Washminster

Washminster
Washminster

Tuesday, 6 January 2009

Motions to Recommit

Rules changes in the House of Representatives are likely to be hotly contested today. One of the most controversial is in the bill H.Res. 5 Section 2 (g) - Instructions in the Motion to Recommit.

There are three variants of the motion to recommit.

The first is a "straight" motion which would have the effect of sending the bill back to committee. Currently such a motion is not debated, but a vote is taken.

The second is a recommital motion which has instructions to the committee, which is to be considered "forthwith". The practice is that, if the motion is passed, the Committee chair must report the bill back to the House immediately, without the bill leaving the Chamber, but including any amendment given by the instructions.

The third type has instructions, but no requirement to report back "forthwith". The motion may include the term 'promptly', but this has no effect.

Where instructions are given, the motion to recommit can be debated for up to 10 minutes.

These motions are procedural devices which give opponents of a measure another chance to attack the bill. Cleverly used, they can be used by the minority party to create an embarrassing dilemma for majority members who favour a specific amendment, but back the bill generally. A motion to recommit without 'forthwith' instructions forces the majority member either to vote for - which could have the practical effect of killing the bill (As John Boehner said in 2003 - "For those of you who are not familiar with the nuance, that means the bill is dead forever") or voting against - which puts into the public record that the member has voted against a policy he (or his constituents) strongly support. At election time this allows an opponent to run ads suggesting the member opposes something, when in fact they didn't want to kill the whole bill.

In the last Congress the use of recommittal motions skyrocked. in the 106th Congress they were used on only 27% of occasions - and the average from 1989-2008 is 46%. In the 110th Congress they were used 78% of the time. 'Non forthwith' variants were used on 47 occasions - (there have only been 121 uses in the 10 Congresses after 1989!

The proposed change would disallow 'Non forthwith' motions which included instructions to the committee. The minority could still put down straight recommital motions (which could kill the bill, but does not limit the committees freedom of action) or 'forthwith' instructions. Debate would be allowed for all motions. (Currently straight motions are not debatable).

There is an excellent CRS paper at http://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL34757.pdf by Megan S Lynch. Details of the rule changes proposed are available at http://www.rules.house.gov/bills_details.aspx?NewsID=4116

First Day of the 111th Congress

Today, at Noon EST (5pm in the UK), the 111th Congress will come into being. If you want to watch events live go to C-SPAN's website - C-SPAN 1 will show the live feed from the House of Representatives while C-SPAN 2 will show the Senate. (http://www.c-span.org/).




In the House of Representatives there are certain things which must be done. The main stages of the day's events in the chamber include



  1. The Clerk of 110th Congress calls the House to order
  2. The Chaplain of the House offers a prayer
  3. Members repeat the pledge of allegiance
  4. A Roll Call vote is taken - to establish that a quorum exists. Members vote electronically
  5. Certain announcements are made - about delegates; and deaths or resignations of former Members
  6. The Speaker is elected - both parties nominate for this (and other posts), but the majority party - the Democrats in 111th Congress - win the viva voce roll call vote. [A 'viva voce' vote involves each member stating his vote after his or her name is read out]
  7. The newly elected Speaker is sworn in
  8. The Oath of Office is taken collectively by all Members in the Chamber. In the afternoon individual oath taking is repeated for the benefit of photographers.
  9. Each party announces its leaders
  10. Officers of the House are elected (usually each party has agreed its own list, but the majority party prevails)
  11. Resolutions regarding messages between the twn Houses; and also with the Presidency, are passed
  12. Rules of Procedure are adopted

For a fuller account of first day activities - read Mildred Amer's excellent CRS (Congressional Research Service) report "The First Day of a New Congress: A Guide to Proceedings on the House Floor" - http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/RL30725_20081031.pdf

For membership information visit http://www.gpoaccess.gov/pictorial/111th/newmems.html

Monday, 5 January 2009

Lobbying

The Public Administration Committee of the House of Commons has produced a report on lobbying. It is well worth reading, both for its conclusions about the need for reforms in the UK, and its reflections on regulation elsewhere (including Washington).

The report is available at http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200809/cmselect/cmpubadm/36/36i.pdf

Soviet Jokes

Matt Taylor explains about Soviet political humour - and tells some classic jokes.

Sunday, 4 January 2009

The Week Ahead

The British Parliament will not meet this week, the Christmas Recess is due to end at 2.30pm on Monday 12th January.

The 111th Congress will meet for the first time on Tuesday at noon EST. This blog will set out the first day's business - and report on the action. The Senate may be lively - with disputes over Minnesota and Illinois.

The House of Representatives business is listed in

http://democraticleader.house.gov/docUploads/1WeeklyLeader10209.pdf?CFID=13924048&CFTOKEN=38577085