the program authorized if less than 5 years. In
- the case of a measure involving revenues, the report need
- contain only an estimate of the gain or loss in revenues for
- a one-year period. The report must include a comparison of
- the estimates of those costs with the estimate made by any
- Government agency and submitted to that committee. The
- Committees on Appropriations, on House Administration, on
- Rules, and on Standards of Official Conduct are not required
- to include cost estimates in their reports. In addition, the
- cost estimates are not required to be included in reports
- when a cost estimate and comparison prepared by the Director
- of the Congressional Budget Office has been submitted prior
- to the filing of the report and included in the report.
-
- FILING OF REPORTS
-
- Measures approved by a committee must be reported promptly
- after approval. A majority of the Members of the committee
- may file a written request with the clerk of the committee
- for the reporting of the measure. When the request is filed,
- the clerk immediately must notify the Chairman of the
- committee of the filing of the request, and the report on the
- measure must be filed within 7 days (excluding days on which
- the House is not in session) after the day on which the
- request is filed. This does not apply to a report of the
- Committee on Rules with respect to the rules, joint rules, or
- order of business of the House or to the reporting of a
- resolution of inquiry addressed to the head of an executive
- department.
-
- AVAILABILITY OF REPORTS AND HEARINGS
-
- With certain exceptions (relating to emergency situations,
- such as a measure declaring war or other national emergency
- and Government agency decisions, determinations, and actions
- that are effective unless disapproved or otherwise
- invalidated by one or both Houses of Congress), a measure or
- matter reported by a committee (except the Committee on Rules
- in the case of a resolution making in order the consideration
- of a bill, resolution, or other order of business) may not be
- considered in the House until the third calendar day
- (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) on which
- the report of that committee on that measure has been
- available to the Members of the House. In addition, the
- measure or matter may not be considered unless copies of the
- report and the reported measure or matter have been available
- to the Members for at least 3 calendar days (excluding
- Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays during which the House
- is not in session) before the beginning of consideration.
- However, it is always in order to consider a report from the
- Committee on Rules specifically providing for the
- consideration of a reported measure or matter notwithstanding
- this restriction. If hearings were held on a measure or
- matter so reported, the committee is required to make every
- reasonable effort to have those hearings printed and
- available for distribution to the Members of the House prior
- to the consideration of the measure in the House. General
- appropriation bills may not be considered until printed
- committee hearings and a committee report thereon have been
- available to the Members of the House for at least 3 calendar
- days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays).
-
-
- VIII. LEGISLATIVE REVIEW BY STANDING COMMITTEES
-
- Each standing committee (other than the Committees on
- Appropriations and on the Budget) is required to review and
- study, on a continuing basis, the application,
- administration, execution, and effectiveness of the laws
- dealing with the subject matter over which the committee has
- jurisdiction and the organization and operation of Federal
- agencies and entities having responsibility for the
- administration and evaluation of those laws.
-
- The purpose of the review and study is to determine whether
- laws and the programs created by Congress are being
- implemented and carried out in accordance with the intent of
- Congress and whether those programs should be continued,
- curtailed, or eliminated. In addition, each committee having
- oversight responsibility is required to review and study any
- conditions or circumstances that may indicate the necessity
- or desirability of enacting new or additional legislation
- within the jurisdiction of that committee, and must
- undertake, on a continuing basis, futures research and
- forecasting on matters within the jurisdiction of that
- committee. Each standing committee also has the function of
- reviewing and studying, on a continuing basis, the impact or
- probable impact of tax policies on subjects within its
- jurisdiction.
-
- In addition, several of the standing committees have special
- oversight responsibilities, the details of which are
- contained in the rules of the House.
-
-
- IX. CALENDARS
-
- The House of Representatives has 5 calendars of business:
- the Union Calendar, the House Calendar, the Private Calendar,
- the Consent Calendar, and the Calendar of Motions to
- Discharge Committees. The calendars, together with a listing
- of all bills introduced and a history of all bills reported
- out of committee in the current Congress, are printed each
- day the House is in session to provide information on the
- status of pending legislation.
-
- As soon as a public bill is favorably reported, it is
- assigned a calendar number on either the Union Calendar or
- the House Calendar, the 2 principal calendars of business.
- The calendar number is printed on the first page of the bill
- and, in certain instances, is printed also on the back page.
- In the case of a bill that was referred to 2 or more
- committees for consideration in sequence, the calendar number
- is printed only on the bill as reported by the last committee
- to consider it.
-
- UNION CALENDAR
-
- The rules of the House provide that there shall be:
-
- First. A Calendar of the Committee of the Whole House on the
- state of the Union, to which shall be referred bills raising
- revenue, general appropriation bills, and bills of a public
- character directly or indirectly appropriating money or
- property.
-
-
- This is commonly known as the Union Calendar and the large
- majority of public bills and resolutions are placed on it on
- being reported to the House. For a discussion of the
- Committee of the Whole House, see Part XI.
-
- HOUSE CALENDAR
-
- The rules further provide that there shall be:
-
- Second. A House Calendar, to which shall be referred all
- bills of a public character not raising revenue nor directly
- or indirectly appropriating money or property.
-
-
- The public bills and resolutions that are not placed on the
- Union Calendar are referred to the House Calendar.
-
- PRIVATE CALENDAR
-
- The rules also provide that there shall be:
-
- Third. A Calendar of the Committee of the Whole House, to
- which shall be referred all bills of a private character.
-
-
- This is commonly known as the Private Calendar and all
- private bills are placed on it on being reported to the
- House. The Private Calendar is called on the first and third
- Tuesdays of each month. If objection is made by 2 or more
- Members to the consideration of any measure called, it is
- recommitted to the committee that reported it. As in the case
- of the Consent Calendar (see below) there are 6 official
- objectors, 3 on the majority side and 3 on the minority side,
- who make a careful study of each bill or resolution on the
- Private Calendar and who will object to a measure that does
- not conform to the requirements for that calendar, thereby
- preventing the passage without debate of nonmeritorious bills
- and resolutions.
-
- CONSENT CALENDAR
-
- If a measure pending on either the House or Union Calendar
- is of a noncontroversial nature, it may be placed on the
- Consent Calendar. After a bill has been favorably reported
- and is on either the House or Union Calendar, any Member may
- file with the Clerk a notice that the Member desires the bill
- placed on the Consent Calendar. On the first and third
- Mondays of each month immediately after the reading of the
- Journal, the Speaker directs the Clerk to call the bills in
- numerical order (that is, in the order of their appearance on
- that calendar) that have been on the Consent Calendar for 3
- legislative days. If objection is made to the consideration
- of any bill so called, it is carried over on the calendar
- without prejudice to the next day when the Consent Calendar
- is again called, and if then objected to by 3 or more Members
- it is immediately stricken from the calendar and may not be
- placed on the Consent Calendar again during that session of
- Congress. If objection is not made and if the bill is not
- "passed over" by request, it is passed by unanimous consent
- without debate. Ordinarily, the only amendments considered
- are those sponsored by the committee that reported the bill.
-
- To avoid the passage without debate of measures that may be
- controversial or are sufficiently important or complex to
- require full discussion, there are 6 official objectors--3 on
- the majority side and 3 on the minority side--who make a
- careful study of bills on the Consent Calendar. If a bill
- involves the expenditure of more than a fixed maximum amount
- of money or if it changes national policy or has other
- aspects that any of the objectors believes demand explanation
- and extended debate, it will be objected to and will not be
- passed by unanimous consent. That action does not necessarily
- mean the final defeat of the bill because it may then be
- brought up for consideration in the same way as any other
- bill on the House or Union Calendars.
-
- CALENDAR OF MOTIONS TO DISCHARGE COMMITTEES
-
- When a majority of the Members of the House sign a motion to
- discharge a committee from consideration of a public bill or
- resolution, that motion is referred to the Calendar of
- Motions to Discharge Committees. For a further discussion of
- Motions to Discharge, see "Motion to Discharge Committee" in
- Part X.
-
-
- X. OBTAINING CONSIDERATION OF MEASURES
-
- Obviously certain measures pending on the House and Union
- Calendars are more important and urgent than others and it is
- necessary to have a system permitting their consideration
- ahead of those that do not require immediate action. Because
- all measures are placed on those calendars in the order in
- which they are reported to the House, the latest bill
- reported would be the last to be taken up if the calendar
- number alone were the determining factor.
-
- SPECIAL RESOLUTIONS
-
- To avoid delays and to provide some degree of selectivity in
- the consideration of measures, it is possible to have them
- taken up out of order by obtaining from the Committee on
- Rules a special resolution or "rule" for their consideration.
- That Committee, which is composed of majority and minority
- Members but with a larger proportion of majority Members than
- other committees, is specifically granted jurisdiction over
- resolutions relating to the order of business of the House.
- Usually the Chairman of the committee that has favorably
- reported the bill appears before the Committee on Rules
- accompanied by the sponsor of the measure and one or more
- Members of the Chariman's committee in support of the request
- for a resolution providing for its immediate consideration.
- If the Committee on Rules is satisfied that the measure
- should be taken up it will report a resolution reading
- substantially as follows with respect to a bill on the Union
- Calendar:
-
- Resolved, That upon the adoption of this resolution it shall
- be in order to move that the House resolve itself into the
- Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union for
- the consideration of the bill (H.R. ___) entitled, etc., and
- the first reading of the bill shall be dispensed with. After
- general debate, which shall be confined to the bill and shall
- continue not to exceed __ hours, to be equally divided and
- controlled by the chairman and ranking minority member of the
- Committee on ___, the bill shall be read for amendment under
- the five-minute rule. At the conclusion of the consideration
- of the bill for amendment, the Committee shall rise and
- report the bill to the House with such amendments as may have
- been adopted, and the previous question shall be considered
- as ordered on the bill and amendments thereto to final
- passage without intervening motion except one motion to
- recommit.
-
-
- If the measure is on the House Calendar the resolution reads
- substantially as follows:
-
- Resolved, That upon the adoption of this resolution it shall
- be in order to consider the bill (H.R. ___) entitled, etc.,
- in the House.
-
-
- The resolution may waive points of order against the bill.
- When it limits or prevents floor amendments, it is popularly
- known as a "closed rule".
-
- CONSIDERATION OF MEASURES MADE IN ORDER BY PREVIOUS
- RESOLUTION
-
- When a "rule" has been reported to the House, and is not
- considered immediately, it is referred to the calendar and,
- if not called up for consideration by the Member making the
- report within 7 legislative days thereafter, any Member of
- the Committee on Rules may call it up as a question of
- privilege (after having given one calendar day notice of the
- Member's intention to do so) and the Speaker will recognize
- any Member of the Committee seeking recognition for that
- purpose. For a discussion of privileged questions, see the
- matter under the heading "Privileged Matters" at the end of
- this part.
-
- If, within 7 calendar days after a measure has, by
- resolution, been made in order for consideration by the
- House, a motion has not been offered for its consideration,
- the Speaker may recognize a Member of the committee that
- reported the measure to offer a motion that the House
- consider it, if the Member has been duly authorized by that
- committee to offer the motion.
-
- There are several other methods of obtaining consideration
- of bills that either have not been reported by a committee
- or, if reported, for which a special resolution or "rule" has
- not been obtained. Two of those methods, a motion to
- discharge a committee and a motion to suspend the rules, are
- discussed below.
-
- MOTION TO DISCHARGE COMMITTEE
-
- A Member may present to the Clerk a motion in writing to
- discharge a committee from the consideration of a public bill
- or resolution that has been referred to it 30 days prior
- thereto. A Member also may file a motion to discharge the
- Committee on Rules from further consideration of a resolution
- providing either a special order of business, or a special
- rule for the consideration of a public bill or resolution
- favorably reported by a standing committee, or a special rule
- for the consideration of a public bill or resolution that has
- remained in a standing committee 30 days or more without
- action. This motion may be made only when the resolution,
- from which it is moved to discharge the Committee on Rules,
- has been referred to that committee at least 7 days prior to
- the filing of the motion to discharge. The motion is placed
- in the custody of the Clerk, who arranges some convenient
- place for the signature of Members. When a majority of the
- total membership of the House have signed the motion, it is
- entered on the Journal, printed with the signatures thereto
- in the Congressional Record, and referred to the Calendar of
- Motions to Discharge Committees.
-
- On the second and fourth Mondays of each month, except
- during the last 6 days of a session, a Member who has signed
- a motion to discharge, that has been on the calendar at least
- 7 days, may seek recognition and be recognized for the
- purpose of calling up the motion. The bill or resolution is
- then read by title only. After 20 minutes' debate, one-half
- in favor of the proposition and one-half in opposition, the
- House proceeds to vote on the motion to discharge.
-
- If the motion to discharge the Committee on Rules from a
- resolution pending before the Committee prevails, the House
- immediately votes on the adoption of that resolution.
-
- If the motion to discharge one of the standing committees of
- the House from a public bill or resolution pending before the
- committee prevails, a Member who signed the motion may move
- that the House proceed to the immediate consideration of the
- bill or resolution. If the motion is agreed to, the bill or
- resolution is considered immediately under the general rules
- of the House. If the House votes against the motion for
- immediate consideration, the bill or resolution is referred
- to its proper calendar with the same rights and privileges it
- would have had if reported favorably by the standing
- committee.
-
- MOTION TO SUSPEND THE RULES
-
- On Monday and Tuesday of each week and during the last 6
- days of a session, the Speaker may entertain a motion to
- suspend the rules of the House and pass a bill or resolution.
- Arrangement must be made in advance with the Speaker to
- recognize the Member who wishes to offer the motion. Before
- being considered by the House, the motion must be seconded by
- a majority of the Members present, by teller vote, if
- demanded. However, a second is not required on a motion to
- suspend the rules when printed copies of the proposed bill or
- resolution have been available for one legislative day before
- the motion is considered. The motion to suspend the rules and
- pass the bill is then debated for 40 minutes, one-half by
- those in favor of the proposition and one-half by those
- opposed. The motion may not be amended and if amendments to
- the bill are proposed they must be included in the motion
- when it is made. The rules may be suspended and the bill
- passed only by affirmative vote of two-thirds of the Members
- voting, a quorum being present.
-
- The Speaker may postpone all recorded and yea-nay votes on
- motions to suspend the rules and pass bills and resolutions
- until the end of that legislative day or the next 2
- legislative days. At that time the House disposes of the
- deferred votes consecutively without further debate. After
- the first deferred vote is taken, the Speaker may reduce to
- not less than 5 minutes the time period for subsequent
- deferred votes. If the House adjourns before completing
- action on one or more deferred votes, these must be the first
- order of business on the next legislative day. By eliminating
- intermittent recorded votes on suspensions, this procedure
- reduces interruptions of committee meetings and also reduces
- the time Members spend on suspension days going back and
- forth between the floor and their committee rooms or offices.
-
- CALENDAR WEDNESDAY
-
- On Wednesday of each week, unless dispensed with by
- unanimous consent or by affirmative vote of two-thirds of the
- Members voting, a quorum being present, the standing
- committees are called in alphabetical order. A committee when
- named may call up for consideration any bill reported by it
- on a previous day and pending on either the House or Union
- Calendar. Not more than 2 hours of general debate is
- permitted on any measure called up on Calendar Wednesday and
- all debate must be confined to the subject matter of the
- measure, the time being equally divided between those for and
- those against it. The affirmative vote of a simple majority
- of the Members present is sufficient to pass the measure.
-
- DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BUSINESS
-
- The second and fourth Mondays in each month, after the
- disposition of motions to discharge committees and after the
- disposal of business on the Speaker's table requiring only
- referral to committee, are set aside, when claimed by the
- Committee on the District of Columbia, for the consideration
- of any business that is presented by that Committee.
-
- PRIVILEGED MATTERS
-
- Under the rules of the House certain matters are regarded as
- privileged matters and may interrupt the order of business,
- for example, reports from the Committee on Rules and reports
- from the Committee on Appropriations on the general
- appropriation bills.
-
- At any time after the reading of the Journal, a Member, by
- direction of the appropriate committee, may move that the
- House resolve itself into the Committee of the Whole House on
- the State of the Union for the purpose of considering bills
- raising revenues, or general appropriation bills. General
- appropriation bills may not be considered in the House until
- 3 calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
- holidays) after printed committee reports and hearings on
- them have been available to the Members. The limit on general
- debate is generally fixed by unanimous consent.
-
- Other examples of privileged matters are conference reports,
- certain amendments to measures by the Senate, veto messages
- from the President of the United States, and resolutions
- privileged pursuant to statute. The Member in charge of such
- a matter may call it up at practically any time for immediate
- consideration. Usually, this is done after consultation with
- both the majority and minority floor leaders so that the
- Members of both parties will have advance notice and will not
- be taken by surprise.
-
-
- XI. CONSIDERATION
-
- Our democratic tradition demands that bills be given
- consideration by the entire membership with adequate
- opportunity for debate and the proposing of amendments.
-
- COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE
-
- In order to expedite the consideration of bills and
- resolutions, the rules of the House provide for a
- parliamentary usage that enables the House to act with a
- quorum of less than the requisite majority of 218. The House
- resolves itself into the Committee of the Whole House on the
- State of the Union (a quorum of which consists of 100
- Members) to consider a measure. All measures on the Union
- Calendar--involving a tax, making appropriations, or
- authorizing payments out of appropriations already made--must
- be first considered in the Committee of the Whole.
-
- The Committee on Rules reports a special resolution or
- "rule" allowing for immediate consideration of a measure by
- the Committee of the Whole. After adoption of the resolution
- by the House, the House votes on a motion to resolve itself
- into the Committee of the Whole or, in certain situations,
- the Speaker declares the House resolved into the Committee of
- the Whole without intervening motion. When the House resolves
- into the Committee of the Whole, the Speaker leaves the chair
- after appointing a Chairman to preside.
-
- The special resolution or "rule" referred to in the
- preceding paragraph also fixes the length of the debate in
- the Committee of the Whole. This may vary according to the
- importance and controversial nature of the measure. As
- provided in the resolution, the control of the time is
- divided equally--usually between the Chairman and the ranking
- minority Member of the committee that reported the measure.
- Members seeking to speak for or against the measure usually
- arrange in advance with the Member in control of the time on
- their respective side to be allowed a certain amount of time
- in the debate. Others may ask the Member speaking at the time
- to yield to them for a question or a brief statement. A
- transcript of the proceedings and debate in the House and the
- Senate is printed daily in the Congressional Record.
- Frequently permission is granted a Member by unanimous
- consent to extend the Member's remarks in the Congressional
- Record if sufficient time to make a lengthy oral statement is
- not available during actual debate.
-
- The conduct of the debate is governed principally by the
- rules of the House that are adopted at the opening of each
- Congress. Another recognized authority is Jefferson's Manual
- that was prepared by Thomas Jefferson for his own guidance as
- President of the Senate from 1797 to 1801. The House, in
- 1837, adopted a rule that still stands, providing that the
- provisions of Jefferson's Manual should govern the House in
- all cases to which they are applicable and in which they are
- not inconsistent with the rules and orders of the House. In
- addition, there is a most valuable compilation of precedents
- up to the year 1935 set out in Hinds' Precedents and Cannon's
- Precedents of the House of Representatives, consisting of 11
- volumes, to guide the action of the House. A later
- compilation, Deschler's Precedents of the House of
- Representatives, covers years 1936 to date. Summaries of the
- House precedents prior to 1959 can be found in a single
- volume entitled Cannon's Procedure in the House of
- Representatives. A later volume, Procedure in the U.S. House
- of Representatives, fourth edition, as supplemented, is a
- compilation of the parliamentary precedents of the House, in
- summary form, together with other useful related material,
- from 1959 to date. Also, various rulings of the Speaker since
- 1931 are set out as notes to the current House Rules and
- Manual. Most parliamentary questions arising during the
- course of debate are susceptible of ruling backed up by a
- precedent of action in a similar situation. The
- Parliamentarian of the House is present in the House Chamber
- in order to assist the Chairman or the Speaker in making a
- correct ruling on parliamentary questions.
-
- SECOND READING
-
- During the general debate an accurate account is kept of the
- time used on both sides and when all the time allowed under
- the rule has been consumed the Chairman terminates the
- debate. Then begins the "second reading of the bill", section
- by section, at which time amendments may be offered to a
- section when it is read. A Member is permitted 5 minutes to
- explain the proposed amendment, after which the Member who is
- first recognized by the Chair is allowed to speak for 5
- minutes in opposition to it; there is no further debate on
- that amendment, thereby effectively preventing any attempt at
- filibuster tactics. This is known as the "five-minute rule".
- There is, how ever, a device whereby a Member may offer a pro
- forma amendment--"to strike out the last word"--without
- intending any change in the language, and be allowed 5
- minutes for debate, thus permitting a somewhat more
- comprehensive debate. Each amendment is put to the Committee
- of the Whole for adoption. Generally, a pro forma amendment
- is withdrawn. However, in the absence of being withdrawn, it
- must be voted on.
-
- At any time after a debate is begun under the five-minute
- rule, on proposed amendments to a section or paragraph of a
- bill, the Committee of the Whole may by majority vote of the
- Members present, close debate on the section or paragraph.
- However, if debate is closed on a section or paragraph before
- there has been debate on any amendment that a Member has
- caused to be printed in the Congressional Record after the
- reporting of the bill by the committee but at least one day
- prior to floor consideration of the amendment, the Member who
- caused the amendment to be printed in the Record is given 5
- minutes in which to explain the amendment, after which the
- first person to obtain the floor has 5 minutes to speak in
- opposition to it, and there is no further debate on that
- proposed amendment. However, time for debate is not allowed
- when the offering of the amendment is dilatory. Material
- placed in the Congressional Record must indicate the full
- text of the proposed amendment, the name of the proponent
- Member, the number of the bill to which it will be offered
- and the point in the bill or amendment thereto where the
- amendment is intended to be offered, and must appear in a
- portion of the Record designated for that purpose.
-
- When an amendment is offered, while the House is meeting in
- the Committee of the Whole, the Clerk is required to transmit
- 5 copies of the amendment to the majority committee table, 5
- copies to the minority committee table, and at least one copy
- each to the majority and minority cloak rooms.
-
- THE COMMITTEE "RISES"
-
- At the conclusion of the consideration of a bill for
- amendment, the Committee of the Whole "rises" and reports the
- bill to the House with the amendments that have been adopted.
- In rising the Committee of the Whole reverts back to the
- House and the Chairman of the Committee is replaced in the
- chair by the Speaker of the House. The House then acts on the
- bill and any amendments adopted by the Committee of the
- Whole.
-
- HOUSE ACTION
-
- Debate is cut off by moving "the previous question". If this
- motion is carried by a majority of the Members voting, a
- quorum being present, all debate is cut off on the bill on
- which the previous question has been ordered. The Speaker
- then puts the question: "Shall the bill be engrossed and read
- a third time?" If this question is decided in the
- affirmative, the bill is read a third time by title only and
- voted on for passage.
-
- If the previous question has been ordered by the terms of
- the special resolution or "rule" on a bill reported by the
- Committee of the Whole, the House immediately votes on
- whatever amendments have been reported by the Committee in
- the sequence in which they were reported. After completion of
- voting on the amendments, the House immediately votes on the
- passage of the bill with the amendments it has adopted.
-
- In those cases where the previous question has not been
- ordered, the House may engage in debate lasting one hour, at
- the conclusion of which the previous question is ordered and
- the House votes on the passage of the bill. During the debate
- it is in order to offer amendments to the bill or to the
- Committee amendments.
-
- The Speaker may postpone a vote on final passage of a bill
- or resolution or agreement to a conference report. A vote may
- be postponed for up to 2 legislative days.
-
- Measures that do not have to be considered in the Committee
- of the Whole are considered in the House in the first
- instance under the hour rule or in accordance with the terms
- of the special resolution limiting debate on the measure.
-
- After passage of the bill by the House, a pro forma motion
- to reconsider it is automatically made and laid on the table-
- -that is, action is postponed indefinitely--to forestall this
- motion at a later date, because the vote of the House on a
- proposition is not final and conclusive on the House until
- there has been an opportunity to reconsider it.
-
- MOTIONS TO RECOMMIT
-
- After the previous question has been ordered on the passage
- of a bill or joint resolution, it is in order to make one
- motion to recommit the bill or joint resolution to a
- committee and the Speaker is required to give preference in
- recognition for that purpose to a Member who is opposed to
- the bill or joint resolution. This motion is normally not
- subject to debate. However, with respect to a motion to
- recommit with instructions after the previous question has
- been ordered, it is in order to debate the motion for 10
- minutes before the vote is taken, except that the majority
- floor manager may demand that the debate be extended to one
- hour. Whatever time is allotted for debate is divided equally
- between the proponents and opponents of the motion.
-
- QUORUM CALLS AND ROLLCALLS
-
- In order to speed up and expedite quorum calls and
- rollcalls, the rules of the House provide alternative methods
- for pursuing these procedures.
-
- In the absence of a quorum, 15 Members, including the
- Speaker, if there is one, are authorized to compel the
- attendance of absent Members. Such a call of the House is
- ordered by a majority vote, and a minority of 15 or more
- favoring a call is not sufficient. A call of the House is
- then ordered, and the Speaker is required to have the call
- taken by electronic device. However, the Speaker instead may
- name one or more clerks "to tell" the Members who are
- present. In that case the names of those present are recorded
- by the clerks, and entered in the Journal of the House and
- absent Members have not less than 15 minutes from the
- ordering of the call of the House to have their presence
- recorded. If sufficient excuse is not offered for their
- absence, by order of a majority of those present, they may be
- sent for by officers appointed by the Sergeant-at-Arms for
- that purpose, and their attendance secured and retained. The
- House then determines the conditions on which they may be
- discharged. Members who voluntarily appear are, unless the
- House otherwise directs, immediately admitted to the Hall of
- the House and they must report their names to the Clerk to be
- entered on the Journal as present. However, the former
- practice of presenting Members at the Bar of the House,
- during a call, is now obsolete, and Members now report to the
- Clerk and are recorded without being formally excused unless
- brought in under compulsion.
-
- Whenever a quorum fails to vote on any question, and a
- quorum is not present and objection is made for that reason,
- there is a call of the House unless the House adjourns. The
- call is taken by electronic device unless the Speaker orders
- the call in the manner described in the preceding paragraph,
- and the Sergeant-at-Arms proceeds to bring in absent Members.
- The yeas and nays on the pending question are at the same
- time considered as ordered and an automatic rollcall vote is
- taken. The Clerk calls the roll and each Member who is
- present may vote on the pending question as the Member
- answers the roll. After the rollcall is completed, each
- Member, whose attendance was secured, is brought before the
- House by the Sergeant-at-Arms, where the Member's presence is
- noted. The Member then is given an opportunity to vote. If
- those voting on the question and those who are present and
- decline to vote together make a majority of the House, the
- Speaker declares that a quorum is constituted, and the
- pending question is decided according to the will of the
- majority of those voting. Further proceedings under the call
- are considered as dispensed with. At any time after the
- rollcall has been completed, the Speaker may entertain a
- motion to adjourn, if seconded by a majority of those present
- as ascertained by actual count by the Speaker; and if the
- House adjourns, all quorum call proceedings are vacated.
-
- The rules prohibit points of no quorum (1) before or during
- the daily prayer, (2) during administration of the oath of
- office to the Speaker or any Member, (3) during the reception
- of messages from the President or the Senate, (4) in
- connection with motions incidental to a call of the House,
- and (5) against a vote in which the Committee of the Whole
- agrees to rise (but an appropriate point of no quorum would
- be permitted against a vote defeating a motion to rise). If
- the presence of a quorum has been established at least once
- on any day, further points of no quorum are prohibited (1)
- during the reading of the Journal, (2) between the time a
- Committee of the Whole rises and its Chairman reports, and
- (3) during the period on any legislative day when Members are
- addressing the House under special orders. The language
- prohibiting quorum calls "during any period" when Members are
- speaking under special orders includes the time between
- addresses delivered during this period as well as the
- addresses themselves. Furthermore, a quorum call is not in
- order when no business has intervened since the previous
- call. For the purposes of this provision, all the situations
- described above are not to be considered as "business".
-
- The rules prohibit points of no quorum when a motion or
- proposition is pending in the House unless the Speaker has
- put the motion or proposition to a vote. However, the Speaker
- has the discretion to recognize a Member of the Speaker's
- choice to move a call of the House.
-
- The first time the Committee of the Whole finds itself
- without a quorum during any day the Chairman is required to
- order the roll to be called by electronic device, unless the
- Chairman orders a call by naming clerks "to tell" the Members
- as described above. However, the Chairman may refuse to
- entertain a point of order that a quorum is not present
- during general debate. If on a call a quorum appears, the
- Committee continues its business. If a quorum does not
- appear, the Committee rises and the Chairman reports the
- names of the absentees to the House. The rules provide for
- the expeditious conduct of quorum calls in the Committee of
- the Whole. The Chairman may suspend a quorum call after
- determining that a bare or minimum quorum has been reached,
- that is, 100 or more Members. Under such a short quorum call
- the Committee will not rise, and therefore Members' names
- will not be published. Once the presence of a quorum of the
- Committee of the Whole has been established for the day,
- quorum calls in the Committee are only in order when the
- Committee is operating under the five-minute rule and the
- Chairman has put the pending motion or proposition to a vote.
-
- VOTING
-
- There are 4 methods of voting in the Committee of the Whole,
- that are also employed, together with an additional method,
- in the House. These are the voice vote (viva voce), the
- division, the teller vote, the recorded vote, and the yea-
- and-nay vote that is used only in the House. If a Member
- objects to the vote on the ground that a quorum is not
- present in the House, there may be an automatic rollcall
- vote.
-
- To obtain a voice vote the Chair states "As many as are in
- favor (as the question may be) say `Aye'." "As many as are
- opposed, say `No'.". The Chair determines the result on the
- basis of the volume of ayes and noes. This is the form in
- which the vote is ordinarily taken in the first instance.
-
- If it is difficult to determine the result of a voice vote,
- a division may be demanded. The Chair then states that a
- division has been demanded and says "As many as are in favor
- will rise and stand until counted." After counting those in
- favor he calls on those opposed to stand and be counted,
- thereby determining the number in favor of and those opposed
- to the question.
-
- If a demand for a teller vote is supported by one-fifth of a
- quorum (20 in the Committee of the Whole, and 44 in the
- House), the Chair appoints one or more tellers from each side
- and directs the Members in favor of the proposition to pass
- between the tellers and be counted. After counting, a teller
- announces the number in the affirmative, and the Chair then
- directs the Members opposed to pass between the tellers and
- be counted. When the count is stated by a teller, the Chair
- announces the result.
-
- If any Member requests a recorded vote and that request is
- supported by at least one-fifth of a quorum of the House, or
- 25 Members in the Committee of the Whole, the vote is taken
- by electronic device, unless the Speaker orders clerks "to
- tell", that is, record the names of those voting on each side
- of the question. After the recorded vote is concluded, the
- names of those voting together with those not voting are
- entered in the Journal. Members usually have 15 minutes to be
- counted from the time the recorded vote is ordered or the
- ordering of the clerks "to tell" the vote. The Speaker may
- reduce the period for voting to 5 minutes in certain
- situations.
-
- In addition to the foregoing methods of voting, in the
- House, if the yeas and nays are demanded, the Speaker directs
- those in favor of taking the vote by that method to stand and
- be counted. The assent of one-fifth of the Members present
- (as distinguished from one-fifth of a quorum in the case of a
- demand for tellers) is necessary for ordering the yeas and
- nays. When the yeas and nays are ordered (or a point of order
- is made that a quorum is not present) the Speaker directs
- that as many as are in favor of the proposition will, as
- their names are called, answer "Aye"; as many as are opposed
- will answer "No". The Clerk calls the roll and reports the
- result to the Speaker who announces it to the House. The
- Speaker is not required to vote unless the Speaker's vote
- would be decisive.
-
- The rules prohibit a Member from (1) casting another
- Member's vote or recording another Member's presence in the
- House or the Committee of the Whole or (2) authorizing
- another individual to cast a vote or record the Member's
- presence in the House or the Committee of the Whole.
-
- ELECTRONIC VOTING
-
- Recorded and rollcall votes are usually taken by electronic
- device, except when the Speaker orders the vote to be
- recorded by other methods prescribed by the rules of the
- House, and in emergency situations, such as, the failure of
- the electronic device to function. In addition, quorum calls
- are generally taken by electronic device. Essentially the
- system works as follows: A number of vote stations are
- attached to selected chairs in the Chamber. Each station is
- equipped with a vote card slot and 4 indicators, marked
- "yea", "nay", "present", and "open". The "open" indicator is
- used only when a vote period is in progress and the system is
- ready to accept votes. Each Member is provided with a
- personalized Vote 09ID Card. A Member votes by inserting the
- voting card into any one of the vote stations and depressing
- the appropriate push button to indicate the Member's choice.
- The machine records the votes and reports the result when the
- vote is completed. In the event the Member is without a Vote
- 09ID Card, the Member may still vote by handing a paper
- ballot to the Tally Clerk, who may then record the vote
- electronically according to the indicated preference of the
- Member. The paper ballots are green for "yea", red for "nay",
- and amber for "present".
-
- PAIRING OF MEMBERS
-
- When a Member anticipates being unavoidably absent at the
- time a vote is to be taken, the Member may arrange in advance
- to be recorded as being either in favor of, or opposed to,
- the question by being "paired" with a Member who will also be
- absent and who holds contrary views on the question. A
- specific pair of this kind shows how the Member would have
- voted if present. Occasionally, a Member who has arranged in
- advance to be paired, actually is present at the time of
- voting. The Member then votes as if not paired, and
- subsequently withdraws that vote and asks to be marked
- "present" to protect the other Member. This is known as a
- "live pair". If the absence is to continue for several days
- during which a number of different questions are to be voted
- upon the Member may arrange a "general pair". A general pair
- does not indicate how the Member would have voted on the
- question, but merely that the paired Members would not have
- been on the same side of the question.
-
- Pairs are not counted in determining the vote on the
- question, but, rather, provide an opportunity for absent
- Members to express formally how they would have voted had
- they been present. Pairs are announced by the Clerk of the
- House and are listed in the Congressional Record immediately
- after the names of those Members not voting on the question.
-
- SYSTEM OF LIGHTS AND BELLS
-
- Because of the large number and the diversity of daily tasks
- that they have to perform it is not practicable for Members
- to be present in the House (or Senate) Chamber at every
- minute that the body is actually sitting. Furthermore, many
- of the routine matters do not require the personal attendance
- of all the Members. A legislative call system (consisting of
- electric lights and bells or buzzers located in various parts
- of the Capitol Building and of the House and Senate Office
- Buildings) alerts Members to certain occurrences in the House
- and Senate Chambers.
-
- In the House, the Speaker has ordered that the bells and
- lights comprising the system be utilized as follows:
-
- 1 ring and 1 light on the left--Teller vote.
-
- 1 long ring followed by a pause and then 3 rings and 3
- lights on the left--Start or continuation of a notice or
- short quorum call in the Committee of the Whole that will be
- vacated if and when 100 Members appear on the floor. Bells
- are repeated every 5 minutes unless the call is vacated or
- the call is converted into a regular quorum call.
-
- 1 long ring and extinguishing of 3 lights on the left--Short
- or notice quorum call vacated.
-
- 2 rings and 2 lights on the left--Recorded vote, yea-and-nay
- vote or automatic rollcall vote by electronic device or by
- tellers with ballot cards. The bells are repeated 5 minutes
- after the first ring.
-
- 2 rings and 2 lights on the left followed by a pause and
- then 2 more rings--Automatic rollcall vote or yea-and-nay
- vote taken by a call of the roll in the House. The bells are
- repeated when the clerk reaches the R's in the first call of
- the roll.
-
- 2 rings followed by a pause and then 5 rings--First vote
- under Suspension of the Rules or on clustered votes. 2 bells
- are repeated 5 minutes after the first ring. The first vote
- will take 15 minutes with successive votes at intervals of
- not less than 5 minutes. Each successive vote is signaled by
- 5 rings.
-
- 3 rings and 3 lights on the left--Regular quorum call in
- either the House or in the Committee of the Whole by
- electronic device or by clerks. The bells are repeated 5
- minutes after the first ring.
-
- 3 rings followed by a pause and then 3 more rings--Regular
- quorum call by a call of the roll. The bells are repeated
- when the Clerk reaches the R's in the first call of the roll.
-
- 3 rings followed by a pause and then 5 more rings--Quorum
- call in the Committee of the Whole that may be followed
- immediately by a five-minute recorded vote.
-
- 4 rings and 4 lights on the left--Adjournment of the House.
-
- 5 rings and 5 lights on the left--Any five-minute vote.
-
- 6 rings and 6 lights on the left--Recess of the House.
-
- 12 rings at 2-second intervals with 6 lights on the left--
- Civil Defense Warning.
-
- The 7th light indicates that the House is in session.
-
- BROADCASTING LIVE COVERAGE OF FLOOR PROCEEDINGS
-
- The rules of the House provide for unedited radio and
- television broadcasting and recording of proceedings on the
- floor of the House. However, the rules prohibit the use of
- these broadcasts and recordings for any political purpose or
- in any commercial advertisement. Likewise, the rules of the
- Senate provide for broadcasting and recording of proceedings
- in the Senate Chamber with similar restrictions.
-
-
- XII. CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET PROCESS
-
- The Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of
- l974 provides Congress with a procedure for establishing
- appropriate budget and revenue levels for each year.
- Essentially, the Congressional budget process involves
- "concurrent resolutions on the budget" that are passed each
- year. These resolutions are designed to coordinate the
- revenue and spending decisions that the various legislative
- committees of Congress make in acting on measures within
- their respective jusrisdictions in order to provide fiscal
- discipline for Congress.
-
- Congress must complete action on a concurrent resolution on
- the budget for the next fiscal year by April 15. This
- resolution sets levels of new budget authority and spending,
- revenue, and debt levels. However, Congress may adopt a later
- budget resolution that revises or reaffirms the most recently
- adopted budget resolution.
-
- One of the mechanisms Congress uses to enforce projected
- budget authority and spending, revenue, and debt levels is
- called the reconciliation process. Under reconciliation,
- Congress in a budget resolution directs one or more of the
- legislative committees to determine and recommend changes in
- laws or bills that will achieve the levels set by the budget
- resolution. The directions to the committees specify the
- total amounts that must be changed but leaves to the
- discretion of the committees the changes that must be made to
- achieve the required levels.
-
- If only one committee has been directed to recommend
- changes, that committee reports its reconciliation
- legislation directly to the floor for consideration by the
- whole House. How ever, if more than one committee has been
- directed to make changes, the committees report the
- recommended changes to the Committee on the Budget. The
- Committee then reports an omnibus reconciliation bill to the
- floor for consideration by the whole House. The Committee may
- not change the reconciliation legislation substantively.
-
- When changes are to be made in legislation that already has
- been enacted or enrolled (for an explanation of enrollment,
- see Part XVII), the vehicle used is a reconciliation bill
- that is enacted in the same manner as any other bill.
- However, if changes are to be made in bills or resolutions
- that have not been enrolled yet, Congress enacts the changes
- in a concurrent resolution not requiring approval of the
- President. The concurrent resolution directs the Clerk of the
- House or the Secretary of the Senate to make the necessary
- changes in the bill or resolution as directed by the
- reconciliation resolution. Congress must complete action on a
- reconciliation bill or resolution by June 15 of each year.
-
- Generally, after Congress has completed action on a
- concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year, it is
- not in order to consider legislation that does not conform to
- the budget authority and spending, revenue, and debt levels
- set for that fiscal year.
-
- In 1985, Congress enacted legislation establishing a
- procedure to gradually reduce the Federal deficit to zero.
- The current target date for a zero deficit is 1993. Under the
- new procedure, if the estimated deficit for a fiscal year
- exceeds the statutory level for that year, across-the-board
- cuts in the Federal budget (with certain exceptions) would go
- into effect automatically pursuant to order of the President.
-
-
- XIII. ENGROSSMENT AND MESSAGE TO SENATE
-
- The preparation of a copy of the bill in the form in which
- it has passed the House is sometimes a detailed and
- complicated process because of the large number and
- complexity of amendments to some bills adopted by the House.
- Frequently these amendments are offered during a spirited
- debate with little or no prior formal preparation. The
- amendment may be for the purpose of inserting new language,
- substituting different words for those set out in the bill,
- or deleting portions of the bill. It is not unusual to have
- more than 100 amendments, including those proposed by the
- committee at the time the bill is reported and those offered
- from the floor during the consideration of the bill in the
- Chamber. Some of the amendments offered from the floor are
- written in longhand and others are typewritten. Each
- amendment must be inserted in precisely the proper place in
- the bill, with the spelling and punctuation exactly the same
- as it was adopted by the House. Obviously, it is extremely
- important that the Senate receive a copy of the bill in the
- precise form in which it has passed the House. The
- preparation of such a copy is the function of the enrolling
- clerk.
-
- There is an enrolling clerk in each House. In the House, the
- enrolling clerk is under the Clerk of the House. In the
- Senate, the enrolling clerk is under the Secretary of the
- Senate. The enrolling clerk receives all the papers relating
- to the bill, including the official Clerk's copy of the bill
- as reported by the standing committee and each amendment
- adopted by the House. From this material the enrolling clerk
- prepares the engrossed copy of the bill as passed, containing
- all the amendments agreed to by the House. At this point, the
- measureceases technically to be called a bill and is termed
- "an act signifying that it is the act of one body of the
- Congress, although it is still popularly referred to as a
- bill. The engrossed bill is printed on blue paper and a
- certificate that it passed the House of Representatives is
- signed by the Clerk of the House. The engrossed bill is
- delivered by a reading clerk to the Senate, while that body
- is actually sitting, in a rather formal ceremonious manner
- befitting the dignity of both Houses. The reading clerk is
- escorted into the Chamber by the Secretary or another officer
- of the Senate and on being recognized by the Presiding
- Officer of the Senate states that the House has passed the
- bill, giving its number and title, and requests the
- concurrence of the Senate.
-
-
- XIV. SENATE ACTION
-
- The Presiding Officer of the Senate refers the engrossed
- bill to the appropriate standing committee of the Senate in
- conformity with the rules of the Senate. The bill is
- reprinted immediately and copies are made available in the
- document rooms of both Houses. This printing is known as the
- "Act print" or the "Senate referred print".
-
- COMMITTEE CONSIDERATION
-
- Senate committees give the bill the same kind of detailed
- consideration as it received in the House, and may report it
- with or without amendment or "table" it. A committee Member
- who wishes to express an individual view, or a group of
- Members who wish to file a minority report, may do so, by
- giving notice, at the time of the approval of the measure, of
- an intention to file supplemental, minority or additional
- views, in which event those views may be filed within 3 days
- with the clerk of the committee and they become a part of the
- report.
-
- When a committee reports a bill, it is reprinted with the
- committee amendments indicated by showing new matter in
- italics and deleted matter in line-through type. The calendar
- number and report number are indicated on the first and back
- pages, together with the name of the Senator making the
- report. The committee report and any minority or individual
- views accompanying the bill also are printed at the same
- time. Any Senator may enter a motion to discharge a committee
- from further consideration of a bill that it has failed to
- report after what is deemed to be a reasonable time. If the
- motion is agreed to by a majority vote, the committee is
- discharged and the bill is placed on the Calendar of Business
- under the rules of the Senate.
-
- All committee meetings, including those to conduct hearings,
- must be open to the public. However, a majority of the
- Members of a committee or subcommittee may, after discussion
- in closed session, vote in open session to close a meeting or
- series of meetings on the same subject for no longer than 14
- days if it is determined that the matters to be discussed or
- testimony to be taken will disclose matters necessary to be
- kept secret in the interests of national defense or the
- confidential conduct of the foreign relations of the United
- States; will relate solely to internal committee staff
- management or procedure; will tend to charge an individual
- with a crime or misconduct, to disgrace or injure the
- professional standing of an individual, or otherwise to
- expose an individual to public contempt, or will represent a
- clearly unwarranted invasion of the privacy of an individual;
- will disclose law enforcement information that is required to
- be kept secret; will disclose certain information regarding
- certain trade secrets; or may disclose matters required to be
- kept confidential under other provisions of law or Government
- regulation.
-
- CHAMBER PROCEDURE
-
- The rules of procedure in the Senate differ to a large
- extent from those in the House. The Senate relies heavily on
- the practice of obtaining unanimous consent for actions to be
- taken. For example, at the time that a bill is reported, the
- Senator who is making the report may ask unanimous consent
- for the immediate consideration of the bill. If the bill is
- of a noncontroversial nature and there is no objection, the
- Senate may pass the bill with little or no debate and with
- only a brief explanation of its purpose and effect. Even in
- this instance the bill is subject to amendment by any
- Senator. A simple majority vote is necessary to carry an
- amendment as well as to pass the bill. If there is any
- objection, the report must lie over one day and the bill is
- placed on the calendar.
-
- Measures reported by standing committees of the Senate may
- not be considered unless the report of that committee has
- been available to Senate Members for at least 2 days
- (excluding Sundays and legal holidays) prior to consideration
- of the measure in the Senate. This requirement, however, may
- be waived by agreement of the majority and minority leaders
- and does not apply in certain emergency situations.
-
- In the Senate, measures are brought up for consideration by
- a simple unanimous consent request, by a complex unanimous
- consent agreement, by a motion to proceed to the
- consideration of a measure, or by a motion to consider a
- measure on the calendar. A unanimous consent agreement,
- sometimes referred to as a "time agreement", makes the
- consideration of a measure in order and often limits the
- amount of debate that will take place on the measure and
- lists the amendments that will be considered. The offering of
- a unanimous consent request to consider a measure or the
- offering of a motion to proceed to the consideration of a
- measure is reserved, by tradition, to the majority leader.
-
- Usually a motion to consider a measure on the calendar is
- made only when unanimous consent to consider the measure
- cannot be obtained. There is only one Calendar of Business in
- the Senate, there being no differentiation, as there is in
- the House, between (1) bills raising revenue, general
- appropriation bills, and bills of a public character
- appropriating money or property, and (2) other bills of a
- public character not appropriating money or property.
-
- The rules of the Senate provide that at the conclusion of
- the morning business for each "legislative day" the Senate
- proceeds to the consideration of the calendar. In the Senate,
- the term "legislative day" means the period of time from when
- the Senate adjourns until the next time the Senate adjourns.
- Because the Senate often "recesses" rather than "adjourns" at
- the end of a daily session, the "legislative day" usually
- does not correspond to the 24-hour period comprising a
- calendar day. Thus, a "legislative day" may cover a long
- period of time--from days to weeks, or even months. Because
- of this and the modern practice of waiving the call of the
- calendar by unanimous consent at the start of a new
- "legislative day", it is rare to have a call of the calendar.
- When the calendar is called, bills that are not objected to
- are taken up in their order, and each Senator is entitled to
- speak once and for 5 minutes only on any question. Objection
- may be interposed at any stage of the proceedings, but on
- motion the Senate may continue consideration after the call
- of the calendar is completed, and the limitations on debate
- then do not apply.
-
- On any day (other than a Monday that begins a new
- "legislative day"), following the announcement of the close
- of morning business, any Senator obtaining recognition may
- move to take up any bill out of its regular order on the
- calendar. Usually, this is the majority leader. The five-
- minute limitation on debate does not apply to the
- consideration of a bill taken up in this manner, and debate
- may continue until the hour when the Presiding Officer of the
- Senate "lays down" the un finished business of the day. At
- that point consideration of the bill is discontinued and the
- measure reverts back to the Calendar of Business and may
- again be called up at another time under the same conditions.
-
- When a bill has been objected to and passed over on the call
- of the calendar it is not necessarily lost. The majority
- leader, after consulting the majority policy committee of the
- Senate and the minority leadership, determines the time at
- which the bill will be called up for debate. At that time, a
- motion is made to consider the bill. The motion is debatable
- if made after the morning hour.
-
- Once a Senator is recognized by the Presiding Officer, the
- Senator may speak for as long as the Senator wishes and loses
- the floor only when the Senator yields it or takes certain
- parliamentary actions that forfeit the Senator's right to the
- floor. How ever, a Senator may not speak more than twice on
- any one question in debate on the same legislative day
- without leave of the Senate. Debate ends when a Senator
- yields the floor and no other Senator seeks recognition, or
- when a unanimous consent agreement limiting the time of
- debate is operating.
-
- On occasion, Senators opposed to a measure may extend debate
- by making lengthy speeches intended to prevent or defeat
- action on the measure. This is the tactic known as
- "filibustering". Debate, however, may be closed if 16
- Senators sign a motion to that effect and the motion is
- carried by three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and
- sworn. Such a motion is voted on without debate on the second
- day after the day it is filed. This procedure is called
- "invoking cloture". In 1986, the Senate amended its rules to
- limit "post-cloture" debate to 30 hours. A Senator may speak
- for not more than one hour and may yield all or a part of
- that time to the majority or minority floor managers of the
- bill under consideration or to the majority or minority
- leader. The Senate may increase the time for "post-cloture"
- debate by a vote of three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen
- and sworn. After the time for debate has expired, the Senate
- may consider certain amendments before voting on the bill.
-
- While a measure is being considered it is subject to
- amendment and each amendment, including those proposed by the
- committee that reported the bill, is considered separately.
- Generally, there is no requirement that proposed amendments
- be germane to the subject matter of the bill except in the
- case of general appropriation bills. Under the rules, a
- "rider" (an amendment proposing substantive legislation to an
- appropriation bill) is prohibited, but this prohibition may
- be suspended by two-thirds vote on a motion to permit
- consideration of such an amendment on one day's notice in
- writing. Debate on the measure must be germane during the
- first 3 hours after the morning hour unless determined to the
- contrary by unanimous consent or on motion without debate.
- After final action on the amendments the bill is ready for
- engrossment and the third reading, which is usually by title
- only, although if demanded, it must be read in full. The
- Presiding Officer then puts the question on the passage and a
- voice vote (viva voce) is usually taken although a yea-and-
- nay vote is in order if demanded by one-fifth of the Senators
- present. A simple majority is necessary for passage. Before
- an amended measure is cleared for its return to the House of
- Representatives (or an unamended measure is cleared for
- enrollment), a Senator who voted with the prevailing side, or
- who abstained from voting, may make a motion within the next
- 2 days to reconsider the action. If the measure was passed
- without a recorded vote, any Senator may make the motion to
- reconsider. That motion is usually tabled and its tabling
- constitutes a final determination. If, however, the motion is
- granted, the Senate, by majority vote, may either affirm its
- action, which then becomes final, or reverse it.
-
- The original engrossed House bill, together with the
- engrossed Senate amendments, if any, is then returned to the
- House with a message stating the action taken by the Senate.
- Where amendments have been made by the Senate the message
- requests that the House concur in them.
-
- For a more detailed discussion of Senate procedure, see
- Senate Document No. 97-20 of the 97th Congress, second
- session, Enactment of a Law, by Robert B. Dove, then
- Parliamentarian of the Senate.
-
-
- XV. FINAL ACTION ON AMENDED BILl
-
- On their return to the House the official papers relating
- to the amended measure are placed on the Speaker's table to
- await House action on the Senate amendments. If the
- amendments are of a minor or noncontroversial nature the
- Chairman of the committee that originally reported the bill--
- or any Member--may, at the direction of the committee, ask
- unanimous consent to take the bill with the amendments from
- the Speaker's table and agree to the Senate amendments. At
- this point the Clerk reads the title of the bill and the
- Senate amendments. If there is no objection, the amendments
- are then declared to be agreed to, and the bill is ready to
- be enrolled for presentation to the President. Lacking
- unanimous consent, bills that do not require consideration in
- the Committee of the Whole are privileged and may be called
- up from the Speaker's table by motion for immediate
- consideration of the amendments. A simple majority is
- necessary to carry the motion and thereby complete floor
- action on the measure. A Senate amendment to a House bill is
- subject to a point of order that it must first be considered
- in the Committee of the Whole, if, originating in the House,
- it would be subject to that point.
-
- REQUEST FOR A CONFERENCE
-
- If, however, the amendments are substantial or controversial
- the Member may request unanimous consent to take the bill
- with the Senate amendments from the Speaker's table, disagree
- to the amendments and request a conference with the Senate to
- resolve the disagreeing votes of the 2 Houses. If there is
- objection it becomes necessary to obtain a special resolution
- from the Committee on Rules. However, the Speaker may
- recognize a Member for a motion, authorized by the committee
- having jurisdiction over the subject matter of the bill, to
- disagree to the amendments and ask for a conference. If there
- is no objection to the request, or if the motion is carried,
- the Speaker then appoints the managers (as the conferees are
- called) on the part of the House and a message is sent to the
- Senate advising it of the House action. A majority of the
- Members appointed to be managers must have been supporters of
- the House position, as determined by the Speaker. The Speaker
- must name Members primarily responsible for the legislation
- and must include, to the fullest extent feasible, the
- principal proponents of the major provisions of the bill as
- it passed the House. The Speaker usually follows the
- suggestions of the Chairman of the committee in charge of the
- bill in designating the managers on the part of the House
- from among the Members of the committee. The number is fixed
- by the Speaker and majority party representation generally
- reflects the ratio for the full House committee, but may be
- greater on important bills. Representation of both major
- parties is an important attribute of all our parliamentary
- procedures but, in the case of conference committees, it is
- important that the views of the House on the House measure be
- fully repre sented.
-
- If the Senate agrees to the request for a conference, a
- similar committee is appointed by unanimous consent by the
- Presiding Officer of the Senate. Both political parties may
- be represented on the Senate conference committee also. The
- Senate and House committees need not be the same size.
-
- The conference committee is sometimes popularly referred to
- as the "Third House of Congress".
-
- The request for a conference can be made only by the body in
- possession of the official papers. Occasionally the Senate,
- anticipating that the House will not concur in its
- amendments, votes to insist on its amendments and requests a
- conference on passage of the bill prior to returning the bill
- to the House. This practice serves to expedite the matter
- because several days' time may be saved by the designation of
- the Senate conferees before returning the bill to the House.
- The matter of which body requests the conference is not
- without significance because the one asking for the
- conference acts last on the report to be submitted by the
- conferees.
-
- AUTHORITY OF CONFEREES
-
- Although the managers on the part of each House meet
- together as one committee they are in effect 2 separate
- committees, each of which votes separately and acts by a
- majority vote. For this reason the number of managers from
- each House is largely immaterial.
-
- The conferees are strictly limited in their consideration to
- matters in disagreement between the 2 Houses. Consequently,
- they may not strike out or amend any portion of the bill that
- was not amended by the Senate. Furthermore, they may not
- insert new matter that is not germane to the differences
- between the 2 Houses. Where the Senate amendment revises a
- figure or an amount contained in the bill, the conferees are
- limited to the difference between the 2 numbers and may not
- increase the greater nor decrease the smaller figure. Neither
- House may alone, by instructions, empower its managers to
- make a change in the text to which both Houses have agreed,
- but the managers for both bodies may be given that authority
- by a concurrent resolution adopted by a majority of each
- House.
-
- When a disagreement to an amendment in the nature of a
- substitute is committed to a conference committee it is in
- order for the managers on the part of the House to propose a
- substitute which is a germane modification of the matter in
- disagreement, but the introduction of language in that
- substitute presenting a specific additional topic, question,
- issue, or proposition not committed to the conference
- committee by either House does not constitute a germane
- modification of the matter in disagreement. Moreover, their
- report may not include matter not committed to the conference
- committee by either House, nor may their report include a
- modification of any specific topic, question, issue, or
- proposition committed to the conference committee by either
- or both Houses if that modification is beyond the scope of
- that specific topic, question, issue, or proposition as
- committed to the conference committee.
-
- An amendment by the Senate to a general appropriation bill
- which would be in violation of the rules of the House, if the
- amendment had originated in the House, or an amendment by the
- Senate providing for an appropriation on a bill other than a
- general appropriation bill, may not be agreed to by the
- managers on the part of the House, unless a specific
- authority to agree to such an amendment is given first by the
- House by a separate vote on each specific amendment.
-
- MEETINGS AND ACTION OF CONFEREES
-
- The rules of the House require that conference meetings be
- open, unless the House, in open session, determines by a
- rollcall vote of a majority of those Members voting that all
- or part of the meeting will be closed to the public. When the
- report of the conference committee is read in the House, a
- point of order may be made that the conferees failed to
- comply with the House rule referred to in the preceding
- sentence. If the point of order is sustained, the conference
- report is considered rejected by the House and a new
- conference is requested.
-
- There are generally 4 forms of recommendations available to
- the conferees when reporting back to their bodies:
-
- (1) The Senate recede from all (or certain of) its
- amendments.
-
- (2) The House recede from its disagreement to all (or
- certain of) the Senate amendments and agree thereto.
-
- (3) The House recede from its disagreement to all (or
- certain of) the Senate amendments and agree thereto with
- amendments.
-
- (4) The House recede from all (or certain of) its amendments
- to the Senate amendments.
-
- In many instances the result of the conference is a
- compromise growing out of the third type of recommendation
- available to the conferees. The complete report may, of
- course, be comprised of any one or more of these
- recommendations with respect to the various amendments.
- Occasionally, the conferees find themselves unable to reach
- an agreement with respect to one or more amendments and
- report back a statement of their inability to agree on those
- particular amendments. These may then be acted upon
- separately. This partial disagreement is, of course, not
- practicable where the Senate strikes out all after the
- enacting clause and substitutes its own bill which must be
- considered as a single amendment.
-
- If they are unable to reach any agreement whatsoever, the
- conferees report that fact to their respective bodies and the
- amendments are in the position they were before the
- conference was requested. New conferees may be appointed in
- either or both Houses. In addition, the Houses may instruct
- the conferees as to the position they are to take.
-
- After House conferees on any bill or resolution in
- conference between the 2 bodies have been appointed for 20
- calendar days and have failed to make a report, the rules of
- the House provide for a motion of the highest privilege to
- instruct the House conferees or discharge them and appoint
- new conferees. Further, during the last 6 days of a session
- it is a privileged motion to move to discharge, appoint, or
- instruct House conferees after House conferees have been
- appointed 36 hours without having made a report.
-
- CONFERENCE REPORTS
-
- When the conferees, by majority vote of each group, have
- reached complete agreement (or find that they are able to
- agree with respect to some but not all amendments) they make
- their recommendations in a report made in duplicate that must
- be signed by a majority of the conferees appointed by each
- body. The minority portion of the managers have no authority
- to file a statement of minority views in connection with the
- report. The report is required to be printed in both Houses
- and must be accompanied by an explanatory statement prepared
- jointly by the conferees on the part of the House and the
- conferees on the part of the Senate. The statement must be
- sufficiently detailed and explicit to inform Congress as to
- the effect that the amendments or propositions contained in
- the report will have on the measure to which those amendments
- or propositions relate. The engrossed bill and amendments and
- one copy of the report are delivered to the body that is to
- act first on the report; namely, the body that had agreed to
- the conference requested by the other.
-
- In the Senate, the presentation of the report always is in
- order except when the Journal is being read or a point of
- order or motion to adjourn is pending, or while the Senate is
- voting or ascertaining the presence of a quorum. When the
- report is received, the question of proceeding to the
- consideration of the report, if raised, is immediately voted
- on without debate. The report is not subject to amendment in
- either body and must be accepted or rejected as an entirety.
- If the time for debate on the adoption of the report is
- limited, the time allotted must be equally divided between
- the majority and minority party. If the Senate, acting first,
- does not agree to the report it may by majority vote order it
- recommitted to the conferees. When the Senate agrees to the
- report, its managers are thereby discharged and it then
- delivers the original papers to the House with a message
- advising that body of its action.
-
- A report that contains any recommendations which go beyond
- the differences between the 2 Houses is subject to a point of
- order in its entirety. Any change in the text as agreed to by
- both Houses renders the report subject to the point of order
- and the matter is before the House de novo.
-
- The presentation of the report in the House always is in
- order, except when the Journal is being read, while the roll
- is being called, or the House is dividing on any proposition.
- The report is considered in the House and may not be sent to
- the Committee of the Whole on the suggestion that it contains
- matters ordinarily requiring consideration in that Committee.
- The report may not be received by the House if the required
- statement does not accompany it.
-
- It is, however, not in order to consider either (1) a
- conference report or (2) an amendment (including an amendment
- in the nature of a substitute) proposed by the Senate to a
- measure reported in disagreement between the 2 Houses, by a
- conference report, that the conferees have been unable to
- agree, until the third calendar day (excluding Saturdays,
- Sundays, and legal holidays) after the report and
- accompanying statement have been filed in the House, and
- consideration then is in order only if the report and
- accompanying statement have been printed in the edition of
- the Congressional Record for the day on which the report and
- statement have been filed. However, these provisions do not
- apply during the last 6 days of the session. Nor is it in
- order to consider a conference report or such an amendment
- unless copies of the report and accompanying statement,
- together with the text of the amendment, have been available
- to Members for at least 2 hours before the beginning of
- consideration. However, it is always in order to call up for
- consideration a report from the Committee on Rules only
- making in order the consideration of a conference report or
- such an amendment notwithstanding the requirement that the
- report and text of the amendment be available for at least 2
- hours before the beginning of consideration. The time
- allotted for debate on a conference report or such an
- amendment is divided equally between the majority party and
- the minority party. However, if the majority and minority
- floor managers both are supporters of the conference report,
- one-third of the debate time must be allotted to a Member who
- is opposed to the conference report. If the House does not
- agree to a conference report that the Senate has already
- agreed to, the report may not be recommitted to conference
- because the Senate conferees are discharged when the Senate
- agrees to the report.
-
- When a conference report is called up before the House
- containing matter which would be in violation of the rules of
- the House with respect to germaneness if the matter had been
- offered as an amendment in the House, and which is contained
- either (1) in a Senate amendment to that measure (including a
- Senate amendment in the nature of a substitute for the text
- of that measure as passed by the House) and accepted by the
- House conferees or agreed to by the conference committee with
- modification or (2) in a substitute agreed to by the
- conference committee, it is in order, at any time after the
- reading of the report is completed or dispensed with and
- before the reading of the statement, to make a point of order
- that nongermane matter, which must be specified in the point
- of order, is contained in the report. It is also in order to
- make a point of order to nongermane Senate matter in the
- conference report that originally appeared in the Senate bill
- but was not included in the House-passed version. If the
- point of order is sustained, it is then in order for the
- Chair to entertain a motion, that is of high privilege, that
- the House reject the nongermane matter covered by the point
- of order. It is in order to debate the motion for 40 minutes,
- one-half of the time to be given to debate in favor of, and
- one-half in opposition to, the motion. Notwithstanding the
- final disposition of a point of order made with respect to
- the report, or of a motion to reject nongermane matter,
- further points of order may be made with respect to the
- report, and further motions may be made to reject other
- nongermane matter in the conference report not covered by any
- previous point of order which has been sustained. If a motion
- to reject has been adopted, after final disposition of all
- points of order and motions to reject, the conference report
- is considered as rejected and the question then pending
- before the House is whether (1) to recede and concur with an
- amendment that consists of that portion of the conference
- report not rejected or (2) to insist on the House amendment
- with respect to nongermane Senate matter that originally
- appeared in the Senate bill but was not included in the
- House-passed version. If all motions to reject are defeated,
- then, after the allocation of time for debate on the
- conference report, it is in order to move the previous
- question on the adoption of the conference report.
-
- Similar procedures are available in the House when the
- Senate proposes an amendment to a measure that would be in
- violation of the rule against nongermane amendments, and
- thereafter it is (1) reported in disagreement by a committee
- of conference or (2) before the House and the stage of
- disagreement is reached.
-
- The amendments of the Senate in disagreement may be voted on
- separately and may be adopted by a majority vote after the
- adoption of the conference report itself as though no
- conference had been had with respect to those amendments. The
- Senate may recede from all amendments, or from certain of its
- amendments, insisting on the others with or without a request
- for a conference with respect to them. If the House does not
- accept the amendments insisted on by the Senate the entire
- conference process begins again with respect to them.
-
- CUSTODY OF PAPERS
-
- The custody of the original official papers is important in
- conference procedure because either body may act only when in
- possession of the papers. As indicated above the request for
- a conference may be made only by the body in possession. The
- papers are then transmitted to the body agreeing to the
- conference and by it to the managers of the House that asked
- for the conference. The latter in turn carry the papers with
- them to the conference and at its conclusion turn them over
- to the managers of the House that agreed to the conference.
- The latter deliver them to their own House, that acts first
- on the report and then delivers the papers to the other House
- for final action on the report.
-
- Each group of conferees, at the conclusion of the
- conference, retains one copy of the report that has been made
- in duplicate, and signed by a majority of the managers of
- each body--the House copy signed first by the House managers
- and the Senate copy signed first by its managers.
-
- Obviously a bill cannot become a law of the land until it
- has been approved in identical terms by both Houses of the
- Congress. When the bill has finally been approved by both
- Houses all the original papers are transmitted to the
- enrolling clerk of the body in which the bill originated.
-
-
- XVI. BILL ORIGINATING IN SENATE
-
- The preceding discussion has described the legislative
- process for bills originating in the House. When a bill
- originates in the Senate, this process is reversed. When the
- Senate passes a bill that originated in the Senate, it is
- sent to the House for consideration. The bill is referred to
- the appropriate House committee for consideration. If the
- committee reports the bill to the full House and if the bill
- is passed by the House without amendment, it is ready for
- enrollment. (See Part XVII.) If the House passes an amended
- version of the Senate bill, the bill is returned to the
- Senate for action on the House amendments. The Senate may
- agree to the amendments or request a conference to resolve
- the disagreement over the House amendments.
-
-
- XVII. ENROLLMENT
-
- When the bill has been agreed to in identical form by both
- bodies--either without amendment by the Senate, or by House
- concurrence in the Senate amendments, or by agreement in both
- bodies to the conference report--a copy of the bill is
- enrolled for presentation to the President.
-
- The preparation of the enrolled bill is a painstaking and
- important task because it must reflect precisely the effect
- of all amendments, either by way of deletion, substitution,
- or addition, agreed to by both bodies. The enrolling clerk of
- the House (with respect to bills originating in the House)
- receives the original engrossed bill, the engrossed Senate
- amendments, the signed conference report, the several
- messages from the Senate, and a notation of the final action
- by the House, for the purpose of preparing the enrolled copy.
- >From these the enrolling clerk must prepare meticulously the
- final form of the bill, as it was agreed to by both Houses,
- for presentation to the President. On occasion there have
- been upward of 500 amendments, particularly after a
- conference, each of which must be set out in the enrollment
- exactly as agreed to, and all punctuation must be in accord
- with the action taken.
-
- The enrolled bill is printed on parchment paper, with a
- certificate on the reverse side of the last page, to be
- signed by the Clerk of the House stating that the bill
- originated in the House of Representatives (or by the
- Secretary of the Senate when the bill has originated in that
- body). It is examined for accuracy by the Committee on House
- Administration (or by the Secretary of the Senate when the
- bill originated in that body). When the Committee is
- satisfied with the accuracy of the bill the Chairman of the
- Committee attaches a slip stating that it finds the bill
- truly enrolled and sends it to the Speaker of the House for
- signature. All bills, regardless of the body in which they
- originated, are signed first by the Speaker and then by the
- Vice President of the United States, who, under the
- Constitution, serves as the President of the Senate. The
- Speaker of the House may sign enrolled bills whether or not
- the House is in session. The President of the Senate may sign
- bills only while the Senate is actually sitting unless
- advance permission is granted to sign during a recess or
- after adjournment. If the Speaker or the President of the
- Senate is unable to sign the bill, it may be signed by the
- authorized presiding officer of the respective House. After
- both signatures are affixed the bill is returned to the
- Committee for the purpose of being presented to the President
- for action under the Constitution.
-
-
- XVIII. PRESIDENTIAL ACTION
-
- Article I, Section 7, of the Constitution provides in part
- that--
-
- Every Bill which shall have passed the House of
- Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it becomes a
- Law, be presented to the President of the United States.
-
-
- In actual practice a clerk of the Committee on House
- Administration (or the Secretary of the Senate when the bill
- originated in that body) delivers the original enrolled bill
- to an employee at the White House and obtains a receipt, and
- the fact of the delivery is then reported to the House by the
- Chairman of the Committee. Delivery to a White House employee
- has customarily been regarded as presentation to the
- President and as commencing the 10-day Constitutional period
- for Presidential action.
-
- Copies of the enrolled bill usually are transmitted by the
- White House to the various departments interested in the
- subject matter so that they may advise the President who, of
- course, cannot be personally familiar with every item in
- every bill.
-
- If the President approves the bill, he signs it and usually
- writes the word "approved" and the date, although the
- Constitution requires only that the President sign it.
-
- The Supreme Court has stated that undoubtedly the President
- when approving bills may be said to participate in the
- enactment of laws, which the Constitution requires the
- President to execute.
-
- The bill may become law without the President's signature by
- virtue of the Constitutional provision that if the President
- does not return a bill with objections within 10 days
- (excluding Sundays) after it has been presented to the
- President, it shall be a law in like manner as if the
- President had signed it. However, if Congress by their
- adjournment prevent its return, it does not become law. The
- latter event is what is known as a "pocket veto", that is,
- the bill does not become law even though the President has
- not sent his objections to the Congress.
-
- Notice of the signing of a bill by the President is sent
- usually by message to the House in which it originated and
- that House informs the other, although this action is not
- necessary to the validity of the act. The action is also
- noted in the Congressional Record.
-
- A bill becomes law on the date of approval (or passage over
- the President's veto), unless it expressly provides a
- different effective date.
-
- VETO MESSAGE
-
- By the terms of the Constitution, if the President does not
- approve the bill "he shall return it, with his Objections to
- that House in which it shall have originated, who shall enter
- the Objections at large on their Journal, and proceed to
- reconsider it". It is the usual but not invariable rule that
- a bill returned with the President's objections, must be
- voted on at once and when laid before the House the question
- on the passage is considered as pending. A vetoed bill is
- always privileged, and a motion to take it from the table is
- in order at any time.
-
- The Member in charge moves the previous question which is
- put by the Speaker, as follows: "The question is, Will the
- House on reconsideration agree to pass the bill, the
- objections of the President to the contrary
- notwithstanding?". The Clerk calls the roll and those in
- favor of passing the bill answer "Aye", and those opposed
- "No". If fewer than two-thirds of the Members present
- (constituting a quorum) vote in the affirmative the bill is
- killed, and a message is usually sent to the Senate advising
- that body of the decision that the bill shall not pass. If,
- however, two-thirds vote in the affirmative, the bill is sent
- with the President's objections to the Senate together with a
- message advising it of the action in the House.
-
- There is a similar procedure in the Senate where again a
- two-thirds affirmative vote is necessary to pass the bill
- over the President's objections. If then passed by the Senate
- the measure becomes the law of the land notwithstanding the
- objections of the President, and it is ready for publication
- as a binding statute.
-
-
- XIX. PUBLICATION
-
- One of the important steps in the enactment of a valid law
- is the requirement that it shall be made known to the people
- who are to be bound by it. Obviously, there would be no
- justice if the state were to hold its people responsible for
- their conduct before it made known to them the unlawfulness
- of such behavior. That idea is implicit in the Constitutional
- prohibition against enacting ex post facto laws. In practice,
- our laws are published immediately upon their enactment so
- that they may be known to the people.
-
- If the President approves a bill, or allows it to become law
- without signing it, the original enrolled bill is sent from
- the White House to the Archivist of the United States for
- publication. If a bill is passed by both Houses over the
- objections of the President the body that last overrides the
- veto likewise transmits it. There it is assigned a public law
- number, and paginated for the Statutes at Large volume
- covering that session of Congress. The public and private law
- numbers run in sequence starting anew at the beginning of
- each Congress, and since 1957 are prefixed for ready
- identification by the number of the Congress--that is, the
- first public law of the 101st Congress is designated Public
- Law 101-1 and the first private law of the 101st Congress is
- designated Private Law 101-1. Subsequent laws of this
- Congress also will contain the same prefix designator.
-
- SLIP LAWS
-
- The first official publication of the statute is in the form
- generally known as the "slip law". In this form, each law is
- published separately as an unbound pamphlet. The heading
- indicates the public or private law number, the date of
- approval, and the bill number. The heading of a slip law for
- a public law also indicates the United States Statutes at
- Large citation. If the statute has been passed over the veto
- of the President, or has become law without the President's
- signature because he did not return it with objections, an
- appropriate statement is inserted in lieu of the usual
- notation of approval.
-
- The Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and
- Records Administration, which prepares the slip laws,
- provides marginal editorial notes giving the citations to
- laws mentioned in the text and other explanatory details. The
- marginal notes also give the United States Code
- classifications, thus enabling the reader immediately to
- determine where the statute will appear in the Code. Each
- slip law also includes an informative guide to the
- legislative history of the law consisting of the committee
- report number, the name of the committee in each House, as
- well as the date of consideration and passage in each House,
- with a reference to the Congressional Record by volume, year,
- and date. A reference to Presidential statements--relating to
- the approval of a bill (or the veto of a bill when the veto
- was overridden and the bill becomes law)--is included in the
- legislative history in the form of a citation to the Weekly
- Compilation of Presidential Documents.
-
- Copies of the slip laws are delivered to the document rooms
- of both Houses where they become available to officials and
- the public. They may also be obtained by annual subscription
- or individual purchase from the Superintendent of Documents,
- U.S. Government Printing Office.
-
- Section 113 of title 1 of the United States Code provides
- that slip laws are competent evidence in all the courts,
- tribunals and public offices of the United States, and of the
- several States.
-
- STATUTES AT LARGE
-
- For the purpose of providing a permanent collection of the
- laws of each session of Congress, the bound volumes (which
- are called the United States Statutes at Large) are prepared
- by the Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and
- Records Administration. When the latest volume containing the
- laws of the first session of the 101st Congress becomes
- available it will be No. 103 in the series. Each volume
- contains a complete index and a table of contents. From 1956
- through 1976, each volume contained a table of earlier laws
- affected. These tables were cumulated for 1956-1970 and
- supplemented for 1971-1975 in pamphlet form, and discontinued
- in 1976. From 1963 through 1974, each volume also contained a
- most useful table showing the legislative history of each law
- in the volume. This latter table was not included in
- subsequent volumes because, beginning in 1975, the
- legislative histories have appeared at the end of each law.
- There are also extensive marginal notes referring to laws in
- earlier volumes and to earlier and later matters in the same
- volume.
-
- Under the provisions of a statute originally enacted in
- 1895, these volumes are legal evidence of the laws contained
- in them and will be accepted as proof of those laws in any
- court in the United States.
-
- The Statutes at Large are a chronological arrangement of the
- laws exactly as they have been enacted. There is no attempt
- to arrange the laws according to their subject matter or to
- show the present status of an earlier law that has been
- amended on one or more occasions. That is the function of a
- code of laws.
-
- UNITED STATES CODE
-
- The United States Code contains a consolidation and
- codification of the general and permanent laws of the United
- States arranged according to subject matter under 50 title
- headings, in alphabetical order to a large degree. It sets
- out the current status of the laws, as amended, without
- repeating all the language of the amendatory acts except
- where necessary for that purpose and is declared to be prima
- facie evidence of those laws. Its purpose is to present the
- laws in a concise and usable form without requiring recourse
- to the many volumes of the Statutes at Large containing the
- individual amendments.
-
- The Code is prepared by the Law Revision Counsel of the
- House of Representatives. New editions are published every 6
- years and cumulative supplements are published after the
- conclusion of each regular session of the Congress.
-
- Twenty-two of the 50 titles have been revised and enacted
- into positive law, and 2 have been eliminated by
- consolidation with other titles. Titles that have been
- revised and enacted into positive law are legal evidence of
- the law and the courts will receive them as proof of those
- laws. Eventually all the titles will be revised and enacted
- into positive law, and thereafter they will be kept up to
- date by direct amendment.
-
- * * * * *
-
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