Order Code 98-996 GOV
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Legislative Procedures and the Legislative
Agenda in the House of Representatives
Updated August 7, 2003
Christopher M. Davis
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Legislative Procedures and the Legislative Agenda in
the House of Representatives
Summary
This report depicts a process of legislative agenda-setting in the House in
which the standing committees first screen the possible agenda of all bills that are
introduced, evaluating them and selecting from among them a potential agenda of
bills that, in the judgment of the committees, deserve floor consideration. Priorities
for considering these bills on the floor are controlled both by the operation of
standing rules and by the adoption of special rules proposed by the Rules Committee.
These priorities are transformed into short-term schedules and the daily order of
business through the political influence of the majority party leaders and especially
through the procedural discretion of the Speaker. The House’s legislative agenda is
embodied primarily in the bills it considers. Individual Representatives may propose
floor amendments that present alternatives or additional options, but opportunities
to offer amendments are constrained by the germaneness rule, among others, and can
be limited by majority vote. Underlying these procedural arrangements is the axiom
that the agenda of the House is generally for the House to decide, and the corollary
that these decisions generally reflect whatever collective preferences can be
assembled from the individual preferences of its Members.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
The Constitutional Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
The Political Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
The Committee System and Agenda Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Constraints on Committee Agenda Decisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Agenda-Setting in Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Rules, Special Rules, and the Floor Agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Privileged Business Under House Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
General Privilege . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Special Days for Privileged Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Special Rules Affecting the Order of Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
The Floor Agenda and the Daily Order of Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Amendments and the Floor Agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Senate Influence on the House Agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Related CRS Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

Legislative Procedures and the Legislative
Agenda in the House of Representatives
Introduction
This report1 focuses primarily on the internal arrangements of the House — the
procedures and practices by which the House decides what issues it will consider,
and how and when it will consider them. Before turning to these matters, several
elements of the constitutional and political context within which the House conducts
its business deserve brief consideration. Analyzing the legislative process in the
House of Representatives, or any dimension of it such as the development of its
agenda, involves abstracting one aspect of this process from its context.2
The Constitutional Context
The Constitution imposes some restrictions on the subjects of national
legislation and, therefore, on Congress’s legislative agenda. Article I enumerates
certain powers of Congress, including the powers to raise revenue, to provide for an
army and navy, and to regulate commerce among the states and with foreign nations.
Congress also is empowered to make all laws which are “necessary and proper” for
carrying out its enumerated powers and all other powers that the Constitution assigns
to the federal government.3 On the other hand, the Constitution distinguishes in
1 This report was written by Stanley Bach, formerly a Senior Specialist in the Legislative
Process at CRS. Dr. Bach has since retired, but the listed author updated the report and is
available to answer questions concerning its contents.
2 This report considers the legislative agenda only from a procedural perspective. From a
broader perspective, the process of agenda-setting can include the development, definition,
and evolution of issues as they attract the attention of, and provoke action by, Congress and
the federal government generally (or as they fail to do so). For different approaches to the
analysis of agendas and agenda-setting, see, for example: John W. Kingdon, Agendas,
Alternatives, and Public Policies (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1984); Paul Charles
Light, The President’s Agenda (Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press, 1982);
Nelson W. Polsby, Political Innovation in America (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1984); Barbara Sinclair, “Agenda, Policy, and Alignment Change from Coolidge to
Reagan,” in Lawrence C. Dodd and Bruce I. Oppenheimer ,eds., Congress Reconsidered,
7th ed. (Washington: Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 2000); and Jack L. Walker, “Setting
the Agenda in the U.S. Senate: A Theory of Problem Selection,” British Journal of Political
Science
, vol. 7 (1977), pp. 423-445.
3 The text of the Constitution, with useful commentary by the House parliamentarian, is
included in the House Rules and Manual, written and compiled in the Office of the
Parliamentarian during the first session of each Congress. The full title of the volume is
(continued...)

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general terms between the powers of Congress and the powers of the executive and
judicial branches, and reserves remaining powers to the individual states and the
people. Article I, including the “necessary and proper” clause, has been interpreted
by the Supreme Court to permit legislation on a wide range of subjects that are not
specifically enumerated in the Constitution. But the “elastic” clause cannot be
stretched in all directions and without limit. Moreover, there are subjects on which
Congress is expressly forbidden to legislate; for example, the familiar constitutional
protections in the Bill of Rights limit Congress’s legislative discretion.
The Constitution also defines the formal relationship between Congress and the
President. The President may not be a Member of Congress, nor does Congress have
any part in electing the President, except under the most extraordinary
circumstances.4 The Vice President is also the president of the Senate but rarely
presides and may vote only in the infrequent event of a tie. The President may
nominate federal judges and senior officials of the executive branch, but all judicial
and many executive branch nominees must be confirmed by majority vote of the
Senate, just as treaties negotiated by the President require approval by a two-thirds
vote of the Senate before they may be ratified. The President is directed to report to
Congress from time to time (in practice, annually) on the “State of the Union” and
to recommend such legislative action as he considers “necessary and expedient.” He
also shares in the legislative power more directly in that he may veto acts of
Congress; but a presidential veto may be overridden by a two-thirds vote of both the
House and the Senate.
Thus, the President may propose and may veto legislation, but neither of these
powers is conclusive. Furthermore, neither the Constitution nor the rules of Congress
make any other provision for the President or other executive branch officials to
participate in the legislative process (except for the Vice President’s position as
president of the Senate). Presidential proposals for legislation have no special
standing under the Constitution or congressional rules; they enjoy no procedural
advantage or priority. Congress is under no constitutional obligation to consider,
much less approve, presidential recommendations for legislation; and, if Congress
fails to act, the President has no constitutional recourse other than to exercise
whatever discretion he already has been granted by law.
Presidential proposals for legislation may take the form of general statements
in speeches or written messages. During the 20th century, however, and especially
during recent decades, Presidents and executive branch officials acting with the
President’s concurrence also have proposed specific drafts of legislation they wish
3 (...continued)
Constitution, Jefferson’s Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United
States.
The 108th Congress edition is H.Doc. 107-284.
4 The Twelfth Amendment to the Constitution provides that, if no presidential candidate
receives a majority of the electoral votes, the House of Representatives shall vote by state
delegation to elect the President from among no more than three persons receiving the
greatest number of electoral votes. Under the comparable provision of the Constitution as
originally ratified, the House elected Thomas Jefferson as President in 1801, neither
Jefferson nor any other candidate having received a majority of the electoral votes.

CRS-3
to see enacted. Nonetheless, the limits on the President’s formal legislative powers
are epitomized by the fact that each of his legislative proposals must be introduced
by a Representative or Senator if it is to receive formal congressional consideration.
This obstacle is easily overcome; a presidential proposal is introduced by his
supporters in Congress or, as a courtesy, by the chairmen of the House and Senate
committees with jurisdiction over the subject of the proposal. But this obstacle is as
important in principle as it is trivial in practice.
The President is an influential participant in the legislative process, of course;
he can have as much or more influence on the legislative agenda as any Member or
entity of Congress. Nonetheless, presidential influence over the congressional
agenda, and over legislative decisions as well, is grounded more in his political
strength than in his constitutional or other formal powers. A President bases his
election campaign on a agenda for government action, however general it may be.
Once elected, he can use the resources of his office and the public attention he
commands with great effect in attempting to persuade Congress to act — directly by
negotiating with Representatives and Senators, or indirectly by mobilizing public
support for his program. Congress is likely to give serious consideration to the
proposals on which the President lays greatest stress, but Congress responds to
presidential initiatives by choice — or by political, not constitutional, necessity.
In a celebrated analysis of the presidency, Professor Richard Neustadt
characterized presidential power as the power to persuade:5
The separateness of institutions and the sharing of authority prescribe the terms
on which a President persuades. When one man shares authority with another,
but does not gain or lose his job upon the other’s whim, his willingness to act
upon the urging of the other turns on whether he conceives the action right for
him. The essence of a President’s persuasive task is to convince such men that
what the White House wants of them is what they ought to do for their sake and
on their authority.
Although Congress always has been concerned with preserving its constitutional
powers and position, it has come to accept and even welcome presidential efforts to
persuade. For reasons to be developed later in this report, Congress as an institution
has difficulty in setting priorities among the many and often conflicting demands
made upon it. Effective presidential persuasion, direct or indirect, helps to focus
congressional attention in ways that presumably respond to public preferences. By
the same token, however, the President also must be selective in his attempts to
persuade Congress to act (or not to act). His resources for persuasion are limited, so
his efforts must be targeted. A President who attempts to overload the congressional
agenda may achieve little because he diffuses his persuasive efforts and fails to
convey a clear and consistent sense of direction and priority.
Congressional agenda-setting, however much influenced by presidential
persuasion, is complicated by its constitutional context in another important respect.
By constitutional arrangement, the House and Senate differ in size, length of terms,
5 Richard E. Neustadt, Presidential Power, 1980 ed. (New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
1960), p. 27.

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and constituencies. These differences are accompanied by deeply entrenched
differences in legislative procedures and occasional differences in partisan control.
As a result, relations between the two halves of Congress involve competition and
conflict as well as cooperation.
In constitutional powers, the two houses of Congress are roughly equal; each has
unique prerogatives that it usually guards jealously. Both houses must agree before
a bill can become law, and neither house consistently dominates the other; nor is
there any authority, other than an electorate fragmented by state and district
boundaries, to which both are accountable. Each chamber has the constitutional
power to select its own officers, devise its own rules, and, by implication, set its own
agenda. There are no congressional leaders; there are only House leaders and Senate
leaders, with no formal mechanisms for coordination between them. For many
purposes, each house is autonomous. The House and Senate typically refer to each
other as “the other body,” reflecting a sense of separateness between the two houses
that is far greater than the physical distance between the two wings of the Capitol
building. When Representatives and Senators meet in a conference committee to
resolve specific legislative differences between them, their discussions can take on
the aura of bilateral treaty negotiations.
There is no congressional agenda as such. Each house generally is free to decide
for itself what matters it will consider and when it will consider them. To be sure,
there are constraints on this freedom of action. Certain laws must be enacted each
year — the activities of the federal government must be funded before the new fiscal
year begins — and presidential influence, popular sentiment, and national and
international emergencies can provoke the House and Senate to give priority to the
same matters. In such cases, however, the two houses are responding independently
to the same requirements, pressures, or developments. Neither house has the
constitutional power to compel the other to act. From time to time, the House or
Senate will even act on a matter in the knowledge that the other house is unlikely to
follow suit. The enactment of a law reflects independent decisions by majorities in
the House and Senate that such action is necessary or desirable. It bears repeating
that, in this most important sense, there is no congressional agenda; there is a House
agenda and a Senate agenda, and they do not always coincide.
The Political Context
If constitutional arrangements militate against a process of legislative agenda-
setting that draws both houses of Congress together with each other and with the
President, elements of the political context complicate the process of agenda-setting
within the House of Representatives itself, and even among the members of the
majority party in the House.
Political parties can unify what constitutions separate. However, the nature and
condition of the national political parties in the United States, together with the
single-member districts from which Representatives are elected, limit the impact of
party priorities on arranging the agenda and policy choices of the House. The
importance of party should not be underestimated. Representatives’ party affiliations
have been the best general predictor of how they will vote, and majority party leaders
and their allies have a profound influence on the business the House conducts. But

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straight party-line votes are far more the exception than the rule — certainly in
comparison with most European parliamentary regimes — and there are influences
on the House’s legislative agenda over which party leaders have no formal control
and only limited influence.
While the form and condition of a party system cannot be attributed solely to
any one set of factors, the structure of national elections and representation does not
promote strong party government in the United States. A powerful presidency
elected by a majority of the Electoral College (that almost always reflects a national
plurality) has encouraged a coalescence of factions into a two-party system.
Historically, third parties have had great difficulty attracting, and especially
maintaining, widespread support in federal elections because they have been unable
to contest seriously for the single most visible and valuable prize, the presidency.
The result has been two parties with different centers of gravity but overlapping
national constituencies in Presidential elections.
At the congressional level, however, candidates of the two parties run for the
House in 435 separate single-member districts that are geographically, economically,
and socially diverse. An unequivocal party position that has strong appeal in some
districts would be overwhelmingly rejected in many others. But party positions
usually are not unequivocal, and they are not staked out by national party
organizations, except for the platforms adopted at the quadrennial presidential
nominating conventions. The national party organizations have tended to be skeletal,
and their chairmen usually have been managers more than policy spokesmen or
political leaders in their own right. The President is the acknowledged leader of his
party, but there is no officially designated leader of the “opposition,” nor are there
any well-developed mechanisms for reaching and enunciating national party positions
on issues as they arise. Between presidential elections, the contest between
Democratic and Republican positions more often than not is really a contest between
the position of the President and the predominant position of the opposing party’s
members in Congress, as articulated by the leaders they have elected.
In the absence of strong national party organizations and mechanisms for setting
and promoting party positions, party discipline in Congress can be difficult to define
and still more difficult to enforce. The majority party in the House enjoys
organizational control and, if it is sufficiently unified, procedural control as well; and
it is on organizational and procedural votes that Representatives are most expected
and likely to support their House party leaders. Because there are no authoritative
positions of the national parties per se, the same degree of party unity often is neither
expected nor achieved on policy matters. Furthermore, except in the area of
campaign fund raising, national party organizations, Presidents, and party leaders in
Congress have relatively little direct influence over Representatives’ re-election
prospects (and even less impact on Representatives’ nominations), and House party
leaders have only limited control over Representatives’ prospects for achieving their
personal and policy objectives in the House.
At the same time, Representatives have become less and less beholden to state
and local party organizations. Like the national parties, state and local parties
generally are organized to win elections more than to promote specific policies.
Historically, they have been better organized than the national parties, but

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subnational party organizations are not as strong today as in decades past. They also
tend to be more concerned with the election of state and local officials than with the
election of Representatives, whose districts may not coincide with state or local
political boundaries; so, many of these organizations can do, or choose to do,
relatively little to aid House candidates.6 For example, they usually can provide only
a small fraction of the increasing amounts of money needed to wage an effective
campaign in a closely contested district. Party support can be valuable but rarely is
it decisive.
Primary elections for the House also tend to weaken control of nominations by
the party organizations. In most states, anyone who can meet low threshold
requirements can compete for a party’s nomination, and the winner of the primary
becomes the party nominee, whether he or she has the support of the local party
leaders. In most districts, the costs of campaigns and the impact of mass media have
reduced the value of endorsements by party organizations, encouraging some local
party leaders to remain neutral in congressional primary contests. In short, most
Representatives and congressional candidates have become political entrepreneurs
— deciding for themselves to run for office, developing their own positions and
campaign organizations, devising their own campaign strategies, attracting their own
supporters and contributors, and linking themselves to other party candidates only
when it serves their own interests.
These political conditions have profound meaning for the incentives and
calculations of Representatives, the position of their party leaders in Congress, and
the influence of individual Representatives on the legislative agenda. Members of
the House have the political freedom as well as the political reasons for advocating
policies that their party colleagues and leaders may oppose. In deciding where they
stand, Representatives tend to look to their constituents before their party leaders,
especially national party leaders. District interests do not always prevail but they can
never be ignored, and they are to be protected and promoted whenever possible.
Representatives are bound to their fellow party members in Congress by shared
loyalties and usually by shared convictions, as well as by a common desire to achieve
or maintain majority control in Congress and win the presidency. They cooperate
with each other and support their congressional leaders whenever, in their individual
judgments, they can do so.
The task of leadership in Congress is much like that of presidential leadership
— to lead by persuasion, not merely by exercise of formal powers. The powers of
a cohesive majority and its leaders are formidable, but the procedures of the House
recognize that the political system promotes congressional individualism. The
agenda-setting procedures and practices that are discussed in the remainder of this
report reflect the fact that, to a greater or lesser degree, every Representative has his
or her own legislative agenda and considerable independence to promote it, though
not necessarily to achieve its enactment.
6 “The task of the congressman’s personal organization is to keep him in Congress. The
task of the local party organizations is to keep the party in control of local offices.” Richard
F. Fenno, Jr., Home Style: House Members in Their Districts (Boston: Little, Brown and
Company, 1978), p. 113.

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The Committee System and Agenda Control
During the 107th Congress (2001-2002), 5,892 bills and joint resolutions were
introduced in the House of Representatives; another 226 such measures were passed
by the Senate and sent to the House for consideration. Of this total of 6,118 bills and
joint resolutions — which represented the possible legislative agenda for that two-
year Congress — only 383, or about 6.2%, became law.7 Any Representative may
introduce virtually any bill at any time during the two-year life of a Congress. The
introduction of a bill is a matter of right; no special permission is required. It is also
a routine act. The Representative sponsoring a bill need not make any statement
about it; he or she has only to present it on the House floor when the House is in
session. And at introduction, all bills enjoy the same standing regardless of the party
or position of their sponsors.
Thus, the legislative process in the House of Representatives (and the Senate)
is in part a process of agenda control — a process of selecting from among the
thousands of measures introduced the relatively few that will reach enactment. The
rules of the House assign primary responsibility for the initial screening and filtering
to its system of standing legislative committees (and their subcommittees), each of
which has jurisdiction, pursuant to House rules, over bills that address certain
subjects. In most cases, a bill that is introduced (or received from the Senate) is
immediately referred to the appropriate committee.8 In some cases, a bill may be
referred to two or more committees if each has jurisdiction over part or all of it.
The committees constitute a system of division of labor by which the House
designates certain of its Members to become experts in certain arenas of policy and
to make recommendations to the full membership. But the committees are equally
important for what they do not do. During the 107th Congress, the standing
committees of the House reported (or recommended for passage) a total of 487 bills
and joint resolutions from among the total of 6,118 that Representatives introduced
or the Senate passed. What makes this figure so significant is that a measure that is
not reported stands little chance of becoming law. Committee approval is not
necessarily conclusive; committee disapproval or inaction usually is.
Constraints on Committee Agenda Decisions
This first agenda decisions are made by each committee as it decides which of
the many bills referred to it will be considered. The committees are creatures of the
House and subject to its control, but it would be extraordinary for the House to
7 A law may originate as either a bill or a joint resolution; joint resolutions usually are used
for more limited purposes than bills. For simplicity, references in this report to bills should
be understood to refer to joint resolutions as well. These totals include some bills and joint
resolutions that are identical to others, but do not include House resolutions and House and
Senate concurrent resolutions on which the House may act but which are not submitted to
the President and so cannot have the force of law.
8 The exceptions include the relatively few bills which are so noncontroversial that they are
considered briefly by the full House and passed at the time they are introduced or received
from the Senate.

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formally direct one of its committees to give priority to a particular bill or to bills on
a particular subject.9 However, agenda decisions within each committee are
influenced by party leaders and the President; they also are constrained by emergency
circumstances and recurring deadlines for legislative action.
The authority of the federal government to spend money to finance most
programs and activities must be renewed at least once a year. For this purpose,
appropriations bills usually are reported by the House Appropriations Committee
during the spring of each year so that they can be enacted by October 1, the beginning
of the new fiscal year. House and Senate rules also anticipate that Congress will
complete action on a concurrent budget resolution each spring as a framework for
subsequent consideration of spending and revenue bills. Thus, most actions of the
Appropriations and Budget Committees, as well as the timing of their actions, are
controlled by the fiscal calendar or the requirements of House rules.
With one significant exception, there are few such constraints on the agendas
of the other legislative committees. That exception derives from the requirement of
House rules — specifically, clause 2(a) of Rule XXI — that a law must first be
enacted to authorize the appropriation of funds for a federal agency, program, or
activity before the appropriation to carry out that purpose may be considered on the
House floor. Because many of these authorizations are supposed to be renewed
either annually or periodically, the sequence of authorizations before appropriations
has a significant effect on the agendas of almost all the other legislative committees,
which have jurisdiction over authorization bills, as well as on the floor agenda of the
House itself. Ideally, committees should report their authorization bills during the
first months of each year so they may be enacted in time to permit the orderly
consideration of appropriations bills. However, the authorization requirement is not
imposed by the Constitution; it is a requirement of House rules and can be waived
or ignored if the House chooses to do so. And, because of the number and
complexity of the authorization bills, and the controversy surrounding some of them,
the House sometimes has found it necessary to act on appropriations for which the
authorizations have not yet become law.
Thus, the authorization requirement need not constrain House committees if the
House is prepared (as it often is) to waive that requirement in order to permit timely
consideration of the related appropriations. Moreover, the time constraints on
committees in reporting authorization bills do not affect the committees’ latitude in
deciding on the provisions of those bills. The committees may propose whatever
authorization levels they consider necessary (which, if enacted, then become ceilings
on the amounts that may be appropriated without violating House rules). Also,
authorization bills almost always include changes in agency powers and
responsibilities, program requirements and procedures, and similar matters. The
committees are under few formal constraints in making these recommendations to
the House.
9 Exceptions are “reconciliation” bills, which result from instructions given by Congress
in a budget resolution, directing House (and Senate) committees to propose changes in laws
within their jurisdictions that will result in specified changes in federal spending, revenues,
or both.

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Agenda-Setting in Committee
Within these constraints, each committee is free to determine its own agenda.
Early each year, the committees prepare reports that discuss the spending and revenue
implications of the legislation they anticipate recommending during the remainder
of the year. These reports assist the Budget Committee in proposing the budget
resolution that Congress is to adopt by April 15. However, these reports are not
always specific and detailed, and the committees are not bound by them. More
generally, House rules neither require not anticipate that committees will develop a
formal legislative agenda for one or both sessions of a Congress. Although
committee members may share an understanding of what their priorities will be, their
understanding usually is not given formal expression, and their priorities may change
to accommodate unexpected developments, presidential requests, scheduling
difficulties, and political exigencies.
Agenda decisions in committee need not be collective decisions. Clause 2(c)
of House Rule XI authorizes committee chairmen to schedule meetings “for the
consideration of a bill or resolution pending before the committee or the transaction
of other committee business, subject to such rules as the committee may adopt.” The
same rule also includes provisions by which a majority of a committee’s members
may require that a meeting be called for a specific purpose, even over the chairman’s
opposition, but there are several reasons why this procedure is very unlikely to be
invoked. First, committee members prefer not to confront their chairman in such a
direct and public way, knowing that his or her support can be crucial if they are to
achieve their own legislative objectives. Second, the majority party members of a
committee are inclined to support their chairmen on organizational and procedural
questions. And third, chairmen are selected every two years by the members of the
majority party in the House. Chairmen who seriously thwart the will of their
committees, including members of their own party, risk provoking opposition to
retaining their leadership positions at the beginning of the next Congress.
In general, then, committee chairmen exercise considerable agenda control. But
in doing so, they must take account of their committee colleagues. The power of
committee chairmen was limited in recent years by a series of developments that
enhanced the role and autonomy of subcommittees. No longer did committee
chairmen appoint subcommittee chairmen and majority party subcommittee
members; beginning in the mid-1970s and continuing for the next two decades of
Democratic majorities in the House, Democratic committee members elected
subcommittee chairmen and chose their own subcommittee assignments.
Subcommittees also gained increased control over their budgets and staff, thereby
giving them greater control over their own agendas. Finally, most subcommittees
came to have fixed jurisdictions and to receive measures within their jurisdictions
when they were referred to the committee.
Collectively, these developments meant that subcommittee agenda decisions
became more difficult for the full committee and its chairman to control. Within
each subcommittee, the chairman generally came to enjoy as much or more agenda
control as did the chairman of the committee in deciding its priorities and schedule.
A subcommittee decision to act — to hold hearings and then to report its
recommendations for legislation — usually was not directly and formally controlled

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by the committee, although subcommittee agendas might be coordinated informally
by subcommittee and full committee leaders. Committee rules might include a
procedure by which the committee, by majority vote or decision of its chairman,
could consider a bill on which the subcommittee to which it was referred failed to
act. However, informal negotiations and accommodations always are considered
preferable to any such formal action; committee members tended to protect
subcommittee prerogatives because they held or could expect to hold positions of
subcommittee leadership themselves.
The Republican majority that took control of the House in 1995 strengthened
the influence of party leaders and the majority party conference over committees and
their chairmen, and also returned to committee chairmen some of the authority over
subcommittees that they had lost during the preceding two decades. Especially
during the 104th Congress, committees and their chairmen often were guided by the
majority party’s legislative program, and subcommittees sometimes were bypassed
in order to expedite the legislative process. To some extent, committees reasserted
themselves during the 105th Congress as the House returned to a more typical
legislative pace, but the imposition of term limits on committee chairmen may have
an important long-term impact on the influence that chairmen are able to exercise vis-
4a-vis both their committees and the House as a whole. Likewise, in the 108th
Congress, the Speaker was given the authority to appoint Appropriations
subcommittee chairs, a move that is likely to further empower the Speaker to set
legislative agendas.
Notwithstanding these recent developments, committee agendas still may reflect
subcommittee agendas. When a subcommittee fails to act on a bill, its parent
committee may not be inclined to take it up in the absence of compelling political
necessity or an externally imposed deadline (such as the approaching end of the fiscal
year). Indeed, subcommittee inaction may be welcomed as a way to protect the
members of the full committee from issues they prefer not to confront. On the other
hand, subcommittee action may create pressure for full committee action, and the
timing of subcommittee action can limit committee control over its own schedule.
The relationships between committees and their subcommittees continue to be
characterized by cooperation more often than by conflict. Subcommittee chairmen
who set agendas that fail to meet the needs and preferences of their party colleagues,
on the committee and in the House, risk losing their chairmanships at the beginning
of the next Congress.
The formal process of subcommittee or committee consideration normally
begins with one or more public hearings at which other Representatives, executive
branch officials, and leaders of private groups and organizations comment on the
legislation and the issues it addresses. Even before these hearings, the subcommittee
often requests a written statement of position from the executive branch department
or agency that would be responsible for implementing the bill if it were to be enacted.
Based on this record, the subcommittee may conclude that no legislative action is
warranted, at least at that time, and the bill is removed from the active agenda. If the
subcommittee decides to proceed, its chairman schedules a “markup” meeting at
which the members vote on amendments to the bill they wish to propose to the
House.

CRS-11
When the subcommittee reports its actions to the full committee, the same
process may be repeated. Additional hearings at this stage are more the exception
than the rule, but major bills are likely to be marked up again by the full committee,
at which time the subcommittee’s proposed amendments may be approved or
rejected. The committee then votes to report the bill back to the House with the
recommendation that the House pass it after first adopting the amendments the
committee proposes. Alternatively, the committee may report a “clean” bill that
already incorporates these amendments. The reported bill is accompanied by a
written report that explains the committee’s actions and recommendations.
The vast majority of bills do not survive the process of selection and
consideration in committee. In fact, the process of hearings and markup can be so
time-consuming and the time pressures on Representatives so great that hearings
usually are not even scheduled on a bill unless the subcommittee chairman and at
least some of his colleagues already believe that some legislative action may be
necessary.10 Similarly, not all bills approved by subcommittees are considered by
their full committees. The time available for committee meetings also is limited, and
committees generally consider it wise to be selective in the number of bills they
recommend to the House for passage. Furthermore, subcommittee and committee
agenda decisions are influenced by what their members believe will be acceptable to
their other House colleagues. The reputation and influence of a committee, and
especially its leaders, within the House depend in part on the willingness of the
House to accept its recommendations. With this in mind, a committee may decide
not to report a bill even though a majority on the committee may favor it, or the
committee may report the bill but then not press for it to be considered on the House
floor.
If the committee does not report a bill, the Representatives who support it have
little in the way of effective recourse. House Rule XV, clause 2, does provide a
procedure by which a majority of all Representatives may sign a petition to discharge
the committee from further consideration of the bill. If sufficient signatures are
obtained, the House votes on whether to discharge the committee and then on
whether it wishes to consider the bill. This procedure rarely has been invoked
successfully, though the prospect of being discharged sometimes may have provoked
committees to act when they might not otherwise have done so. Some
Representatives have been reluctant to sign discharge petitions even though they
supported the bill at issue, arguing that the discharge procedure undermines the
established prerogatives of committees generally and, implicitly, that a pattern of
successful discharge efforts could ultimately jeopardize the prerogatives of their own
committees. The House amended its rules in 1993 to make public for the first time
the names of Members who sign discharge petitions. This was done in the
10 On the other hand, a subcommittee or committee may hold hearings with no expectation
of recommending legislation — for example, as a way of ventilating the issue, giving the
bill’s proponents an opportunity to be heard, as a boon to a politically vulnerable Member,
or laying the groundwork for action at some later time.

CRS-12
expectation that it would become somewhat easier to attract the 218 signatures that
a successful discharge petition requires.11
In light of the powerful veto that committees can and do exercise, proponents
of legislation attempt to influence committee and subcommittee agendas. The
President as well as private individuals and groups may lobby for committee action,
both by arguing the merits of their case and by demonstrating the breadth and
intensity of support for the bill they endorse. The bill’s supporters in Congress may
attempt to persuade their colleagues on the committee and demonstrate support for
the bill within the House by such methods as seeking co-sponsors for the bill from
a broad cross-section of the House and especially from influential Representatives
— including, if possible, members of the committee itself. In some cases, the goal
of such efforts is not to transform opponents into proponents, but instead to increase
the visibility of a bill that otherwise might simply be lost in the press of other
business. On the other hand, opponents can be equally successful in stressing the
political and policy disadvantages of the bill, and in encouraging their allies on the
committee to prolong the process of committee consideration, in the hope that the bill
will be removed eventually from the committee’s agenda in favor of more pressing
and less controversial matters. By and large, the advantage normally rests with the
opponents of legislative action.
Rules, Special Rules, and the Floor Agenda
When a House committee reports a bill — that is, when it returns the bill to the
control of the full House with a recommendation that the bill be passed, with or
without amendments — the bill normally is referred to one of two calendars.
According to clause 1 of Rule XIII, authorization, appropriations, and tax bills are
placed on the Union Calendar; other public bills appear on the House Calendar. The
two calendars taken together may be thought of as a list of bills that have survived
committee scrutiny and are now available for consideration on the floor by the full
House. If the bills that are introduced can be said to constitute a possible agenda for
the House, the bills on these two calendars constitute a potential floor agenda.12 Each
reported bill has been studied and found worthy by the House’s designated committee
experts. At this stage, the agenda problem for the House becomes one of
transforming this potential agenda into a prospective agenda of bills on which floor
11 Another alternative that Representatives may pursue is to encourage the Senate to take
the legislative initiative, in the hope of prompting House committee action or with the
possibility of bypassing the recalcitrant House committee altogether. Also, the Rules
Committee may report a resolution providing for floor consideration of a bill that has not
yet been reported by the committee with jurisdiction over it. However, the Rules Committee
rarely invokes this power of “extraction” over the intense opposition of another committee.
12 Minor and emergency bills are the only ones that often reach the House floor without
prior committee action. If a bill has been referred to committee, the House may not consider
it until the committee reports it or is discharged from further consideration of the bill. The
committee may be discharged by unanimous consent when possible or through the more
elaborate procedures of Rule XV when necessary.

CRS-13
action is expected in the near term, and finally, into the actual agenda or schedule for
the daily conduct of business.
The various legislative committees of the House can consider bills
simultaneously, but the bills they report must be taken up on the House floor one at
a time. Some bills on the calendar die at the end of each Congress for lack of time
for floor consideration, so a selection process is unavoidable. A mechanical answer
would be to call bills to the floor in the order in which they appear on the calendars,
which is the order in which they are reported from committee. However, this
procedure would not permit necessary differentiations between the critical and the
insignificant, nor would it ensure timely action on bills that confront deadlines such
as the beginning of the new fiscal year for appropriations bills. Some more
discriminating procedure is required.
At one extreme, agenda decisions could be delegated to a single leader, and
between roughly 1890 and 1910, it could be argued without much exaggeration that
the Speaker enjoyed such power as the elected leader of the majority party. But this
is no longer the case. At the other extreme, decisions affecting the floor agenda
could require the unanimous concurrence of all Members; in daily practice, the
Senate’s rules encourage reliance on procedures that approach this limit. Generally
speaking, the rules of the House seek the middle ground of majority control.
Although the specific procedures to be discussed are varied and rather complicated,
they are permeated by a single principle: when the votes of a simple numerical
majority are sufficient to pass a bill, the decision to consider it also can be controlled
by the same majority.
Privileged Business Under House Rules
The rules of the House provide for arranging the floor agenda by applying the
concept of “privileged” business. In brief, a bill that is privileged may be called up
for consideration on the floor out of its order on the House or Union Calendar. To
put it somewhat differently, privileged business may interrupt the daily order of
business that is listed in the House’s rules. In fact, this order of business under clause
1 of Rule XIV is never followed, save for the routine proceedings such as the
morning prayer, the saying of the pledge of allegiance, and approval of the Journal
at the beginning of each day’s session. Virtually all legislative business that is
transacted on the House floor is an interruption of the regular order of business and
is privileged by virtue of House rules, by vote of the House, or by unanimous
consent. In practice, a bill that does not gain privilege by one of these means cannot
be considered on the floor; a motion to consider it may not interrupt the regular order
of business and, therefore, is not in order. Thus, House rules affect the floor agenda
by designating certain classes of bills as privileged and by establishing procedures
by which other bills become privileged.
General Privilege. The rules grant privilege to bills and resolutions on
certain subjects and for certain purposes, but only if those measures have been
reported by the appropriate committees. Under clause 5(a) of Rule XIII, for example,
privilege extends to general appropriations bills, to budget resolutions and budget
reconciliation bills, and to House resolutions concerning changes in House rules, the
conduct of Representatives and House employees, election challenges affecting

CRS-14
Representatives, and certain expenditures for House operations. These matters
generally concern either the integrity and proceedings of the House itself or the
performance of what is usually considered to be the core constitutional power of
Congress — the “power of the purse.”
It is in order for the committee that has reported one of these privileged bills or
resolutions to call it up for action on the floor at any time that another matter is not
already under consideration. However, a variety of other matters also are privileged,
including conference reports on legislative disagreements between the House and
Senate, certain Senate amendments to House bills, and bills that the President has
vetoed. Furthermore, House rules do not establish a fixed and certain order of
precedence among all privileged matters; if each of two Representatives wishes to
call up a privileged bill or other matter, the rules do not always determine which of
them is to be recognized first. The effect of this situation is to leave some important
discretion to the Speaker in arranging a specific order of business from among the
various matters that enjoy privileged access to the House floor.
Putting the exercise of this discretion aside for the moment, the grant of general
privilege by House rules has the effect of moving privileged bills from the potential
agenda of bills on the Union and House Calendars to the prospective agenda of bills
that can be expected to come to the floor in the near future.13 But the rules do not
require that privileged bills be considered, though they usually are. By one means or
another, a numerical majority on the floor usually has an opportunity to vote to block
consideration of a bill, thereby avoiding the need to vote for or against it on its
merits. Such a vote is rarely necessary, however, because even privileged bills are
not called up for floor action unless there is good reason to expect that the House is
prepared to pass them. For these bills, unlike bills that are not privileged, the
question affecting their fate usually becomes when, not whether, they will be
considered on the floor.
Among the legislative measures that can become law, general appropriations
measures and budget reconciliation bills are the only ones that frequently reach the
floor by virtue of their general privilege under House rules. The rules do not grant
such favored status to most bills. Instead, the rules include a number of devices by
which the vast majority of non-privileged bills that the House considers are made in
order. In the case of general appropriations bills and the other matters that are
generally privileged, the House has determined over the years that privilege should
extend to them as a class — because of their subjects and without regard to their
specific provisions. Two additional devices to be discussed also are designed to
facilitate floor action on certain limited classes of legislation — private bills and bills
affecting the District of Columbia. There are five other devices by which bills are
moved from the potential to the prospective agenda on a case-by-case basis, because
of their individual merits and circumstances, not because of the general nature of the
subjects they address.
13 House rules generally require that the written committee report on a bill, even a
privileged bill, be available for three days before the bill may be considered on the floor.
This delay permits time for Representatives and their staffs to become familiar with the
committee’s recommendations before they are debated.

CRS-15
These seven devices may be summarized as follows:
1.
motions to discharge House committees from further consideration of bills
they have not reported, making discharged bills eligible for floor
consideration;
2.
procedures known as Calendar Wednesday, by which committees may call
up nonprivileged bills they have reported but which have not reached the
House floor by more conventional routes;
3.
special procedures for considering bills concerning the District of
Columbia;
4.
procedures for the call of a special calendar of private bills affecting
specific individuals or entities;
5.
procedures for the call of the “Corrections Calendar” for bills that enjoy
widespread support in the House;
6.
procedures known as suspension of the rules for expeditious consideration
of relatively noncontroversial bills; and
7.
special rules adopted by the House, at the recommendation of its Rules
Committee, that provide for consideration of individual, nonprivileged,
bills.
These devices are not equally important, nor are they employed with equal frequency.
Some are well-suited to relatively minor bills; others are used to consider more
controversial bills. In a sense, the first six of these procedures are alternatives to the
seventh, which usually is the most complicated and time-consuming, because it is
through the Rules Committee that the most important nonprivileged bills usually
reach the floor. The six alternative devices are generally used (if used at all) to deal
with bills that are either routine or extraordinary, and they will be discussed first.
Special Days for Privileged Action. House rules designate specific days
of each week and month for transacting certain kinds of legislative business. The
effect of these rules is to make the appropriate kinds of bills privileged for
consideration on the designated days. Of the six rules with this effect, two are
designed to protect the House against its own committees.
First, the second and fourth Mondays of each month are set aside for voting on
motions by which a majority of Representatives can discharge a committee from
further consideration of a measure that it has not reported (clause 2 of Rule XV). If
the House votes to discharge, a motion to consider the measure at issue then is
privileged.
Second, each Wednesday is available to committees that want the House to
consider bills they have reported that have not otherwise become privileged for floor
consideration. This procedure, known as Calendar Wednesday, usually is dispensed

CRS-16
with each week by unanimous consent; the House also may dispense with Calendar
Wednesday by a two-thirds vote (clause 7 of Rule XV.)
These two devices are designed to respond to unusual circumstances, and they
are rarely used; but they are preserved in the rules as means by which a voting
majority on the floor can retain control of its own agenda. Through a discharge
motion, that majority can overcome the powerful negative influence of the standing
committees over the potential floor agenda. The majority can propose to bring a bill
directly and immediately to the floor over the opposition or disinterest of the
committee of jurisdiction. Through Calendar Wednesday, the committee that has
reported a bill can overcome the purported inaction or indifference of the Rules
Committee or the majority party leadership (the implications of which are discussed
below) if the full House is prepared to consider the bill. Any committee may use this
procedure to propose one of its nonprivileged bills for floor consideration, but the
House retains the authority to vote against considering it.
The other four devices are used to transact business that is far more routine;
consequently, they are invoked more frequently. First, the first and third Tuesdays
are set aside for the consideration of private bills — usually minor bills that affect
only one individual or entity (clause 5 of Rule XV) — if any such bills have been
reported and are awaiting floor action. On the designated days, each bill on the
Private Calendar is called up and passed almost immediately — usually without any
debate or amendments — but only if there is virtually no opposition to its passage.
Second, the second and fourth Mondays are designated not only for considering
discharge motions but also for considering bills concerning the District of Columbia
— a subject of lower priority to most Representatives (clause 4 of Rule XV).
Although only a majority vote is necessary to pass District bills, they usually require
and consume less time on the floor than would be required in most cases if they were
to be considered through more conventional procedures.
In short, by designating days for District of Columbia business and for the call
of the Private Calendar, House rules set aside predictable and convenient
opportunities for the House to act expeditiously on bills that are generally routine and
non-controversial.
Third, on every Monday and every Tuesday, and during the 108th Congress on
Wednesdays, the Speaker may recognize Representatives to move to suspend the
rules and pass a particular bill that usually is, but need not be, on the Union or House
Calendar. When this motion is made, a special set of procedures is triggered by
which the bill is debated for no more than 40 minutes, with no floor amendments to
it in order, before a single vote occurs on suspending the rules and passing the bill.
But to pass a bill under suspension of the rules requires a two-thirds vote (clause 1
of Rule XV).14 Bills considered in this way are not expected to pass without
14 A quorum (a simple majority of the Representatives actually serving) is supposed to
participate in every vote. Thus, the minimal number of votes needed to pass a bill under
suspension of the rules without violating this quorum requirement is 146 (two-thirds of a
quorum of 218, assuming there are no vacancies in the House membership). However, a
(continued...)

CRS-17
opposition, but they are expected to enjoy such overwhelming support that there is
no need to devote more than 40 minutes to each of them.
Finally, in 1995 the House created a new Corrections Calendar and fixed the
procedure for considering bills placed on it (clause 6 of Rule XV). After a committee
has reported a bill and it has been entered on the Union or House Calendar, the
Speaker has the authority to have it placed also on the Corrections Calendar. On the
second and fourth Tuesdays of each month, the Speaker may decide that the House
will consider one or more bills on this special calendar. As each bill is called up, it
is debatable for only one hour and it cannot be amended except for amendments
proposed by the committee that reported it or by the committee’s chairman (and one
amendment included in a motion to recommit with instructions). Like suspension of
the rules, the Corrections Calendar procedure limits Members’ opportunities to
debate and propose amendments. Also like the suspension procedure, therefore, the
Corrections Calendar rules require more than a simple majority vote to pass a bill in
this way. Instead of a two-thirds vote, however, a three-fifths vote is needed to pass
a bill called up from the Corrections Calendar.
The six procedures just summarized merit several additional comments. First,
three of these procedures — District of Columbia day, discharge motions, and
Calendar Wednesday — each provide for a bill to be passed by simple majority vote,
and in each case, the same majority can vote not to consider the bill. The House can
defeat the discharge motion or it can vote against considering a bill called up on
District day or on Calendar Wednesday. The question of consideration rarely is
raised, but it remains available as a protection for the majority against being
compelled to vote on a bill it does not wish to consider. The three procedures
provide opportunities for committees or for a majority of Representatives (through
a discharge petition) to propose bills for the House to consider, but it remains for the
House to decide whether it will do so. These are majority vote procedures, and the
majority retains ultimate control in deciding what bills to consider under them.
In the case of the Private Calendar, objections by only a few Members are
sufficient to prevent bills from being considered. Under these procedures, therefore,
the question of majority control of the floor agenda does not arise because consensus
is required before a bill on this special calendar can be debated, much less passed.
On the other hand, when a Representative moves to suspend the rules and pass a bill,
that bill is immediately before the House for debate and disposition. There usually
is no way that a majority can vote not to consider the motion and the bill.15 Similarly,
the Speaker is empowered to present a committee-reported bill from the Corrections
Calendar for the House to consider. For a bill to pass under either procedure,
however, more than a bare majority of the Representatives voting must support it.
14 (...continued)
vote in which a quorum does not participate is considered conclusive unless a
Representative makes a point of order that the quorum requirement was not met.
15 When the House amended its rules during the 1970s to minimize time-consuming
procedural votes, it virtually eliminated a device by which Representatives had been able
to demand a vote that had the effect of determining whether the House would consider a
motion to suspend the rules and pass a particular bill.

CRS-18
The majority loses a certain degree of agenda control, but only under conditions that
require an extraordinary majority for passage. And a bill that fails to pass under any
one of these three procedures may be considered on the floor again — this time under
more elaborate procedures, permitting amendments and lengthier debate in
Committee of the Whole, that require only a simply majority vote for passage.
Second, only four of the six procedures are used with any frequency — the
discharge and Calendar Wednesday procedures are rarely attempted and less often
successful — and these four are expediting procedures. Through them, House rules
reserve regular and predictable occasions for disposing of business that is not
especially contentious. District and private bills usually are noncontroversial because
of the subjects with which they deal. Bills considered under the suspension and
Corrections Calendar procedures are not expected to be very divisive because their
proponents know that unusually high levels of support are necessary to pass them by
either means. And it is usually pointless, and even self-defeating, for proponents of
a bill to force it to a vote without reasonable prospects for success. Because of the
nature and use of these procedures, therefore, they are not likely to provoke serious
and recurring concerns about agenda control.16
Third, the availability of these expediting procedures affects the House floor
agenda in another important respect. They relieve some of the pressure on the agenda
by making it possible for the House to act on more bills than would be possible if the
same, more elaborate, and time-consuming procedures were followed in every
instance. While the fate of a bill obviously depends on whether it reaches the floor,
its prospects also can be affected by when it reaches the floor. For example, a bill
that the House passes during the first session of a Congress may have better prospects
for ultimate enactment than one passed shortly before final adjournment, because
there is ample time remaining for the Senate to act as well and for the two chambers
to reach agreement. Thus, decisions to give priority to considering certain bills can
damage the prospects of others that are not so favored.
In this respect, the suspension of the rules procedure has become particularly
and increasingly important. In fact, more than half of all the bills the House passed
during recent Congresses were considered in this way. Amendments to the House
rules in 1973 and 1977 resulted in a four-fold increase in opportunities to offer
suspension motions. Whereas such motions had been in order on every other
Monday, they now can be made on any Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday that the
House is in session. These rules changes recognized the utility of the suspension
procedure as a way for the House to act quickly on the large number of measures that
most Representatives are prepared to pass in the form recommended by their
committees. Consequently, more time is available for prompt consideration of more
bills that require more extended consideration. So in a sense, the use of the
suspension procedure requires the majority to sacrifice a certain degree of agenda
16 From time to time, some Representatives have opposed passage of a bill under suspension
of the rules on the grounds that the bill requires amendments and more extended debate,
that it combines elements that deserve separate consideration instead, or as a political protest
or dilatory tactic.

CRS-19
control over bills that matter less in return for greater agenda control over bills that
matter more.
In summary, House rules designate certain days for certain purposes — either
to allow opportunities for the majority to protect itself against inaction by its
committees or leaders (discharge motions and Calendar Wednesday), or to facilitate
the conduct of relatively routine business in a convenient and expeditious manner
(the Corrections and Private Calendars and the District and suspension procedures).
The first two procedures permit affirmative agenda control by a determined majority
which can use them to compel floor action, but these procedures cannot be used to
compel such a majority to vote on a bill it does not wish to consider. Two of the
other four procedures involve bills that usually evoke little if any controversy over
their merits and, therefore, over the advisability of considering them (and in case of
controversy over a District bill, the majority may vote not to consider it). The
Corrections Calendar and suspension of the rules procedures, on the other hand, are
used for bills that can evoke some opposition, and they are inconsistent with majority
control of the agenda because a majority usually cannot prevent a bill from being
considered in either way. However, both procedures are controlled by the majority
party’s leader and both require more than a simple majority vote for passage.
Special Rules Affecting the Order of Business
The procedures discussed to this point are not applicable to most of the major
bills that House committees report each Congress. These bills are not generally
privileged under House rules, nor are they supported by large enough majorities to
be passed under an expediting procedure such as suspension of the rules. Thus, these
procedures are not sufficient to fully resolve the problem of transforming the large
potential agenda of reported bills into the smaller prospective agenda of bills that are
likely to reach the floor.
For this purpose, the House also has looked for the past century to one of its
committees, the Committee on Rules. Like the other standing committees, the Rules
Committee has jurisdiction over a class of measures, primarily bills and resolutions
affecting House rules. But this committee also is authorized to report House
resolutions that, if adopted by the House, affect the order of business on the floor.
These resolutions, which also are known as rules or special rules, are privileged and
so may be considered by the House at any time that another matter is not already
pending. Because of both their provisions and their privilege, special rules constitute
the critical link between most major legislation on the House and Union Calendars
and the House’s actual floor agenda.
A special rule usually begins by providing that, upon adoption of the resolution,
the Speaker may declare the House resolved into the Committee of the Whole House
on the State of the Union for the consideration of a particular bill designated by the
resolution. (The nature of the Committee of the Whole and some of the other
provisions of special rules are discussed later in this report.) In the absence of this
provision, the Speaker would have no such authority because the bill at issue
presumably is not privileged and, therefore, the regular order of business could not
be interrupted to consider it in Committee of the Whole (except by unanimous

CRS-20
consent). Adoption of the special rule concerning a bill has the effect of making the
bill itself in order for consideration.17
Once the Rules Committee reports a special rule, it remains for the House to
decide by majority vote whether to accept it or reject it. The special rule itself is
debated for as much as an hour and it may even be amended, although with difficulty.
The Rules Committee proposes moving individual bills from the potential floor
agenda to the prospective agenda, but the House is not bound to accept these
recommendations. The voting majority on the floor retains negative agenda control.
The House usually cannot avoid considering a Rules Committee proposal but the
majority may reject it (although this does not happen very often for reasons that will
be discussed).
The Rules Committee also can exercise a certain degree of negative agenda
control. The authority of the committee is not restricted to recommending the order
in which the House should consider the bills reported by the other House committees.
The Rules Committee also has the option of not acting — of declining to report the
special rule that a bill may require if it is to reach the floor. The committee has often
been characterized as a “traffic cop,” regulating and directing the flow of legislative
traffic to the floor. This metaphor is apt in some respects, but it also has one serious
deficiency. The traffic cop decides when a car may pass, but not whether it may pass
if its driver is obeying the “rules of the road.” By contrast, the Rules Committee is
not obliged to allow all bills to come to the floor; it may decide instead that
individual bills do not merit floor consideration at all. If the committee fails to report
a special rule for a bill, or fails to act promptly, the prospects for that bill becoming
law fall precipitously.
The committee that reported the bill may resort to the Calendar Wednesday
procedure, but Calendar Wednesday rarely is invoked in part because it is not
difficult to prevent passage of a bill that is brought to the floor in this way.
Alternatively, the bill’s proponents may attempt to discharge the committee from
further consideration of a special rule that would make the bill in order, but discharge
petitions rarely have been successful. Thus, since much of the legislative activity in
the House focuses on bills that are not privileged and that are too controversial to
pass under suspension of the rules (with limited debate, no floor amendments, and
a two-thirds vote required for passage) or by call of the Corrections Calendar, the
position of the Rules Committee in arranging the floor agenda is absolutely pivotal.
In view of the importance of its decisions, how the Rules Committee makes
these decisions requires attention. When one of the other committees reports a bill
that does not enjoy enough support to pass under suspension of the rules of by use
of the Corrections Calendar, the committee’s chairman requests a hearing before the
Rules Committee. If the committee obliges (and it need not do so), Representatives
appear before it to speak for or against the bill. During the hearing, Rules Committee
members may inquire into the merits of the legislation as well as into when and how
it should be considered on the floor. The committee then decides, by majority vote,
17 Different forms of special rules are reported for other purposes, such as waiving points
of order against conference reports.

CRS-21
whether to grant a rule and, if so, what its provisions should be. Like any other
committee, the Rules Committee bases its decisions on the views of its own members
and on their perceptions of what a majority of the House is prepared to support. But
in the contemporary House, the actions of this committee also have been shaped by
its unique relationship with the House’s majority party leadership.
Today this relationship is cooperative, but it has not always been so. In fact, the
changes in this relationship during the 20th century have been at the heart of some of
the most important developments that have taken place within the House.18 At the
beginning of this century, the Speaker also served as chairman of the Rules
Committee and appointed its other members (as well as the chairmen and members
of all other committees). Consequently, he and his allies controlled the committee
and its decisions, and the flow of legislation to the floor. If the Speaker did not look
with favor on a bill, it was all but certain to perish from Rules Committee inaction.
The Calendar Wednesday procedure was adopted in 1909 to assuage critics of the
Speaker’s power; nevertheless, he soon was stripped of his chairmanship and
appointment powers. This was truly a historic moment for the House, because the
result was a fundamental redistribution of power from the Speaker and the majority
party leadership to the standing committees and their chairmen.
The seniority system became the basis for much of the power of House
committees and especially their chairmen. In search of a stable alternative to
appointments by the Speaker, the House came to rely more and more on the length
of continuous committee service by majority party Representatives as the criterion
for selecting chairmen. Once appointed to committees, Representatives usually could
remain on them as long as they wished and as long as they were members of the
House. If they were members of the majority party, they could eventually expect to
become chairman if they remained on their committees longer than any of their party
colleagues. As a result, the seniority system tended to insulate committees from the
short-term influence of elections as well as from the efforts of party leaders to draw
their members together in support of a party program for legislation. And nowhere
were the consequences of seniority more pronounced than on the Rules Committee.
Although the Democrats were the majority party in the House for all but four
years between the mid-1930s and 1960, the Rules Committee could be dominated
during most of that period by a coalition of Republicans and conservative Democrats.
Although the Democrats enjoyed a nominal majority on the committee, their control
over committee decisions was far from certain. The chairman of the Rules
Committee during much of the 1950s has been credited with being one of the driving
forces behind a bipartisan “conservative coalition” that could stymie the Democratic
majority by refusing to report special rules. If this report had been written 40 years
ago, it could very well have concluded that effective agenda control rested in the
hands of this coalition, when it chose to exercise it, over which the leaders of the
majority party had no real control and only uncertain influence.
18 On the history of the Rules Committee, see U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules,
A History of the Committee on Rules, committee print, 97th Cong., 2d sess. (1983).

CRS-22
This situation began to change in 1961 when the House voted narrowly to
increase the size of the Rules Committee, giving the Democrats a tenuous one-vote
majority on which it could rely more often than not. In 1975, the Democratic
majority in the House changed its party rules to tie the Rules Committee more firmly
to the party majority acting through its leader, the Speaker. Whereas a party
committee nominated new members to other committees, subject to approval by all
the Democrats meeting in a caucus, it was the Speaker who nominated the
Democratic members of the Rules Committee. Because there now were more than
twice as many Democrats as Republicans on the committee, the effect of these
changes was to transform the relationship between the committee and the majority
party. With rare exceptions, the Rules Committee became allied with the Speaker
and the other majority party leaders. Although the Speaker could not dictate
committee decisions, he and the committee’s Democratic members tended to share
the same policy goals and a common desire to use the committee’s powers to
promote them.
Now that the utility of these arrangements has become well-established, they are
likely to be preserved, no matter which party holds a majority of seats in the House.
Rule 12B of the House Republican Conference for the 105th Congress authorizes the
Speaker to nominate the chairman and other Republican members of the Rules
Committee, subject to approval by the Republican Conference. Should the
conference reject one of these nominations, the Speaker is to make another one. In
other words, the Republican Speaker, like his Democratic predecessors, can ensure
that a working majority of the committee will be responsive to the party leadership’s
priorities and to its short-term agenda preferences and strategic interests.
From the perspective of this report, these developments were critical because
of their implications for majority control of the floor agenda. The majority party
leadership selects more than a majority of the members of the Rules Committee, who
in turn make decisions that meet the needs and interests of their party colleagues who
can constitute a working majority on the floor.
The Rules Committee provides an excellent vantage point from which to look
again at the implications for agenda-setting in the House of the organization of
national parties generally and in Congress specifically. The House has relied heavily
on the seniority system for allocating committee chairmanships in part because doing
so has avoided the possibility of factional conflicts within the majority party. The
Speaker lost his authority to appoint and reappoint majority party members to
committees when a significant faction within his own party rebelled and joined forces
with the minority party. The presumption that a Representative who serves on a
committee may remain on that committee protects the interests of Members
individually against the preferences of their party collectively.
This arrangement would not be as acceptable if there were consistently a
coherent party position that Representatives were expected to support. But it has
been acceptable in the House where party positions often have tended to emerge, if
at all, from a weighing of what most party members in the House are willing to
support, as they calculate their own electoral interests and as they evaluate national
interests and balance them against constituency interests. When majority party unity
is particularly strong, Members may delegate to its leaders more de facto authority

CRS-23
over the selection of committee chairmen, even in violation of the seniority norm,
and over appointments to fill committee vacancies. When unity is weaker, majority
party leaders are likely to exercise less unilateral control over these decisions.
Changing the relationship between the Rules Committee and the majority
party’s leaders in the House narrowed the gap between agenda control by majority
vote and agenda control by the majority party. Because members of the committee
now are effectively chosen by the party leadership, their interests and decisions are
likely to coincide, more often than not, with the preferences of most of their party
colleagues. When there is significant opposition on the floor to a special rule, the
House tends to divide along party lines, and the outcome usually turns on the number
of Members from each party who vote with most of the Members from the other.
In sum, the Rules Committee is the key instrument through which the House
makes its agenda decisions affecting most major bills. Without a special rule from
the committee, a bill that is not privileged cannot reach the floor for passage by
majority vote (except through the rarely successful discharge and Calendar
Wednesday procedures). The House accepts or rejects the committee’s
recommendations by majority vote, and thereby retains the power to refuse a bill a
place on the floor agenda. Changes in the committee’s membership and the
procedures for selecting its members have made the committee more regularly and
predictably responsive to the agenda preferences of the majority party, whether
Republican or Democrat. The committee always has been reluctant to propose a bill
for the floor agenda that a majority might oppose. In the House today, the committee
also is reluctant to refuse a special rule for a bill when support for it centers in the
majority party. Such a bill still may not reach the floor until the committee and party
leaders can assemble the majority vote needed to pass it. But, the Rules Committee
has become an ally of, not a potential obstacle to, control of the floor agenda by the
majority party.
The Floor Agenda and the Daily Order of Business
The floor agenda of the House is governed by the application of standing rules
and the adoption of special rules. Through these two types of rules, a prospective
agenda of bills that probably will reach the floor is created from the potential floor
agenda of bills that have been reported from committee and placed on one of the two
primary calendars. Important as these rules are, however, they are not sufficient to
define and control the daily order of business.19
House rules provide that a motion to suspend the rules and pass a bill is usually
in order only on a Monday or Tuesday; but the rules do not control whether or when
a particular bill is to be considered under this procedure. A privileged bill may be
called up on the floor at the direction of the committee that reported it whenever
there is no other matter pending. But various types of bills are privileged, as are a
number of other matters, and House rules do not establish a firm order of priority
19 As noted earlier, House rules do designate certain days for considering bills on the
Corrections and Private Calendars and bills concerning the District of Columbia.

CRS-24
among all of them. Other bills may not be debated and passed by majority vote until
after the House adopts special rules for their consideration. But a special rule usually
does not require that the bill it makes in order must be considered immediately after
the House adopts the rule. So standing and special rules may create an agenda of
bills with special claims on the attention of the House, but these rules generally do
not determine the order in which the bills are considered. Additional procedures and
authorities are required to transform the prospective agenda into the daily order of
business — in other words, to develop an actual schedule for considering legislation
on the floor.
During a 1983 debate, Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill Jr. declared that “[t]he power
of the Speaker of the House is the power of scheduling.”20 In political terms, he
exercises this power as the elected leader of the majority party; his scheduling
decisions take account of the strategic interests and prevailing sentiments of his
majority party colleagues. In procedural terms, his control over scheduling flows
from certain provisions of House rules and generally from his responsibilities as the
presiding officer of the House. In this capacity, he enjoys considerable discretion,
but a discretion that is far from being unlimited, in recognizing Representatives to
speak or to bring legislative business before the House for consideration.
The suspension of the rules procedure restricts the rights and powers of most
Representatives by limiting debate and precluding amendments to bills that are
considered in this way. On the other hand, it enhances the power of the Speaker.
Suspension motions are in order on Mondays and Tuesdays, but Representatives do
not have a right under House rules to make such motions. The Speaker has the
discretion to decide whether to permit a bill to be considered in this way. If a
committee or subcommittee chairman wants to bring a bill to the floor “under
suspension,” he or she must seek the consent of the Speaker; if a chairman sought
to use the procedure without the Speaker’s prior approval, the Speaker simply would
refuse to recognize him or her for that purpose.
The Speaker’s control over the suspension procedure usually does not provoke
controversy. The procedure is attractive to committee chairmen because it protects
their bills from amendments. It is equally attractive to the Speaker because it
conserves time and, therefore, creates greater flexibility for scheduling more
controversial bills. Also, bills considered in this way usually enjoy substantial
bipartisan support because a two-thirds vote is required for passage. When
controversy does arise, however, there usually is no way for a majority of the House
to avoid debating and voting on a suspension motion (and, therefore, a bill) that it
would prefer not to consider, at least under such procedural restraints. Both the
Speaker and the committee chairmen are constrained in using the suspension
procedure by a shared desire to avoid floor defeats, but the opportunity to limit
debate on a bill, and especially to protect it against damaging amendments, can
sometimes make the risk worthwhile.
The procedures governing bills on the Corrections Calendar also limit Members’
opportunities to debate and offer amendments while requiring a three-fifths vote for
20 Congressional Record, daily edition, v. 129, no. 158 (Nov. 15, 1983), p. H9856.

CRS-25
final passage, and the Speaker exercises comparable control over the use of this
calendar. Only the Speaker may place a bill on the Corrections Calendar after a
committee has reported it favorably. And the Speaker has the discretion to decide
whether bills that he has had placed on this special calendar actually should be called
up for the House’s consideration on the days the rules set aside for that purpose.
With respect to bills considered under special rules (or as generally privileged
matters), the Speaker’s powers are less direct and conclusive, but he and his party
leadership colleagues still are primarily responsible for scheduling floor action on
special rules and the bills they make in order. On matters of significant party interest,
the majority party members of the Rules Committee normally act in concert with
their party leaders in deciding whether to hold hearings and grant rules and when to
do so. On the infrequent occasions when another committee reports a bill that is
unacceptable to the majority party leadership, the Rules Committee may decline to
consider it, at least until some accommodation can be reached. Similarly, when two
or more committees make conflicting proposals on the same subject, the committee
can withhold action and urge the committee and subcommittee chairmen to seek
common ground. In short, the Rules Committee as “traffic cop” can be expected to
direct legislative traffic in the direction of, and at a speed consistent with, goals
sought by the majority party leaders on behalf of their party colleagues.
Once the Rules Committee reports a special rule, it is privileged for floor
consideration, as is any bill made in order by the standing rules or by a special rule
the House already has adopted. However, the Speaker retains an important degree
of discretion in arranging these matters into a daily and weekly schedule that meets
the responsibilities of the House and the interests of his party. As noted earlier, a
variety of bills and other matters are privileged for floor consideration. In some
cases, they are of equal privilege. Thus, the Speaker may exercise discretion in
deciding the order in which they are to be considered. If one Representative seeks
to call up a privileged matter, the Speaker may decline to recognize him or her if
there is another Representative on the floor who can be recognized instead to bring
up some other matter that is at least equally privileged (and who, therefore, has an
equal right to be recognized).
It is rarely necessary, however, for the Speaker to actually use his control over
recognition on the floor to control the flow of legislative business. Scheduling
decisions generally are made within the majority party through consultations by the
Speaker and other party leaders with the appropriate committee and subcommittee
leaders. A probable schedule for the week then is announced on the floor by a
majority party spokesman. Representatives of the minority party also may be
consulted. They may inquire about the status of certain bills, and they may complain
that some bills are being held back while others are being propelled to the floor
prematurely. But the minority has little effective recourse, other than to attempt to
defeat the special rules providing for consideration of the bills they oppose.
By the time the House convenes each day, Representatives have been advised
of the expected order of business, although it is always subject to change. When the
House completes action on one bill, the Speaker knows which Representative should
be the next to seek recognition. If another Member seeks recognition instead and the
Speaker is unsure of his purpose, the Speaker may ask: “For what purpose does the

CRS-26
gentleman rise?” If the response is not satisfactory, he may decline to recognize that
Representative if there is an equally privileged matter available for consideration.
Of course, the Speaker does not exercise this authority arbitrarily and for his own
purposes; instead, he uses his powers as the presiding officer of the House to
advance whatever legislative program he and his fellow party leaders construct from
among the measures reported by the House’s committees and the sometimes
disparate interests and preferences of his party colleagues.
Thus, the arrangement of an agenda of privileged bills and other matters into a
daily and weekly schedule for the order of business is a responsibility (and
opportunity) for the majority party leadership — one that is usually exercised
formally by the Speaker, but only after consultation with other party leaders, the
party’s members of the Rules Committee, and appropriate committee and
subcommittee chairmen. The leverage over legislative decisions that flows from this
influence over scheduling derives, to a considerable extent, from the tactical
importance of timing for legislative success.
When party unity is strong and predictable, and defections are few, timing may
be less significant unless the majority party’s margin of votes is very narrow. In the
House of Representatives, on the other hand, where majority coalitions are not
always equivalent to party majorities and where substantial components of majority
coalitions may have to be assembled vote by vote, timing can become critical.
Sometimes, for example, floor action must be expedited before a bill’s opponents and
their allies outside of Congress can organize and bring the full weight of their
influence to bear. At other times, critical floor votes must be delayed — sometimes
for only a day, but sometimes for weeks or longer — while a few more
Representatives are being convinced or cajoled. When a vote is expected to be
particularly close, the decision to hold back or push ahead may even turn on the
number of Representatives absent that day and how their absence will affect the
outcome. Their control over the daily schedule allows majority party leaders to reap
the marginal but sometimes decisive advantage that comes with determining not only
what issues will be considered, but when critical votes will take place.
There are limits, to be sure, on the discretion that the Speaker, other majority
party leaders, and the Rules Committee can exercise in constructing the House’s
legislative schedule and its daily order of business. The President, the media, and
interest groups can press for prompt action, which the party in control of the House
ignores at its political peril. Events over which the House has no direct control can
force a re-shuffling of priorities and provoke legislative responses that the majority
party might otherwise approach more slowly and cautiously. In addition,
requirements for annual legislative action and deadlines such as the end of the fiscal
year combine to load the floor agenda with bills (such as appropriations bills) that
should or must be considered, and to dictate when at least some of those bills (such
as continuing resolutions) must occupy the attention of the House.
Equally important, the Speaker and his colleagues in the majority party
leadership must be ever alert to what can pass and what cannot. Like House
committees, the reputations of House leaders rest in large part on their records of past
successes and failures. On occasion, the Speaker and the Rules Committee have

CRS-27
allowed controversial bills to reach the floor even while doubting that the votes could
be found to pass them. But there usually is little to be gained from failure.
Amendments and the Floor Agenda
To this point, the discussion has focused on the agenda of measures that reach
the House floor. However, the agenda problem may be posed not only in terms of
bills and resolutions but also in terms of policy issues or choices. Looking at the
problem from this perspective, the important question becomes whether a policy
option can reach the floor for debate and decision. That option may be embodied in
a bill, but it also may be presented as an amendment to a bill. Thus, the rules and
practices of the House governing the amendments that Representatives may offer on
the floor also affect the floor agenda by creating opportunities for, and imposing
limitations on, expanding the agenda of policy decisions that the House may make.
As a general rule, any Representative may offer amendments to a bill while it
is being considered on the House floor. However, there is a critically important
limitation on the contents and subjects of these amendments. In addition, House
rules prohibit amendments under some circumstances and make them difficult to
propose under others. Finally, Representatives can and sometimes do vote to impose
restrictions on their rights to offer amendments during consideration of specific bills.
The most important limitation that House rules impose on amendments is the
germaneness requirement; clause 7 of Rule XVI requires that any amendment to a
bill must be germane to that bill. The concept of germaneness is related to the
concepts of relevance and pertinence, but it is generally narrower in application. For
example, an amendment to change individual income tax rates would not be germane
to every bill affecting federal tax laws, and it may not even be germane to a bill
dealing with other aspects of the income tax. When an amendment is challenged on
the grounds that it is not germane, the Representative presiding over the House often
bases his ruling on rather fine distinctions that derive from a large and complex body
of earlier rulings.21 It is neither possible nor necessary to summarize these precedents
here, but the principle underlying the germaneness requirement is simple. While the
House is considering a bill on one subject, it should not be distracted by amendments
on other subjects. Although the application of this principle to specific amendments
is far more complicated, what is most important for present purposes is that the
requirement exists and usually is enforced. Consequently, it can severely restrict (if
not foreclose altogether) Representatives’ opportunities to present policy questions
and options on the floor that are not reflected in the bills the House considers.
Another general restriction on amendments is related to the special nature and
standing of most appropriations bills. The basic theory underlying House rules
governing these bills is that they are intended to fund departments and agencies that
21 In the most recent published compilations of House precedents, two full volumes
comprising a total of 1,850 pages are devoted to the issue of germaneness. U.S. Congress,
House, Deschler-Brown Precedents of the United States House of Representatives, 94th
Cong., 2nd sess., H.Doc. 94-661, vols. 10 and 11.

CRS-28
already have been established, as well as programs and activities that already have
been approved, in authorizing legislation. Therefore, clause 2 of House Rule XXI
prohibits amendments to (and provisions in) general appropriations bills that would
appropriate funds for purposes that have not been authorized by law or that would
change the existing laws governing how the appropriated funds may be used. Under
some circumstances, a general appropriations bill can be amended to prevent funds
from being used for a specific purpose or in a specific way that otherwise would be
permitted under existing law. In general, though, amendments to appropriations bills
are supposed to address the question of how much money Congress should provide
for various purposes, and not to other issues even though they may be related to those
purposes.
In addition to these restrictions on amendments, certain House procedures
prohibit amendments altogether. As noted earlier, when a motion is made to suspend
the rules and pass a bill, no amendments to the bill may be offered from the House
floor. Similarly, when the House considers a bill that the Speaker has placed on the
Corrections Calendar, no amendments to the bill are in order unless offered by the
committee or its chairman. Under certain other circumstances, the House may have
to decide by majority vote that it wishes to consider a specific amendment before that
amendment can be formally proposed. During consideration of a bill or resolution,
for example, the House may have to vote against a motion to order the previous
question before a Member can be recognized to offer an amendment to the measure.
The House’s rules are designed to permit major bills to be considered under
floor procedures that do allow for orderly consideration of whatever germane
amendments individual Representatives choose to offer. These bills and amendments
to them, are debated in the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union
— a committee on which all Representatives serve and which meets on the House
floor. The Committee of the Whole is really a parliamentary device to facilitate full
and orderly deliberation by allowing Representatives to offer amendments to each
part of a bill in sequence and by permitting each Member to speak for five minutes
on each amendment. Under Rule clause 6 of Rule XVI, each amendment to a bill
also may be amended, so Members can alter a proposal before deciding whether to
include it in the bill. Within the constraints imposed by the germaneness
requirement, the amending process in Committee of the Whole permits
Representatives to propose alternatives to or improvements in the legislation
recommended by their standing committees.
The House itself usually decides by majority vote whether to permit such an
open amending process, and it does so by approving, amending, or disapproving the
special rules recommended by the Rules Committee. The importance of these special
rules for making bills in order for floor consideration already has been discussed.
But special rules also contain other provisions that can be just as important,
especially provisions governing the amending process in Committee of the Whole.
The Rules Committee may propose, for example, that no amendments to a bill be
permitted at all, except perhaps for amendments proposed by the committee that had
studied and reported the bill. Alternatively, a special rule may restrict the
amendments that Representatives can offer without foreclosing them completely.

CRS-29
In recent years, the Rules Committee often has recommended that the House
restrict the amendments that Members may offer to a certain bill to only the series of
specific amendments that are printed in a written report from the Rules Committee
that accompanies its resolution. In other cases, the committee has proposed to
restrict amendments only by prohibiting amendments on certain subjects or to certain
provisions of a bill. At the other extreme, the committee may even propose that
Members be allowed to offer certain amendments on the floor even though those
amendments would violate the standing rules of the House. For example, a special
rule may make an amendment in order, notwithstanding the fact that the amendment
is not germane to the bill to which it will be proposed.
In short, the Rules Committee can propose to narrow or expand the range of
amendments that Representatives may offer to individual bills. This enables the
committee to define a special set of procedures and ground rules that it considers best
suited to the parliamentary and political circumstances surrounding each bill. In the
contemporary House, these decisions by the committee can be more important and
controversial than its decisions to grant or not grant rules at all. While most
Representatives may agree that a bill needs to be considered, there may be far more
disagreement over the procedures that should govern its consideration, and especially
over the amendments that should be considered on the House floor. The importance
of special rules as they affect the amending process is difficult to overestimate. By
permitting some amendments and prohibiting others, a special rule limits the range
of alternatives and defines the choices that Representatives can make on the floor.
Although the Rules Committee’s proposals are cast in procedural terms, their
substantive consequences can be profound. If an amendment cannot be proposed, it
cannot be adopted.
It bears emphasizing that the committee proposes special rules to the House but
it cannot impose its recommendations on the membership. It is for the House to
decide, again by majority vote, whether it is prepared to accept the ground rules,
including any restrictions on amendments, that the committee proposes. Historically,
most special rules have been essentially “open rules” — rules that do not prohibit any
amendments that would be in order under the normal operation of House rules and
precedents. But more and more often during the 1980s, 1990s, and today, the
committee has recommended more complex rules proposing to proscribe some
amendments, or permit others to be offered, or both.
Restrictive special rules have been more controversial than simple open rules;
nonetheless, the House has approved most of those the Rules Committee has
proposed. In some cases, there has been bipartisan agreement that the bill to be
considered is very complex and technical, and that it is in everyone’s interests to take
up only a limited number of amendments that focus attention and debate on the major
policy choices at issue. In other cases, however, minority party Representatives have
argued that the Rules Committee’s proposed special rule would permit consideration
of key amendments supported by the majority but not equally important amendments
that minority party Members wished to offer. Thus, the most important vote on a
particularly controversial bill may not be the vote by which the House finally passes
the bill. Instead, that vote may come on ordering the previous question on the special
rule — which determines whether the House wishes to consider an amendment to the

CRS-30
rule, and thereby permit Representatives to offer amendments to the bill in addition
to, or instead of, those contemplated in the special rule as reported by the committee.
Such are the powers of the Rules Committee, both procedural and political.
Procedurally, the committee’s special rules shape the House floor agenda in two
respects. Not only does the committee recommend which bills should reach the
floor, it also proposes which amendments to those bills should be considered. The
first decisions affect the general issues on which the House acts; the second
decisions affect the choices available for addressing those issues. Politically, the
powers of the committee and the majority party leadership have been enhanced by
their close and mutually supportive relationship. The committee’s recommendations
usually are approved with the support of most Representatives of the majority party,
both because their interests tend to be well served and because majority party support
for special rules can be portrayed as being part and parcel of the party’s continuing
control over the essential operations of the House. Nonetheless, party voting is far
from being automatic, and the Rules Committee must be ever conscious of the need
to fashion special rules that accommodate the political interests and policy
preferences of a diverse House membership that normally does not vote strictly along
party lines.
Senate Influence on the House Agenda
The constitutional and political context in which the House reaches its agenda
decisions makes the House agenda highly permeable in political terms but highly
autonomous in procedural terms. In the latter respect, presidential proposals enjoy
no formal status or advantage under House rules, and both the standing rules and the
special rules that have been discussed in previous sections do not take cognizance of
institutions, persons, or events outside the precincts of the House. However, this
picture of a House that is procedurally autonomous is not complete, in the same way
that the legislative process is not yet complete when the House passes a bill. There
remains the “other body” and the impact of the Senate on the agenda of the House.
The passage of a bill by the Senate creates no procedural imperatives for House
action (and conversely), although action by one house may stimulate public attention
and create political momentum that makes action by the other chamber more likely
than it otherwise would be. But there are two respects in which Senate actions
impinge in a more direct procedural way on the House agenda, and both derive from
differences between House and Senate rules.
The first of these differences concerns appropriations. Senate rules and
precedents are not as restrictive as those of the House in prohibiting unauthorized
appropriations and keeping general appropriations bills free from changes in the laws
that govern the ways in which, and the purposes for which, appropriations may be
used. Unlike the House, for example, the Senate’s Rule XVI permits it to consider
an appropriation that is not yet authorized by law if that appropriation is
recommended either by its Appropriations Committee or by the Senate committee
with jurisdiction over the authorization bill. Thus, when the Senate considers a
general appropriations bill that the House already has passed, the Senate may attach

CRS-31
to it Senate amendments that were not and could not have been considered by the
House because they would have violated basic House rules.
The second difference, which is probably even more important for bicameral
relations, concerns the floor amendments that Senators can offer. Whereas House
procedures require that all amendments must be germane (unless Members vote to
approve a special rule that permits a specific nongermane amendment to be offered),
there is no such general requirement in the Senate. Senate rules require that
amendments be germane under certain limited circumstances, and the Senate
sometimes imposes such a germaneness requirement on itself by unanimous consent
during consideration of individual bills. As a general rule, however, Senators are free
to offer whatever amendments they like, on whatever subjects, to most bills that
reach the Senate floor.
This situation has obvious and profound implications for attempts to define and
control the legislative agenda in the Senate. Although Representatives usually are
free to offer amendments, the subjects of their amendments are limited by the
germaneness requirement. It is fair to say that, in the House, the basic agenda
decisions are those that determine which bills will be considered. Amendments to
a bill may present alternatives and raise closely related issues, but only on subjects
already raised by the bill itself. This is not the case in the Senate. If the Senate does
not consider a bill on a subject that is of special interest to even one Senator, that
Senator may bring the subject to the floor in the form of a nongermane amendment
to a bill on a wholly unrelated subject. Consequently, the bills that the Senate passes
can address a wider and more diverse range of subjects than the bills approved by the
House. Furthermore, amendments play a far more significant and independent part
for the Senate than the House — and Senate committees play a far less conclusive
part than House committees — in defining the issues that reach the floor agenda.
The requirements of the legislative process compel the House to respond to the
consequences of these two differences between House and Senate rules, especially
when the Senate attaches amendments to a bill that the House already has passed.
Before a bill can become a law, the House and Senate must reach complete
agreement on its text, including any and all Senate proposals that could not have been
considered on the House floor because they would have violated House rules. Thus,
the Senate can push matters toward the House floor agenda that did not, and
sometimes would not, reach the floor through the operation of the House’s own rules.
When neither house’s position on a major bill is acceptable to the other, the
House and Senate usually create a conference committee to resolve the differences
between them. This committee is composed of Representatives and Senators who
are charged with representing the position of their chamber in negotiations to reach
a compromise that majorities in both houses will accept. In these negotiations, the
House conferees can protect the House floor agenda from direct Senate influence if
they can convince their Senate counterparts to give way on Senate proposals that are
inconsistent with House rules. But if these Senate proposals are truly important to
their proponents, the House conferees are more likely to accept at least some of them,
although perhaps with modifications. A rigid House stance against accepting any
Senate proposals that are inconsistent with House rules would doom many bills for
lack of bicameral agreement and would be viewed by Senators as an attempt by one

CRS-32
house to impose its rules on the other. Bicameralism in Congress requires
compromise instead.
Thus, conference agreements can include issues and proposals that had not
reached the House floor agenda and that may not even have been considered by the
appropriate House committees. The usual result of a successful conference is a
conference report — a proposed package settlement of all the differences between the
House and Senate versions of a bill — and the House and Senate normally each vote
to accept or reject the package as a whole, but not to amend it. This procedure would
require the House to vote on the report without an opportunity to debate and vote
separately on matters in the report that had not yet been considered on the House
floor. To protect against this possibility, the House has developed rather elaborate
and complicated rules by which it can deal individually, and by majority vote, with
recommendations of a conference committee that bring before the House certain
kinds of issues that had not been included in the House version of the bill.22
Notwithstanding these special procedures, however, the fact remains that the Senate,
through its amendments to general appropriations bills and its nongermane
amendments to other bills, can force issues onto the House floor agenda, unless the
House is willing to jeopardize enactment of the bills to which the Senate attaches
these amendments and to strain bicameral relations generally. Thus, bicameralism
limits the autonomy of the agenda-setting process in the House.
Conclusion
This report began with a summary of the constitutional context that gives the
House considerable independence in setting its legislative agenda, and it ended with
a brief exploration of how the constitutional position and rules of the Senate limit this
independence. House procedures for setting its agenda are conditioned also by their
political context — by the nature and organization of the national political parties and
by the political autonomy that most Representatives enjoy. The result is a process
that is far more complicated than would be necessary if a united majority party could
expect its members to give consistent support to the same priorities and positions.
The conventional process of agenda-setting in the House has been portrayed as
one in which the standing committees first screen the possible agenda of bills
introduced, evaluating them and selecting from among them a potential agenda of
bills that, in the judgment of the committees, deserve floor consideration. Priorities
for considering these bills on the floor are controlled both by the operation of
standing rules and by the adoption of special rules proposed by the Rules Committee.
And these priorities are transformed into short-term schedules and the daily order of
business through the political influence of the majority party leaders and especially
through the procedural discretion of the Speaker. The House’s legislative agenda is
embodied primarily in the bills it considers. Individual Representatives may propose
floor amendments that present alternatives or additional options, but opportunities
to offer amendments are constrained by the germaneness rule, among others, and can
be limited by majority vote.
22 See clauses 5 and 10 of Rule XXII.

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Underlying these procedural arrangements is the axiom that the agenda of the
House is generally for the House to decide, and the corollary that these decisions
generally reflect whatever collective preferences can be assembled from the
individual preferences of its Members. The House delegates great powers to its
committees, powers that are exercised as much through inaction as through action.
However, the House retains the power to overrule the judgments of its committees.
If this power is rarely used, it is both because Representatives tend to respect the
judgments of their committees and because the committees tend to respond to the
will of the House.
The standing rules designate certain kinds of bills for priority consideration on
the House floor, and set aside certain times for the House to consider other bills
under special expediting procedures. But the most important decisions affecting the
floor agenda are made one at a time, by majority vote, as the House votes on the
special rules recommended by its Rules Committee. The responsibility for arranging
the floor agenda into an orderly schedule is delegated primarily to the majority party
leadership, and these arrangements are implemented and enforced through the formal
powers of the pre-eminent majority party leader, the Speaker. In turn, these leaders
are expected to act in ways that respond to the interests of their party colleagues and
the responsibilities of the House as a whole. House leaders may lead only where and
when their colleagues are prepared to follow.
The procedures of the House of Representatives, including the procedures for
setting its agenda, have developed over two centuries, as have the institutional
dynamics surrounding them (such as the relationship between the Rules Committee
and the Speaker). The result is neither simple nor tidy, but the result also is a body
of rules and practices that is generally consistent with the principle of majority
control. In most respects, the House agenda is subject to control by a voting
majority. But this majority sometimes can be transitory and unstable. More often
than not, the House is characterized by shifting majorities — majorities that usually
have their base in the majority party, but that still must be constructed and
reconstructed as one issue gives way to the next. Ultimately then, the problem of
agenda management in the House is the problem of developing majorities that do not
necessarily emerge naturally from the imperatives of constitutional arrangements or
the dynamics of electoral competition.
Related CRS Reports
CRS Report 98-995. The Amending Process in the House of Representatives.
CRS Report RS20147. Committee of the Whole: An Introduction.
CRS Report 96-708. Conference Committee and Related Procedures: An
Introduction.
CRS Report 97-552. The Discharge Rule in the House: Principal Features and Uses.

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CRS Report 97-236. Floor Procedure in the House of Representatives: A Brief
Overview.
CRS Report 97-301. The House’s Corrections Calendar.
CRS Report RS20067. How Measures Are Brought to the House Floor: A Brief
Introduction.
CRS Report 95-563. The Legislative Process on the House Floor: An Introduction.
CRS Report 96-548. The Legislative Process on the Senate Floor: An Introduction.
CRS Report RL30787. Parliamentary Reference Sources: House of Representatives.
CRS Report 97-704. Quorums in House Floor Proceedings: An Introduction.
CRS Report 98-696. Resolving Legislative Differences in Congress: Conference
Committees and Amendments Between the Houses.
CRS Report 96-938. Special Rules in the House of Representatives.
CRS Report 98-796. Suspension of the Rules in the House of Representatives.
CRS Report 98-988. Voting and Quorum Procedures in the House of
Representatives.