Order Code 98-736 GOV
Updated May 19, 2003
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Floor Consideration of Conference Reports
in the House
James V. Saturno
Specialist on the Congress
Government and Finance Division
Filing Conference Reports
When a committee of conference approves its report, the next step in the legislative
process is for the report, along with a joint explanatory statement of the managers, to be
presented to the House and Senate for consideration. A conference report must be filed
and considered in one chamber at a time, when a chamber is in possession of the official
conference papers. The high privilege accorded to conference reports in the House under
Rule XXII, clause 7(a) allows them to be presented or filed at almost any time the House
is in session, provided that it is in possession of the conference papers. Exceptions to this
procedure include a time when the Journal is being read, during a quorum call, or when
the House is conducting a record or division vote. This privilege applies in the House,
so that conference reports may not be filed while the chamber is resolved into Committee
of the Whole. For more information on legislative process, see
[http://www.crs.gov/products/guides/guidehome.shtml].
House Rule XXII, clause 8(a) provides that it is not in order to consider a conference
report until the third calendar day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays, unless the
House is in session) after the report has been filed. A conference report may be
considered only if it has been printed in the Congressional Record of the day on which
it was filed. These requirements are not in force during the last six days of a session, and
may be waived by unanimous consent, or, more commonly, by adopting a special rule.
Copies of the conference report and joint explanatory statement must be available
to Members at least two hours before the beginning of floor consideration. This
requirement may also be waived by unanimous consent or special rule, allowing for the
consideration of a conference report immediately after it is filed. None of these
requirements would apply to a conference report considered under suspension of the rules.
Debating Conference Reports
A conference report is highly privileged and may be called up for consideration at
almost any time another matter is not pending. A conference report that meets the layover
and availability requirements does not need to be read when it is called up. If it does not
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CRS-2
meet these requirements, the report must be read unless the reading is dispensed with by
unanimous consent. Typically, majority managers of a conference call up a conference
report, even when they do not sign or support it, although the Speaker may recognize
another Member for this purpose.
Once called up, conference reports are normally considered in the House under the
one-hour rule. A conference report may also be considered under a special rule from the
Rules Committee or suspension of the rules. House Rule XXII, clause 8(d) requires that
the time allotted for debate on a conference report be equally divided and controlled by
the majority and minority parties. However, if managers from both parties support the
report, the rule also provides that a Member who opposes it may claim and control one-
third of the hour. Recognition of a Member in opposition does not depend on party
affiliation, but priority is given to a member of the conference committee. Debate may
be extended beyond one hour by unanimous consent, by special rule, or by defeating the
previous question on the conference report. The House may choose to accept or reject a
conference report, but amendments are not in order.
The chamber that agrees to a request for a conference is normally the one that
considers the report first. This is significant because the first chamber to act can agree or
disagree to a conference report, or it can agree to a preferential motion to recommit the
report to conference. (A motion to recommit to conference may be made after the
previous question is ordered on the conference report, and may include non-binding
instructions to the conferees.) However, after one chamber has acted on a conference
report, its conferees are discharged, and the other chamber may only accept or reject the
conference report.
If the second house rejects the conference report, the measure is left in the procedural
situation it was in before the conference was requested. Under such a circumstance, one
house could propose a new position to the other house as an amendment between the
houses, or it could ask for a new conference. In the event that a report is recommitted or
rejected and the measure submitted to a new conference committee, all of the matters
originally sent to conference are again before the conferees de novo for consideration.
Points of Order
In the House, any point of order against a conference report must be made or
reserved before debate on it has begun (or before a joint explanatory statement is read).
If a report is required to be read because it has not met the layover and availability
requirements, a point of order cannot be made or reserved until after the reading. A point
of order may only be made against the conference report, and not against the language in
the joint explanatory statement. If a point of order is sustained against a conference
report, it falls and any further consideration of the measure must follow some alternate
route in the same manner as if the report had been defeated. Rule XXII, clause 10
establishes a procedure for points of order against a conference report due to the inclusion
of Senate matter not germane to the House-passed bill.
A special rule may be used to protect a conference report from one or more points
of order, and all points of order are implicitly waived when a conference report is
considered under suspension of the rules.