Introducing a House Bill or Resolution
Mark J. Oleszek
Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process
April 24, 2015
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R44001


Introducing a House Bill or Resolution

Summary
Authoring and introducing legislation is fundamental to the task of representing voters as a
Member of Congress. In fact, part of what makes the American political process unique is that it
affords all Members an ability to propose their own ideas for chamber consideration. By
comparison, most other democratic governments around the world rely on an executive or prime
minister to originate and submit policy proposals for discussion and enactment by the legislature.
Legislators serving in other countries generally lack the power to initiate legislative proposals of
their own.
In the American political system, ideas and recommendations for legislation come from a wide
variety of sources. Any number of individuals, groups, or entities may participate in drafting bills
and resolutions, but only Members of Congress may formally introduce legislation, and they may
do so for any reason.
When a Representative has determined that a bill or resolution is ready for introduction, it is
placed in the box, or “hopper,” at the bill clerk’s desk on the chamber floor when the House is in
session. The sponsor must sign the measure and attach the names of any original cosponsors on a
form provided by the Clerk’s office. Cosponsors do not sign the bill. Since the 112th Congress,
House rules have required Members to provide at the time of introduction a statement of
constitutional authority indicating why Congress has the authority to enact the proposed bill or
joint resolution. There is no House rule that introduced bills and resolutions be prepared by the
House Office of the Legislative Counsel, but the office plays an important role by providing
Members and staff, at their request, with drafts of legislation. Use of the office by Members and
staff is nearly universal.
Once introduced, the Speaker refers legislation to one or more committees based primarily on
how its contents align with the subject matter jurisdictions of committees established in clause 1
of House Rule X. In practice, the Office of the Parliamentarian advises the Speaker in these
referral decisions, and the Parliamentarian’s recommendations are followed in virtually every
case.
This report is intended to assist Members and staff in preparing legislation for introduction. Its
contents address essential elements of the process, including bill drafting, the mechanics of
introduction, and the roles played by key House offices involved in the drafting, submission, and
referral of legislation. Statistics on introduced measures are presented in the final section, and a
brief explanation of patterns of introduction over time is also provided.

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Introducing a House Bill or Resolution

Contents
Developing Ideas for Legislation ..................................................................................................... 1
Drafting Legislation ......................................................................................................................... 1
Introducing a Bill or Resolution ...................................................................................................... 2
Statistics on Introduced Measures ................................................................................................... 5

Figures
Figure 1. The “Hopper” ................................................................................................................... 3

Tables
Table 1. Statistics on Introduced Measures, 1973-2014 .................................................................. 5

Contacts
Author Contact Information............................................................................................................. 6
Acknowledgements .......................................................................................................................... 6

Congressional Research Service

Introducing a House Bill or Resolution

Developing Ideas for Legislation
“Ideas can come from anywhere,” a scholar of American politics once wrote.1 To be sure, ideas
and recommendations for legislation come from a wide variety of sources, such as individual
Representatives; committees and other House working groups; legislative staff; party and
chamber leaders; executive branch agencies and the White House; states and localities; members
of the media; citizens; and interest groups. Any or all of these individuals or entities may
participate in drafting legislation, but only a Member of Congress may formally introduce
legislation.2
Some common considerations taken into account when drafting a bill include the following:
• What problem does the bill seek to solve?
• To what committee or committees is it likely to be referred?
• Will the bill attract cosponsors?
• Does it have bipartisan appeal?
• What are the budgetary or appropriations implications?
• Should companion legislation be introduced in the Senate?
• Is the measure best introduced at the beginning, in the middle, or toward the end
of a Congress?
Drafting Legislation
There is no House rule that introduced bills and resolutions be prepared by the House Office of
the Legislative Counsel, but the office plays an important role by providing Members and staff, at
their request, with drafts of legislation.3 Use of the office by Members and staff is nearly
universal. Its staff attorneys are both subject matter specialists and experts in legislative drafting,
and they focus almost exclusively on policy issues within their areas of expertise. Legislative
attorneys are often assigned to serve a specific committee or committees as a kind of nonpartisan,
shared staff, and they work closely with committee members and staff to ensure that the bill’s
language and form matches the intent of its sponsor and adheres to drafting rules and linguistic
traditions of the House.4

1 John Kingdon, Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1984), p. 75.
Kingdon’s account of the policymaking process offers insights into why some ideas but not others make their way into
law. See also CRS Report RS21169, Sources of Legislative Proposals: A Descriptive Introduction, by Judy Schneider.
2 Delegates from the District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands,
and the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico may also introduce legislation. For information on how U.S.
territories are represented in Congress, see CRS Report R40555, Delegates to the U.S. Congress: History and Current
Status
, by Christopher M. Davis.
3 A brief guide to drafting legislation is available for download on the Office of Legislative Counsel’s website, at
http://legcounsel.house.gov/HOLC/Resources/quick_guide.pdf.
4 Additional information on the Office of Legislative Counsel can be found in CRS Report RS20735, Office of
Legislative Counsel: House
, by Matthew E. Glassman.
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Introducing a House Bill or Resolution

Numerous drafts may be required before a measure is ready for formal introduction.5 Those
drafting legislation may seek assistance from the Office of Legislative Counsel at any stage. All
communications with the office are treated as confidential. The office is located in Room 136 of
the Cannon House Office Building and can be reached at extension 5-6060.6
Following introduction, the Speaker refers legislation to the appropriate committee(s) based
primarily on how its contents align with the subject matter jurisdictions of committees established
in clause 1 of House Rule X. According to clause 2 of House Rule XII, the Speaker shall refer
legislation
[I]n such a manner as to ensure to the maximum extent feasible that each committee that has
jurisdiction under clause 1 of rule X over the subject matter of a provision thereof may
consider such provision and report to the House thereon.7
Technically, the Office of the Parliamentarian advises the Speaker on committee referrals. In
practice, the Parliamentarian has been delegated the responsibility for committee referrals.8
Representatives and staff involved in drafting legislation may consult the Office of the
Parliamentarian regarding the committee(s) to which their draft measure might be referred. The
office is located in Room H209 of the Capitol (5-7373).
Introducing a Bill or Resolution
The formal procedures that govern the introduction of legislation are few and are found in House
Rule XII.9 “The system for introducing measures in the House is a relatively free and open one,”
wrote former House Parliamentarian William Holmes Brown.10 House rules do not limit the
number of bills a Member may introduce.11 Members may introduce legislation for any number of
reasons, and they may do so on behalf of another individual, entity, or group “by request.”12
Between 1973 and 2014, each Member introduced an average of about 20 bills and resolutions
per Congress. Statistics on introduced measures are presented in Table 1.

5 Bills and resolutions are collectively referred to as “measures” or “legislation.” Only bills and joint resolutions can
make or change law, while simple and concurrent resolutions are used to address matters that are internal to one or both
chambers of Congress. For examples of how each is used, see CRS Report 98-706, Bills and Resolutions: Examples of
How Each Kind Is Used
, by Richard S. Beth.
6 Detailed information on legislative drafting can be found on the office’s website, at http://legcounsel.house.gov/.
7 U.S. Congress, House, Constitution, Jefferson’s Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the One
Hundred Thirteenth Congress
, H.Doc. 112-161, 112th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 2013), §815, p. 612.
8 For additional information on committee referral, see “The Referral of Legislation in the House” in CRS Report
R41083, House Committee Markups: Manual of Procedures and Procedural Strategies, by Michael L. Koempel and
Judy Schneider.
9 See also William Holmes Brown, Charles W. Johnson, and John V. Sullivan, House Practice: A Guide to the Rules,
Precedents and Procedures of the House
(Washington: GPO, 2011), ch. 6, §6, pp. 168-169.
10 William Holmes Brown, House Practice: A Guide to the Rules, Precedents and Procedures of the House,
(Washington: GPO, 1996), ch. 27, §1, p. 547.
11 Introduced legislation is often referred to as being “dropped,” a literal reference to a bill being dropped in the hopper.
12 Presidents, citizens, interest group representatives, and others may ask a Member to introduce legislation on their
behalf. Clause 7 of House Rule XII allows a legislative sponsor who wants to officially acknowledge such a request to
include the words “by request” following the sponsor’s name on the introduced bill.
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When a Representative has determined that a bill or
resolution is ready for introduction, it is placed in the box,
Figure 1. The “Hopper”
or “hopper,” at the bill clerk’s desk on the chamber floor
when the House is in session, including a “pro forma”
session.13 The hopper is pictured in Figure 1. The sponsor
must sign the measure and attach the names of any
original cosponsors on a form provided by the Clerk’s
office, which is located in Room H154 of the Capitol
Building (5-7000).14 Cosponsors do not sign the bill.15 The
bill as drafted by legislative counsel leaves space both for
the insertion of a bill number, which is assigned
chronologically based on the date of introduction, and for
the Parliamentarian’s office to note the committee(s) to
Source: Photo courtesy of the Clerk of the
which the measure was referred. A Member need not seek House
recognition from the chamber’s presiding officer in order
to introduce a measure.16 Following introduction, Members often summarize the purpose and
merits of their proposal in a statement published in the “Extension of Remarks” section of the
Congressional Record.17
Since the 112th Congress, House rules have required Members to provide at the time of
introduction a statement of constitutional authority indicating why Congress has the authority to
enact the proposed bill or joint resolution.18 The bill clerk does not accept legislation for
introduction that lacks a constitutional authority statement. Clause 7(c) of Rule XII establishes
that the statement must be as “specific as practicable,” and must be attached to the bill when it is
dropped in the hopper for introduction. If no such statement is provided, then the measure will be
returned to its sponsor.19 A point of order cannot be lodged against a bill based on the content of a
constitutional authority statement.20 However, if a measure will be considered under the terms of

13 Staff may also have legislation introduced on a Member’s behalf by delivering it by hand to the cloakroom. The
Republican cloakroom is located in Room H223 of the Capitol (5-7350), and the Democratic cloakroom is in Room
H222 (5-7330). Staff customarily write their name and contact information on the back of the bill when it is introduced.
14 A form to add or remove cosponsors is available on HouseNet, the House’s internal website.
15 For information on sponsoring and cosponsoring legislation in the House, see CRS Report RS22477, Sponsorship
and Cosponsorship of House Bills
, by Mark J. Oleszek.
16 In the unlikely event that a measure is erroneously introduced in a Member’s name, that Member may raise a
“question of privilege” on the House floor to correct the mistake. On questions of privilege, see CRS Report 98-411,
Questions of Privilege in the House, by James V. Saturno.
17 Written statements can be delivered to the cloakroom or to the Reporters of Debate located in Room HT-59 of the
Capitol. See https://housenet.house.gov/legislative/ for forms and directions to put statements in the Record.
18 Constitutional authority forms are available for download on the website of the Office of Legislative Counsel:
http://legcoun.house.gov/members/HOLC/Resources/casform.pdf. The constitutional authority of Congress is set forth
beginning in Article 1, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution, which states that “all legislative powers herein granted shall
be vested in a Congress of the United States.” Article 1, Section 8 of the founding document contains additional clarity
regarding Congress’s enumerated powers. For further information on the kinds of authority that could be cited to meet
this requirement, see CRS Report R41548, Sources of Constitutional Authority and House Rule XII, Clause 7(c), by
Kenneth R. Thomas, as well as guidance issued from the House Legislative Counsel, at http://legcoun.house.gov/
members/HOLC/Resources/const_auth_statement.html. The statement is not required to accompany the introduction of
simple or concurrent resolutions.
19 The content of a constitutional authority statement is not evaluated at the time of introduction. Rather, the Clerk
simply notes whether or not the statement was provided. Protocols of the majority leadership provide additional clarity
on the amount of detail these statements should contain. See http://www.majorityleader.gov/Protocols/.
20 For information on raising, debating, and deciding points of order, see CRS Report 98-307, Points of Order, Rulings,
(continued...)
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a special rule, then Members may send a written request to the chair of the Rules Committee for
debate to occur on the constitutionality of the proposed measure.21 If at least 25 Members sign the
request, the majority leader will schedule 20 minutes of floor debate, evenly divided between
proponents and opponents, on “the constitutionality of a measure considered under a rule.”22
A sponsor may not reclaim a measure he or she has placed in the hopper after it has been assigned
a number and referred to committee (a process that normally takes one day). Once a measure has
been numbered and referred, it becomes the property of the House and cannot be modified by the
sponsor. It is too late at this point to make any changes to the bill—however cosmetic they might
be—except by amending the bill on the House floor during its consideration.23 Introduced bills or
resolutions can be taken up by the House even if the sponsor resigns from the House or dies.
In the first days of a new Congress, hundreds of bills and resolutions are introduced.24 Measures
are usually numbered sequentially based on the date of introduction, but Representatives may
seek to reserve numbers in advance by communicating with the Parliamentarian’s office prior to
introduction. Bill numbers are sometimes seen as a way to provide shorthand meaning to the
legislation, enhance its visibility, or confer symbolic importance. Measures have sometimes been
assigned the same number for several Congresses, perhaps because lawmakers and others have
grown accustomed to referring to a bill by its number. For instance, sponsors of tax reform
proposals may request H.R. 1040 as a bill number to draw attention to the 1040 tax form many
individuals use to pay federal income taxes.25 By the same logic, a bill addressing ocular health or
medical coverage for eyeglass and contact lenses might take the number H.R. 2020 because 20/20
is considered normal vision.
In recent Congresses, the House has ordered that bill numbers H.R. 1 through H.R. 10 be reserved
for assignment by the majority leader and numbers H.R. 11 through H.R. 20 be reserved for the
minority leader.26 These bills, sometimes called “message” bills, tend to generate considerable
attention and coverage because they often represent the top agenda items of each political party.27

(...continued)
and Appeals in the House of Representatives, by Valerie Heitshusen.
21 A brief primer on special rules is provided in CRS Report 98-354, How Special Rules Regulate Calling up Measures
for Consideration in the House
, by Richard S. Beth.
22 See the “Debate on Constitutionality of Proposed Measures” protocol on the majority leader’s website.
23 On House amending practices, see CRS Report 98-995, The Amending Process in the House of Representatives, by
Christopher M. Davis.
24 Legislation automatically dies if not enacted into law by the time Congress adjourns at the end of its second session.
For additional consideration to occur, the measure must be re-introduced as a new bill in the following Congress.
25 In the 114th Congress, H.R. 1040 is a tax reform proposal that would give individuals and businesses the option of
paying a flat tax. Similarly worded flat tax legislation has been introduced as H.R. 1040 since the 109th Congress, and
prior to that other kinds of tax reform plans took the 1040 designation.
26 Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 161 (January 6, 2015), p. H9.
27 For an analysis of the legislative process surrounding “message” bills, see C. Lawrence Evans, “Committees,
Leaders, and Message Politics,” in Congress Reconsidered, ed. Lawrence Dodd and Bruce Oppenheimer, 7th ed.
(Washington DC: Congressional Quarterly Press, 2001), pp. 217-243.
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Statistics on Introduced Measures
The number of bills and resolutions introduced in a given Congress fluctuates over time as Table
1
shows. Some of this variation can be explained on the basis of changes in House rules and
practices. From 1968 to 1978, for instance, a limit of 25 was placed on the number of
cosponsorships a measure could obtain. One effect of this rule was to encourage the introduction
of identically worded legislation (with a new bill number) to allow additional Members to sign on
as cosponsors. The cosponsorship limit was removed in 1979, which accounts in part for the drop
in introduced measures between the 95th and 96th Congresses.28 No longer was it necessary to
introduce duplicative bills for the purpose of gaining cosponsors.
Table 1. Statistics on Introduced Measures, 1973-2014
Measures
Member
Measures Passed
Passage
Congress (Years)
Introduced
Average
by House
Rate
93rd (1973-74)
21,095
48.1
1,485
7.0%
94th (1975-76)
18,327
41.7
1,234
6.7
95th (1977-78)
16,826
38.3
1,272
7.6
96th (1979-80)
9,552
21.8
1,185
12.4
97th (1981-82)
8,480
19.3
818
9.6
98th (1983-84)
7,650
17.4
1,027
13.4
99th (1985-86)
7,174
16.3
1,021
14.2
100th (1987-88)
6,967
15.8
1,116
16.0
101st (1989-90)
7,378
16.8
1,050
14.2
102nd (1991-92)
7,597
17.3
1,088
14.3
103rd (1993-94)
6,454
14.7
909
14.1
104th (1995-96)
5,185
11.8
897
17.3
105th (1997-98)
5,858
13.3
1,002
17.1
106th (1999-00)
6,781
15.4
1,288
19.0
107th (2001-02)
6,923
15.7
1,110
16.0
108th (2003-04)
6,858
15.6
1,245
18.2
109th (2005-06)
8,033
18.3
1,280
15.9
110th (2007-08)
9,313
21.2
1,965
21.1
111th (2009-10)
8,721
19.8
1,751
20.1
112th (2011-12)
7,796
17.7
755
9.7
113th (2013-14)
6,900
15.6
833
12.1
Congress Average
9,041
20.6
1,366
15.1
Source: Legislative Information System (LIS)

28 This rules change occurred by way of H.Res. 86 (95th Congress), which passed the House on October 10, 1978, and
took effect at the outset of the 96th Congress (1979-1980).
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Notes: Measures include all public bills, joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, and simple resolutions
introduced in the House during each Congress. “Member average” was calculated by dividing the number of
measures introduced during a given Congress by the membership of the House during that time. “Passage rate”
was determined by dividing the number of introduced measures by the number that passed the House during
each two-year period. Members, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners are all eligible to introduce legislation.
Delegates from the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands, and Guam served in the House throughout the 1973
to 2014 period, as did the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico. A Delegate representing American Samoa
was added to the House at the outset of the 97th Congress (1981-1982), and the Northern Mariana Islands
gained a Delegate beginning in the 111th Congress (2009-2010). The current membership of the House consists
of 435 Members, 5 Delegates, and a Resident Commissioner.
The House has also sought to reduce the amount of commemorative legislation it considers. The
rules for the 104th Congress (1995-1996), for instance, included new restrictions on the
introduction of measures that would express a commemoration “through the designation of a
specified period of time.”29 The decline in the number of introduced measures in that Congress
might be attributed at least in part to the new rule. The 114th Congress (2015-2016) maintains this
ban on temporal commemoratives, and Rule 28 of the House Republican Conference expanded
the definition of what constitutes a commemoration and placed additional limits on considering
these kinds of measures.30

Author Contact Information

Mark J. Oleszek

Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process
moleszek@crs.loc.gov, 7-7084

Acknowledgements
A short version of this report was originally prepared by CRS Specialist Richard C. Sachs. Please direct
any inquiries to the listed author.


29 According to clause 5 of House Rule XII, “a bill or resolution, or an amendment thereto, may not be introduced or
considered in the House if it establishes or expresses a commemoration.” For other ways to celebrate individuals,
groups, or events, see CRS Report R43539, Commemorations in Congress: Options for Honoring Individuals, Groups,
and Events
, coordinated by Jacob R. Straus.
30 House Republican Conference rules are available online at http://www.gop.gov/114th-rules/. Conference Rule 28
states that legislation may not be considered under suspension of the rules if it “expresses appreciation, commends,
congratulates, celebrates, recognizes the accomplishments of, or celebrates the anniversary of, an entity, event, group,
individual, institution, team or government program; or acknowledges or recognizes a period of time for such
purposes.” For information on suspensions procedure, see CRS Report 98-314, Suspension of the Rules in the House:
Principal Features
, by Elizabeth Rybicki.
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