The Discharge Rule in the House: Recent Use in Historical Context

The discharge rule of the House of Representatives affords a way for Members to bring to the floor a measure not reported from committee. It may also be used to bring to the floor a special rule for consideration of a measure, either reported or unreported, if the Committee on Rules declines to do so. Before a motion to discharge may be made, 218 Members must sign a petition for that purpose.

Since the present form of discharge rule was adopted in 1931, 563 discharge petitions have been filed, of which 47 obtained the required signatures. The House voted for discharge 26 times, and passed 19 of the measures involved, but only two became law (and two others changed House Rules). Discharge attempts, however, may also lead indirectly to legislative success. The House considered 10 of the measures on which petitions were completed, under other procedures, and eight of these became law. It also took up, under other procedures, 32 measures on which petitions were still pending. Of these, all but three passed the House, and 17 received final approval. Overall, either the petition was completed, or the measure received floor action by some means, in about 16% of discharge attempts.

During the past 35 years (1967-2002), discharge petitions on 12 measures obtained the required signatures. The House voted for discharge six times, and considered the other six measures under other procedures. Six of the 12 measures were rejected, all of them proposed constitutional amendments, which require a two-thirds majority for passage. The House adopted one amendment to the discharge rule itself, one proposed constitutional amendment (which failed in the Senate), and four measures that became law. During this period, it also used other procedures (such as a special rule reported by the Committee on Rules) to consider 10 additional measures on which discharge was attempted, of which six became law.

Increasingly often in recent years, the Committee on Rules has responded to discharge efforts by reporting its own special rules for considering the measures involved. It often does so even when the petition is not completed, especially for petitions filed on special rules, rather than on the measures themselves. Since 1967, measures on which this form of petition was filed have had over twice as much chance of reaching the floor, especially under alternative procedures, as when the petition was filed on the measure itself. Perhaps as a result, this form of discharge has become more popular, amounting to almost 70% of petitions filed during the past decade (1993-2002).

Only since the 103rd Congress has the number of Members signing each discharge petition been public information. During that period, four petitions were signed by more Members than the number belonging to the minority party. Thirty-six were signed by fewer than this number of Members, but more than 90. Thirteen were signed by 30-60 Members, eight by 7-30, and nine by three or fewer.

The Discharge Rule in the House: Recent Use in Historical Context

April 17, 2003 (97-856)

Contents

Summary

The discharge rule of the House of Representatives affords a way for Members to bring to the floor a measure not reported from committee. It may also be used to bring to the floor a special rule for consideration of a measure, either reported or unreported, if the Committee on Rules declines to do so. Before a motion to discharge may be made, 218 Members must sign a petition for that purpose.

Since the present form of discharge rule was adopted in 1931, 563 discharge petitions have been filed, of which 47 obtained the required signatures. The House voted for discharge 26 times, and passed 19 of the measures involved, but only two became law (and two others changed House Rules). Discharge attempts, however, may also lead indirectly to legislative success. The House considered 10 of the measures on which petitions were completed, under other procedures, and eight of these became law. It also took up, under other procedures, 32 measures on which petitions were still pending. Of these, all but three passed the House, and 17 received final approval. Overall, either the petition was completed, or the measure received floor action by some means, in about 16% of discharge attempts.

During the past 35 years (1967-2002), discharge petitions on 12 measures obtained the required signatures. The House voted for discharge six times, and considered the other six measures under other procedures. Six of the 12 measures were rejected, all of them proposed constitutional amendments, which require a two-thirds majority for passage. The House adopted one amendment to the discharge rule itself, one proposed constitutional amendment (which failed in the Senate), and four measures that became law. During this period, it also used other procedures (such as a special rule reported by the Committee on Rules) to consider 10 additional measures on which discharge was attempted, of which six became law.

Increasingly often in recent years, the Committee on Rules has responded to discharge efforts by reporting its own special rules for considering the measures involved. It often does so even when the petition is not completed, especially for petitions filed on special rules, rather than on the measures themselves. Since 1967, measures on which this form of petition was filed have had over twice as much chance of reaching the floor, especially under alternative procedures, as when the petition was filed on the measure itself. Perhaps as a result, this form of discharge has become more popular, amounting to almost 70% of petitions filed during the past decade (1993-2002).

Only since the 103rd Congress has the number of Members signing each discharge petition been public information. During that period, four petitions were signed by more Members than the number belonging to the minority party. Thirty-six were signed by fewer than this number of Members, but more than 90. Thirteen were signed by 30-60 Members, eight by 7-30, and nine by three or fewer.


The Discharge Rule in the House: Recent Use in Historical Context

Introduction

Function of the Discharge Rule

The "discharge rule" of the House of Representatives (Rule XV, clause 2),1 provides a means by which a majority of Members may bring to the floor for consideration a measure that has not been reported from committee. To initiate action under this rule, a Member files a discharge petition either (1) on the measure or (2) on a special rule providing that the measure be extracted from committee and considered. If a majority of the membership then signs the petition, it enables the House to entertain, on specified days, a motion that the pertinent committee be discharged from considering the measure (or the special rule). If the House adopts this motion, it then may entertain a motion to consider the measure (or it takes up the special rule for considering the measure). Finally, if the House adopts the motion to consider (or the special rule), the measure comes to the floor for consideration.2

The House first adopted the discharge rule in essentially this form in 1931. From then through 2002, discharge petitions were filed on 563 measures. Most of these never led to any floor action. During these years, the House adopted only 26 discharge motions.3 However, an additional 42 of the measures involved (or alternatives on the same subject) reached the floor through other procedures available under House Rules, such as pursuant to a special rule reported from the Committee on Rules. Often, these alternative floor proceedings may have occurred because the leadership or the pertinent committees were acting in response to the discharge attempts.

Key Features of the Rule

Although the House has had a discharge rule since 1910, it did not adopt the essential features of the present rule until 1931, and many features of earlier discharge procedures were not comparable with those of today. For this reason, the data presented here address only the period since 1931.4

Elements introduced into the rule in 1931 include the establishment of three different forms in which discharge may be attempted and the present requirements for offering a discharge motion on the floor. The 1931 revisions also established mechanisms to (1) ensure the ability of the House to consider a measure once a petition receives the required 218 signatures, and (2) prevent dilatory use of the rule.

Although the discharge rule has remained unchanged in its basic structure since 1931, the House has altered its specific features on four occasions. In 1935, it increased the number of signatures required on the petition from 145 (one-third of the House) to 218 (one-half of the House). No further changes occurred until the 1990s, when the House:

  • eliminated a provision that had the effect of preventing debate on, or amendment of, a special rule reaching the floor through discharge (1991);
  • provided that the names of Members signing discharge petitions be publicly available (1993); and
  • made the procedure inapplicable to any special rule that would have the effect of permitting non-germane amendments, or that would provide for the consideration of more than one measure (1997).

Data Presented

The data presented herein on use of the discharge procedure are of three kinds:

(1) overall figures on use of the discharge procedure in each Congress, 1931-2002 (72nd-107th Congresses);

(2) the number of signatures received by each discharge petition, 1993-2002 (103rd-107th Congresses); and

(3) a summary of any action beyond the committee stage that occurred on measures on which discharge petitions were filed, 1967-2002 (90th-107th Congresses).

The overall figures cover the entire period since the House adopted its current discharge rule. These data include the number of discharge petitions filed, broken down according to which of the three methods available under the rule was used. The overall figures also indicate the success of these discharge efforts: how many of the petitions obtained the full 218 signatures required, how many of the measures received floor consideration, and how many of them passed.5 These data on success cover action both under the discharge procedure itself and under other procedures. This coverage permits comprehensive assessment of the likelihood that a measure on which Members attempt discharge will receive favorable legislative action.

Data on the number of Members signing each discharge petition cover the period only from the 103rd Congress forward (1993-2002). For earlier years, before the rule was changed to require disclosing the names of Members signing, these data are not available.

The summaries of action on individual measures begin with 1967, so that they cover roughly the period during which the Committee on Rules has consistently operated as an organ of the leadership in managing the floor agenda.6 As with the overall data by Congress, these summaries include every measure on which a discharge petition was filed, if any action beyond the committee stage of the process occurred, either pursuant to the discharge rule or under other procedures. This broad coverage offers concrete information on the variety of courses of action that have occurred on measures subjected to discharge efforts.

Use of the Discharge Procedure

Frequency of Discharge Attempts

Table 1 shows the frequency with which House Members have initiated discharge attempts, and how the frequency has fluctuated. After the present form of the rule was established in 1931, its use remained relatively common throughout the New Deal and World War II periods. Prior to 1950 (i.e., from the 72nd through 82nd Congresses), more than 20 petitions were typically filed in each Congress, and sometimes more than 30. Thereafter, however, numbers declined swiftly, no more than seven petitions being filed in any Congress from the 84th through 90th (1955-1968). This period of fewer discharge petitions began toward the end of the epoch in which the Committee on Rules did not always act as an arm of the leadership, but continued into the early part of the subsequent era, in which the committee has operated as a leadership organ.

Since about 1970, the number of discharge petitions has stabilized at intermediate levels. In 11 of the 17 Congresses included in this period (91st-107th Congresses), 10 to 15 petitions were filed. This level was exceeded only in the 97th and 103rd Congresses (1981-1982 and 1993-1994), and was not attained only in the 100th through 102nd (1987-1992) and 105th (1997-1998) Congresses. This period of stability has continued through the heavy Democratic majorities of the 1970s, the increasingly assertive Republican minorities that began in the 1980s, and the Republican majorities that began in the mid-1990s.

The high use in the 97th Congress appears associated with attempts by the minority to develop new means of agenda access. The steep declines in the 100th through 102nd Congresses may reflect a developing sense that discharge offered no promising avenue of agenda access. Because a successful discharge effort requires support from a majority of the House, Members may have found the procedure ill-adapted to measures favored chiefly in the minority party. The high levels of the 103rd Congress suggest that the rule change making petition signatures public rekindled hopes of using the procedure as a floor access tool. The subsequent return to (and temporary decline below) more usual levels may reflect not only the continued scarcity of successful results, but also the 1995 change in party control of the House (104th Congress).

Use of the Three Forms of Discharge

One of the most significant innovations of the 1931 rule was the establishment of three alternate forms for initiating discharge action. Since 1931, it has been possible to file a discharge petition either:

  • directly on an unreported measure;
  • on a special rule providing that an unreported measure be extracted from committee and considered; or
  • on a special rule for considering a measure already reported from committee, but never called up for floor consideration, or still on the calendar.

The first two methods of discharge both provide means for securing consideration of a measure on which the committee of referral seems unlikely to act. The second method has two advantages. First, it permits proponents to draft a special rule that sets terms they consider appropriate for considering and amending the measure. Second, if a discharge petition is filed directly on a measure in committee, the committee can render the petition moot by reporting the measure. If the petition is filed on a special rule for considering the measure, however, then even if the committee reports the measure, it remains in order to discharge the Committee on Rules from the special rule.7

The rule was drafted with the idea that the second method would become its normal use.8 As Table 1 shows, however, in most Congresses since 1931, most Members attempting to use the discharge procedure to bring an unreported measure to the floor appear to have been either unaware of this method of discharge, or unattracted by its potential advantages. In earlier times, the number of discharge petitions on special rules for unreported measures did not even approach those directly on unreported measures, except in 1937-1940 (75th-76th Congresses) and 1959-1968 (86th-90th Congresses). Discharge of special rules for unreported measures re-emerged as a common form, however, in the 98th Congress (1985-1986), and has continued to be so. From the 104th Congress (1994-1995) onward, in fact, this form of discharge attempt has usually been the most common one.

The third method of discharge, by contrast, offers the possibility of bringing to the floor a measure that the committee has reported, but which the leadership and Committee on Rules do not schedule for floor action. Discharge attempts of this kind, on special rules for the consideration of reported measures, were most common during the period of "conservative coalition" control of the Committee on Rules (roughly 1937-1960). During this period, the Committee on Rules recurrently declined to respond to committee and leadership requests to report special rules for considering measures reported by committees. Supporters of such measures sometimes sought to overcome this obstacle by attempting to discharge the Committee on Rules from a special rule for considering the reported measure.

The data in Table 1 suggest that, because this situation made Members focus on the possibility of discharge on special rules for reported measures, it may have led them to overlook that the discharge procedure could also be used on special rules for unreported measures. This form of discharge attempt has become uncommon in recent years, but it was used in the 107th Congress after the House rejected a proposed special rule for considering a campaign finance reform bill, and the leadership declined to make another attempt to call it up.

Table 1. Discharge Petitions Filed, 1931-2002

Congress
and (Years)

Discharge Petitions Filed

On Unreported
Measures
(Other than
Special Rules)

On Special Rules for Considering

Total

Unreported
Measures

Reported
Measures

72nd (1931-1933)

9

-

3a

12

73rd (1933-1934)

28

-

3

31

74th (1935-1936)

25b

4

4

33b

75th (1937-1938)

20

20

3

43

76th (1939-1940)

21c

14

2

37c

77th (1941-1942)

11

4

-

15

78th (1943-1944)

14

7

-

21

79th (1945-1946)

28

6

1

35

80th (1947-1948)

15

3

2

20

81st (1949-1950)

24

3

7

34

82nd (1951-1952)

14

-

-

14

83rd (1953-1954)

6

-

4

10

84th (1955-1956)

3

2

1

6

85th (1957-1958)

2

1

4

7

86th (1959-1960)

1

3

3

7

87th (1961-1962)

2

4

-

6

88th (1963-1964)

2

2

1

5

89th (1965-1966)

4

2

-

6

90th (1967-1968)

2

2

-

4

91st (1969-1970)

9

1

2

12

92nd (1971-1972)

13

1

1

15

93rd (1973-1974)

9

1

-

10

94th (1975-1976)

13

-

2

15

95th (1977-1978)

11

-

-

11

96th (1979-1980)

13

1

-

14

97th (1981-1982)

23

1

-

24

98th (1983-1984)

6

4

3

13

99th (1985-1986)

6

3

1

10

100th (1987-1988)

3

2d

-

5d

101st (1989-1990)

5

3

-

8

102nd (1991-1992)

5

3

-

8

103rd (1993-1994)

14

12

-

26

104th (1995-1996)

2

13

-

15

105th (1997-1998)

4e

3

1

8

106th (1999-2000)

-

11

-

11

107th (2001-2002)

-

11

1

12

Total (1931-2002)

367

147

49

563

Source: House Final Calendars for the Congresses indicated. Beth, Discharge Rule: Procedure, pp. 77-82. Beth, Control of the House Floor Agenda, pp. 62-63. Table 8.

a. Includes one measure reported adversely.

b. Includes one petition whose type is unknown.

c. Includes one petition filed and later withdrawn.

d. One petition was filed on a rule for considering two measures. It is counted as one petition and not two.

e. Includes one petition to waive a rule to permit introduction and consideration of a bill.

Number of Signers

Before the House amended the discharge rule in the 103rd Congress (1993-1994), the names of Members signing a discharge petition were treated as confidential unless the full required number of Members signed, in which case the names were printed in the Congressional Record.9 Pursuant to the 1993 amendment, the names of those signing discharge petitions each week are now also printed in the last issue of the Record for that week. In addition, the names of signers of discharge petitions are available through the Office of the Clerk.10 The listings in the Record identify discharge petitions only by the numbers of the measures against which they are filed; their subjects are set forth in the index entry for "Discharge" in the House Calendar.11

These listings make it possible, from the 103rd Congress forward, to ascertain the number of Members signing each discharge petition filed. Table 2 lists all the discharge petitions filed in each Congress from the 103rd through 107th (1993-2002). For each Congress, petitions are listed in order of the numbers of Members who signed. This table offers a sense of the range of support that discharge petitions may attract.

Table 2 identifies each petition by (1) its number, (2) the special rule, if any, that it proposes to bring to the floor, and (3) the number and subject of the underlying measure that it proposes ultimately to bring to the floor. The notations of bill subjects enable identification of what issues have been addressed by recent discharge attempts. Also shown is the date on which each petition was filed, for the number of signatures obtained may be affected by how late in the Congress the discharge process was initiated. If any Members withdrew their signatures from a discharge petition, the number of withdrawals is noted in a footnote. The figures in the table do not include these Members as signers.

Examination of Table 2 shows that the levels of support discharge petitions obtain fall into groupings fairly clearly separated in size. Although no assurance can be given that future Congresses may display similar groupings, the consistency with which these have continued to appear may suggest the presence of a general pattern.

A first grouping includes only four petitions (all but one in the 103rd Congress) that gained more signatures than the strength of the minority party. Three of these attained the full 218 signatures; the fourth fell short of this level after an active counter-campaign by the leadership.12 Petitions that reach this level of support evidently must draw at least some support from the majority party, and therefore presumably will appear on legislation supported either by a bipartisan coalition or by the rank and file of the majority party in opposition to its own leadership.

A second grouping of 36 petitions was signed by fewer Members than the strength of the minority party, but more than half this number (usually, by more than 100). In some Congresses, petitions with this level of support have been the predominant form; in the 106th and 107th Congresses (1999-2002), especially, almost all petitions have fallen into this grouping. House records do not identify the party of signers, but this level of support may often indicate a discharge effort favored principally by the minority, sometimes by an essentially united party and at least by a majority thereof.

During the five Congresses covered, only two petitions received between 60 and 95 signatures. Thirteen, by contrast, received between 30 and 60 signatures. Whether or not the signers drew principally from a single party in the House, petitions in this third grouping cannot be associated with a party in the same sense as can those in the previous one, inasmuch as their level of support could not constitute a majority of either party. This level of support nevertheless represents a potentially significant segment of the House, so that it may often be appropriate to view these petitions as representing factional discharge efforts.

A fourth grouping includes the nine petitions that obtained three signatures or fewer. These appear to be understandable essentially as individualistic discharge efforts. The remaining eight petitions obtained between seven and 30 signatures, arrayed more loosely between the third and fourth groups. Some of these might also be considered factional discharge efforts.

Table 2. Discharge Petitions, 1993-2002,by Congress and by Number of Signers

Petition
Number

Date
Filed

Measure Subjected to Discharge

Final
Number
of
Signers

Special
Rule
(If Any)

Underlying Measure

Number

Subject

103rd Congress

2

5/27/93

- - -

H.Res. 134

Public discharge signatures

218

14

2/24/94

H.Res. 331

H.J.Res. 103

Balanced budget constitutional amendment

218

16

5/4/94

H.Res. 407

H.R. 3266

Spending reductions
("A to Z bill")

204

25

8/3/94

H.Res. 489

H.R. 410

Unfunded mandates

173

13

2/9/94

- - -

H.Res. 281

Sense of House on child pornography

167

21

5/26/94

H.Res. 405

S. 1458

Aircraft manufacturer liability

160

23

6/29/94

- - -

H.R. 3875

Property rights against environmental regulation

149

17

5/4/94

H.Res. 386

H.R. 3500

Welfare reform

147

18

5/11/94

H.Res. 402

H.R. 300

Social security earnings test

133

11

1/26/94

- - -

H.Res. 247

Point of order against retroactive taxes

128

1

5/11/93

- - -

H.R. 493

Line item rescission

127

12

2/9/94

- - -

H.R. 3261

Internal Revenue Service (IRS) staff liability for litigation awards

116

3

7/1/93

- - -

H.J.Res. 38

Term limits constitutional amendment

109

10

11/21/93

H.Res. 295

H.R. 2672

Crime

107

19

5/17/94

H.Res. 415

H.R. 830

Judicial review of Regulatory Flexibility Act compliance

102

4

9/23/93

- - -

H.J.Res. 9

Balanced budget constitutional amendment

97

15

3/24/94

H.Res. 382

H.R. 65

Military disability and retirement

54

5

9/28/93

- - -

H.Res. 156

Repeal rule for automatic debt limit adjustment

53

22

6/22/94

H.Res. 409

H.R. 3835

Advisory referenda on term limits, balanced budget amendment, line item veto

52

26

8/5/94

H.Res. 472

H.R. 3801

Congressional reform

49

9

10/19/93

- - -

H.Res. 227

Somalia withdrawal

47

6

10/7/93

- - -

H.R. 1025

Handgun regulation ("Brady bill")

10

20

5/25/94

- - -

H.J.Res. 131

Pearl Harbor remembrance day

7

24

7/12/94

H.Res. 459

H.R. 3266

Spending reductions
("A to Z bill")

2

7

10/14/93

- - -

H.J.Res. 146

Term limits constitutional amendment

1

8

10/14/93

- - -

H.Res. 125

House reform

1

104th Congress

8

1/24/96

H.Res. 292

H.R. 2409

Debt limit

173

6

11/17/95

H.Res. 242

H.R. 2261

Lobbying; gift ban

88

2

3/22/95

H.Res. 111

H.R. 807

International Monetary Fund (IMF) assistance to Mexico

55

15

7/17/96

H.Res. 466

H.R. 2275

Endangered species amendments

51

12

3/21/96

H.Res. 373

H.R. 2566

Campaign finance

46

13

6/25/96

H.Res. 443

H.R. 1627

Pesticides and food safety

41

1

3/15/95

- - -

H.R. 125

Repeal assault weapon ban

26

9

1/30/96

H.Res. 333

H.R. 2530

Budget balancing

25

4

5/3/95

H.Res. 127

H.Res. 40

Gift ban

23

7

11/9/95

H.Res. 246

H.R. 302

Debt limit

17

14

6/27/96

H.Res. 425

H.R. 2915

Welfare reform

16

11

3/7/96

H.Res. 364

H.R. 125

Repeal assault weapon ban

3

5

11/7/95

H.Res. 240

H.R. 1710

Terrorism

2

10

3/7/96

H.Res. 210

H.R. 464

Repeal assault weapon ban

1

3

4/5/95

- - -

H.R. 920

Repeal Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994

1

105th Congress

3

10/24/97

H.Res. 259

H.R. 1366

Campaign finance

191a

7

7/20/98

H.Res. 486

H.R. 3605

Patients' rights

189b

4

6/11/98

- - -

H.R. 306

Genetic discrimination

64

6

6/25/98

H.Res. 473

H.R. 3580

Supplemental appropriations

45

1

9/11/97

- - -

H.Res. 141

Presidents' Day holiday

40

2

10/9/97

- - -

H.R. 1984

Air quality standards moratorium

31

5

6/23/98

H.Res. 467

H.R. 3526

Campaign finance

8

8

9/17/98

- - -

H.R. 836

Filipino military service

1

106th Congress

1

4/14/99

H.Res. 122

H.R. 417

Campaign finance

202

10

6/21/00

H.Res. 508

H.R. 3688

Campaign finance

196

9

5/11/00

H.Res. 478

H.R. 773

Older Americans Act reauthorization

191

5

8/4/99

H.Res. 240

H.R. 1660

Public school modernization

189

3

6/23/99

H.Res. 197

H.R. 358

"Patients' Bill of Rights"

184

11

6/21/00

H.Res. 520

H.R. 2457

Genetic discrimination

178

6

10/5/99

H.Res. 301

H.R. 325

Minimum wage

165

7

2/16/00

H.Res. 371

H.R. 664

Medicare prescription drug benefit

148

8

2/16/00

H.Res. 372

H.R. 1495

Medicare prescription drug benefit

143

4

7/15/99

H.Res. 192

H.R. 1037

Large ammunition clip imports

103

2

4/20/99

H.Res. 126

H.R. 417

Campaign finance

3b

107th Congress

3

7/30/01

H.Res. 203

H.R. 2356

Campaign finance

218

1

6/13/01

H.Res. 146

H.R. 1076

School renovation

201

6

3/13/02

H.Res. 352

H.R. 3341

Economic stimulus

201

8

7/17/02

H.Res. 456

H.R. 3884

Corporate tax flight

187

12

9/24/02

H.Res. 519

H.R. 1343

Prosecution of hate crimes

178

2

6/27/01

H.Res. 165

H.R. 1468

Markets for electric power

163b

9

7/23/02

H.Res. 479

H.R. 3818

Corporate financial regulation

161

7

6/19/02

H.Res. 425

H.R. 3497

Social security individual accounts

157c

10

7/23/02

H.Res. 480

H.R. 4098

Corporate fraud

153

11

9/19/02

H.Res. 517

H.R. 1862

Prescription drug affordability

150b

5

12/19/01

H.Res. 304

H.R. 808

Steel industry aid

124

4

11/13/01

H.Res. 271

H.R. 218

Concealed weapons for police

46c

Source: Records of discharge petitions in the Legislative Resources Center, Office of the Clerk of the House, B106 Cannon House Office Building; also available at http://clerkweb.house.gov/mbrcmtee/legis/pastleg.htm. Additional information was drawn from the House Final Calendar and the Legislative Information System of the U.S. Congress, at http://www.congress.gov/, for the Congresses in question.

a. Sixteen additional Members signed and later withdrew their signatures.

b. One additional Member signed and later withdrew the signature.

c. Two additional Members signed and later withdrew their signatures.

Success of Discharge Attempts

The success of a discharge effort can be assessed in various ways. The simplest measure is whether the petition attains the 218 signatures requisite to permit supporters to offer the discharge motion (known as "entering the motion on the discharge calendar"). In a more basic sense, however, the ultimate goal of a discharge petition is presumably not the offering of a discharge motion in itself, but securing floor consideration for the measure in question. In a more extended sense, the objective is presumably to see the measure not only considered, but also passed by the House, and ultimately enacted into law.

The data in Tables 3 through 5 permit assessing the success of discharge efforts in all three senses. In particular, the objective of securing floor consideration can be accomplished either (1) if the discharge motion, once offered, is agreed to by the House; or (2) if the prospect of discharge impels the House to take up the measure under some other procedures. Table 3 shows the extent to which discharge efforts have been successful at bringing about action through the discharge process itself; Table 4 addresses the success of discharge efforts at bringing about action through other procedures. Table 5 aggregates both classes of data.

Action Under Discharge Procedure

Bringing the measure to the floor

As Table 3 shows, only rarely since 1947 has more than one petition in the same Congress received the full 218 signatures needed for entry on the discharge calendar. On average throughout the entire period, fewer than 10% of petitions have been entered. The petition entered on the campaign finance reform bill in the 107th Congress (2001-2002) was the first since the Republicans obtained the majority in the House in the 104th Congress (1994-1995).

Between 1939 and 1972, however, when a discharge petition was entered, the motion was almost always offered on the floor and almost always approved. If supporters of a measure could secure 218 signatures, they could be confident that the discharge procedure would enable them to secure floor consideration for their measure. Before and after that period, on the other hand, entry of a petition did not guarantee that a discharge motion would ever actually be offered on the floor, much less adopted.

Instead, the committees of referral, the leadership, and the Committee on Rules commonly used a variety of devices to preempt further proceedings under the discharge rule. From the 1980s onward, these have often involved bringing up the measure, or an alternative proposal, under terms of an alternative special rule reported from the Committee on Rules. When this course of action occurs, proponents of the discharge effort succeed in bringing about consideration of legislation on the subject, but not necessarily of their preferred measure, and not on their own terms. Events of this kind are considered further in the next section.

Table 3. Proceedings Under the House Discharge Rule, 1931-2002

Congress
and (Years)

Discharge
Petitions
Filed

Discharge Motion

Committee
Discharged

Underlying Measurea

Enteredb

Called upc

Passed
House

Received
Final
Approvald

72nd (1931-1933)

12

5

5

1

1

-

73rd (1933-1934)

31

6

1

1

1

-

74th (1935-1936)

33

3

2

2e

-

-

75th (1937-1938)

43

4

4

3f

2

1

76th (1939-1940)

37g

2

2

2

2

-

77th (1941-1942)

15

1

1

1

1

-

78th (1943-1944)

21

3

3

3

3

1h

79th (1945-1946)

35

3

1

1

1

-

80th (1947-1948)

20

1

1

1

1

-

81st (1949-1950)

34

3i

1

1

1

-

82nd (1951-1952)

14

-

-

-

-

-

83rd (1953-1954)

10

1

1

1

1

-

84th (1955-1956)

6

-

-

-

-

-

85th (1957-1958)

7

1

1

1

1

-

86th (1959-1960)

7

1

1

1

1

1

87th (1961-1962)

6

-

-

-

-

-

88th (1963-1964)

5

-

-

-

-

-

89th (1965-1966)

6

1

1

1

1

-

90th (1967-1968)

4

-

-

-

-

-

91st (1969-1970)

12

1

1

1

1

-

92nd (1971-1972)

15

1

1

1

-

-

93rd (1973-1974)

10

-

-

-

-

-

94th (1975-1976)

15

-

-

-

-

-

95th (1977-1978)

11

-

-

-

-

-

96th (1979-1980)

14

2

1

1

-

-

97th (1981-1982)

24

1

-

-

-

-

98th (1983-1984)

13

1

-

-

-

-

99th (1985-1986)

10

1

-

-

-

-

100th (1987-1988)

5j

-

-

-

-

-

101st (1989-1990)

8

1

-

-

-

-

102nd (1991-1992)

8

1k

1k

1k

-

-

103rd (1993-1994)

26

2k

2k

2k

1

1h

104th (1995-1996)

15

-

-

-

-

-

105th (1997-1998)

8

-

-

-

-

-

106th (1999-2000)

11

-

-

-

-

-

107th (2001-2002)

12

1

-

-

-

-

Totals
(1931-2002)

563

47

31

26

19

4

Sources: House Final Calendars for the Congresses indicated. Beth, Discharge Rule: Procedure, pp. 74-75. Table 1.

a. A discharge petition may be filed to bring to the floor either a substantive measure in committee or a "special rule" from the Committee on Rules providing for House consideration of such a measure that is either in committee or was previously reported. The last two columns of this table reflect action on the underlying substantive measure, not on the special rule, if any, on which discharge was directly sought.

b. A discharge petition is "entered" on the discharge calendar when it receives the signatures of 218 Members (one-half of the House). During the 72nd and 73rd Congresses, 135 signatures were required (one-third of the House). In the 86th Congress, when the membership of the House temporarily reached 437 with the admission of Alaska and Hawaii, 219 signatures were required.

c. A discharge motion may be offered on the floor on any second or fourth Monday falling at least seven legislative days after the discharge petition is entered (as described in the previous note). Usually, each day on which the House convenes is a legislative day.

d. Includes measures that reached the following status: (1) became law, for bills and joint resolutions; (2) submitted to the states for ratification, for joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments; (3) agreed to by the House, for House resolutions; and (4) finally agreed to by both chambers, for concurrent resolutions.

e. One of the measures from which a committee was discharged was not subsequently considered by the House.

f. The Committee on Rules was discharged from a special rule for consideration of one measure, and the measure was then taken up but recommitted. The Committee on Rules was subsequently discharged from a second special rule for considering the measure. This measure is counted twice in this column and the columns farther to the left, but only once in those farther to the right.

g. Includes one petition filed and later withdrawn.

h. Resolution changing House rules.

i. Includes one petition entered with respect to a special rule on a measure and another entered on the same measure directly.

j. Includes one petition filed on a special rule for considering two measures.

k. Includes one measure in the 102nd Congress, and two measures in the 103rd, from which the committee was discharged, and which were brought to the floor, after the discharge petition was entered, by unanimous consent.

Passage

Even when a measure does come to the floor pursuant to the discharge procedure, the House has not always chosen to pass it. This finding might be thought surprising, for a measure can reach the floor through discharge only if a majority of Members (1) sign the petition, (2) vote for the discharge motion, and also (3) vote for the special rule or consideration of the measure. A measure that can pass these tests would seem to have a manifest capacity to command majority support in the House. Especially between 1969 and 1994 (91st-104th Congresses), however, many of the measures reaching the floor through discharge were proposed constitutional amendments. Such proposals may possess the majority support required for discharge, yet lack the two-thirds support required for their adoption. Recent examples, noted below in Table 8, begin with the Equal Rights Amendment in the 91st Congress, and continue through the Balanced Budget Amendment on several occasions in the 97th through 103rd Congresses.

Enactment

Finally, only two measures have become law after being considered pursuant to discharge: a federal pay act in the 86th Congress, and the Wages and Hours Act in the 75th (the first minimum wage law). Measures facing sufficient opposition to block their consideration in the House under regular procedures often suffer strong opposition at other stages of the legislative process as well. The House also adopted two changes in rules after consideration pursuant to discharge. These actions occurred in the 78th and 103rd Congresses, the latter action being the amendment that made discharge petition signatures public.

Action Under Other Procedures After a Petition Has Been Entered

In practice, when a discharge petition obtains its 218 signatures and is entered on the discharge calendar, the result almost guarantees that supporters will have an opportunity to bring the measure to the floor. Sometimes, however, the action that occurs at this point is not pursuant to the discharge rule itself, but under other procedures. Action of this kind presumably represents an attempt by the committee of jurisdiction, the leadership, or the Committee on Rules to recover control of the floor by taking action to preempt the opportunity that the discharge rule affords. The left-hand portion of Table 4 shows how frequently measures received floor action under other procedures after a discharge petition received 218 signatures and was entered on the discharge calendar.

From 1951 through 1978, such action never occurred; previously and thereafter, it occurred seldom. The most recent example, on campaign finance reform in the 107th Congress, was the first in over a decade. Yet every measure that has reached the floor under other procedures after a discharge petition was entered has been passed by the House and gone on to final approval, except proposed constitutional amendments (the Balanced Budget Amendment in the 97th and 101st Congresses). This record of success is substantially more favorable than that for measures considered pursuant to the discharge procedure itself.

Before 1951, when alternative floor action occurred after a petition was entered, it was typically because the committee of referral reported the measure and had it called up under usual procedures. Since 1979, by contrast, the committee usually did not report the measure; instead, the alternative action usually involved House floor consideration of an alternative special rule or alternative measure on the same subject. Alternative actions of this sort are included in Table 4 when identifiable.

On some recent occasions, however, supporters of discharge have not permitted these attempted alternative actions to forestall further proceedings by discharge. For example, the last two times a petition was entered on a Balanced Budget Amendment (102nd and 103rd Congresses; see Table 8), supporters arranged for the committee to be discharged, and for the measure to be considered, by unanimous consent.

Action Under Other Procedures While a Petition Was Pending

The right-hand side of Table 4 shows that alternative action has occurred more frequently on measures for which discharge petitions had not achieved the requisite 218 signatures. Approximately half the measures considered under such circumstances proceeded to final approval, a proportion intermediate between that for measures considered pursuant to discharge and for measures considered under alternative procedures after a petition was entered. Again, action on alternative measures on the same subject, or pursuant to alternative special rules, is included in Table 4 where it could be identified.

Action on measures with petitions pending was especially common before the mid-1960s, then disappeared entirely until the 1980s. The alternative action in these cases may represent attempts by the committee of referral, or the leadership, to preempt a discharge effort that either perceives as likely to succeed. For petitions that attract few signers, however, the force of discharge as a threat is presumably minimal, so that the alternative action may have occurred simply in the normal course of committee and leadership activity. Some of these discharge efforts may have occurred in part because supporters of the measures underestimated the likelihood of success through normal procedures. For Congresses prior to the 103rd, of course, there is usually no way of knowing definitely whether a petition obtained few or many signatures.

Table 4. Measures on Which Discharge Petitions Were Filed, But That Received Action Under Other Procedures, 1931-2002

Congress
and (Years)

Action on Measure
After Petition Entereda

Action on Measure
With Petition Pendinga

Considered

Passed
House

Received
Final
Approvalb

Considered

Passed
House

Received
Final
Approvalb

72nd (1931-1933)

-

-

-

1

1

-

73rd (1933-1934)

1

1

1

-

-

-

74th (1935-1936)

-

-

-

3

3

2

75th (1937-1938)

-

-

-

2

1

1

76th (1939-1940)

-

-

-

2

2

1

77th (1941-1942)

-

-

-

-

-

-

78th (1943-1944)

-

-

-

-

-

-

79th (1945-1946)

2

2

2

-

-

-

80th (1947-1948)

-

-

-

1

1

1

81st (1949-1950)

1

1

1

4

3

-

82nd (1951-1952)

-

-

-

1

1

1

83rd (1953-1954)

-

-

-

1

1

1

84th (1955-1956)

-

-

-

1

1

-

85th (1957-1958)

-

-

-

4c

4c

2c

86th (1959-1960)

-

-

-

1

1

1

87th (1961-1962)

-

-

-

-

-

-

88th (1963-1964)

-

-

-

1

1

1

89th (1965-1966)

-

-

-

-

-

-

90th (1967-1968)

-

-

-

-

-

-

91st (1969-1970)

-

-

-

-

-

-

92nd (1971-1972)

-

-

-

-

-

-

93rd (1973-1974)

-

-

-

-

-

-

94th (1975-1976)

-

-

-

-

-

-

95th (1977-1978)

-

-

-

-

-

-

96th (1979-1980)

1

1

1

-

-

-

97th (1981-1982)

1

-

-

-

-

-

98th (1983-1984)

1

1

1

3

3

2

99th (1985-1986)

1

1

1

-

-

-

100th (1987-1988)

-

-

-

-

-

-

101st (1989-1990)

1

-

-

1

-

-

102nd (1991-1992)

-

-

-

-

-

-

103rd (1993-1994)

-

-

-

3

3

3

104th (1995-1996)

-

-

-

2

2

1

105th (1997-1998)

-

-

-

-

-

-

106th (1999-2000)

-

-

-

1

1

-

107th (2001-2002)

1

1

1

-

-

-

Total
(1931-2002)

10

8

8

32

29

17

Source: House Final Calendars for the Congresses indicated. Beth, Discharge Rule: Procedure, pp. 86-89. Table 1.

a. Includes action on alternative measures, where identifiable. A discharge petition is "entered" on the discharge calendar when it receives the signatures of 218 Members.

b. Includes measures that reached the following status: (1) became law, for bills and joint resolutions; (2) submitted to the states for ratification, for joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments; (3) agreed to by the House, for House resolutions; and (4) finally agreed to by both chambers, for concurrent resolutions.

c. Petitions were filed on special rules for both initial consideration of, and disposition of Senate amendments to, one measure. On each occasion the Committee on Rules reported, and the House adopted, an alternative special rule. This measure is accordingly counted twice in the "considered" and "passed House" columns, but only once under "received final approval."

Summary: Action Under All Procedures

Table 5 brings together action under other procedures that may have been related to the presence of a discharge effort, as discussed in the previous two sections, with action under the discharge rule itself, as discussed in the section before that. The first three data columns in Table 5 repeat the last three columns of Table 3, on action under the discharge rule itself, except for omitting one early case in which the House voted for discharge but never considered the measure in question. The second three data columns represent the sum of the entries in the two parts of Table 4, on action under other procedures on measures subjected to discharge attempts. The last three columns represent the sum of the entries in the previous two parts of the table, thereby covering all action on measures on which discharge attempts took place.

These summary columns show that overall, between 1931 and 2002, 67 of the 563 measures against which discharge petitions were filed were considered in the House either by discharge or under other procedures. (As mentioned earlier, an additional few were reported, though not considered.) Some of these measures may have received action for reasons unrelated to the filing of the discharge petition. Supporters of most, however, presumably believed discharge action necessary because the measures were otherwise unlikely to reach the floor, and also believed that attempting discharge would enhance the measures' prospects. The frequency with which measures on which discharge petitions were filed reached the floor by some means, as compared with the frequency for all measures, offers some support for this proposition.

Table 5. Action on Measures on Which Discharge Petitions Were Filed, 1931-2002

Congress
(and years)

Action Under Discharge Procedurea

Action Under Other Proceduresa

Totala

Considered

Passed
House

Received Final
Approvalb

Considered

Passed
House

Received Final
Approvalb

Considered

Passed
House

Received Final
Approvalb

72nd (1931-1933)

1

1

-

1

1

-

2

2

-

73rd (1933-1934)

1

1

-

1

1

1

2

2

1

74th (1935-1936)

1c

-

-

3

3

2

4

3

2

75th (1937-1938)

3d

2

1

2

1

1

5d

3

2

76th (1939-1940)

2

2

-

2

2

1

4

4

1

77th (1941-1942)

1

1

-

-

-

-

1

1

-

78th (1943-1944)

3

3

1e

-

-

-

3

3

1e

79th (1945-1946)

1

1

-

2

2

2

3

3

2

80th (1947-1948)

1

1

-

1

1

1

2

2

1

81st (1949-1950)

1

1

-

5

4

1

6

5

1

82nd (1951-1952)

-

-

-

1

1

1

1

1

1

83rd (1953-1954)

1

1

-

1

1

1

2

2

1

84th (1955-1956)

-

-

-

1

1

-

1

1

-

85th (1957-1958)

1

1

-

4

4

2f

5

5

2f

86th (1959-1960)

1

1

1

1

1

1

2

2

2

87th (1961-1962)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

88th (1963-1964)

-

-

-

1

1

1

1

1

1

89th (1965-1966)

1

1

-

-

-

-

1

1

-

90th (1967-1968)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

91st (1969-1970)

1

1

-

-

-

-

1

1

-

92nd (1971-1972)

1

-

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

93rd (1973-1974)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

94th (1975-1976)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

95th (1977-1978)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

96th (1979-1980)

1

-

-

1

1

1

2

1

1

97th (1981-1982)

-

-

-

1

-

-

1

-

-

98th (1983-1984)

-

-

-

4

4

3

4

4

3

99th (1985-1986)

-

-

-

1

1

1

1

1

1

100th (1987-1988)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

101st (1989-1990)

-

-

-

2

-

-

2

-

-

102nd (1991-1992)

1g

-

-

-

-

-

1g

-

-

103rd (1993-1994)

2g

1

1e

3

3

3

5g

4

4e

104th (1995-1996)

-

-

-

2

2

1

2

2

1

105th (1997-1998)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

106th (1999-2000)

-

-

-

1

1

-

1

1

-

107th (2001-2002)

-

-

-

1

1

1

1

1

1

Totals (1931-2002)

25

19

4

42

37

25

67

56

29

Source: Tables 3 and 4.

a. Includes action on alternative measures, where identifiable.

b. Includes measures that reached the following status: (1) became law, for bills and joint resolutions; (2) submitted to the states for ratification, for joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments; (3) agreed to by the House, for House resolutions; and (4) finally agreed to by both chambers, for concurrent resolutions.

c. On one additional measure, not counted in this table, the committee was discharged, but the House never proceeded to consider the measure.

d. The Committee on Rules was discharged from a special rule for the consideration of one measure, and the measure was then considered but recommitted. The Committee on Rules was subsequently discharged from a second special rule for considering the measure. This measure is counted twice under "considered," but only once under "passed House" and "received final approval."

e. One resolution changing House rules.

f. For one measure, petitions were filed on special rules both for initial consideration and for disposition of Senate amendments. On each occasion the Committee on Rules reported, and the House adopted, an alternative special rule. This measure is accordingly counted twice in the "considered" and "passed House" columns, but only once under "received final approval."

g. Includes one measure in the 102nd Congress, and two measures in the 103rd, that were taken from committee and brought to the floor by unanimous consent after the discharge petitions were entered.

Recent Discharge Efforts and Floor Action

Table 8 provides specific information on individual measures on which discharge was attempted and action beyond the committee stage occurred. The data in Table 8 do not cover the entire period since 1931, but only from 1967 through 2002 (90th-107th Congresses), roughly the time since the Committee on Rules has operated consistently as an organ of the leadership, and during which use of the discharge procedure has generally remained stable at moderate levels.

This period includes 221 discharge efforts, 24 of which were followed by House floor consideration of the measure involved (or an alternative on the same subject). In relation to two of these measures, however, two petitions each were filed, so that these 24 petitions relate to a total of only 22 measures. An additional 11 measures on which discharge was sought were reported, but not taken up for consideration. Table 8 lists all 33 of these measures, thereby including all cases, during the period covered, for which either (1) use of the discharge rule could have helped to promote further action, or (2) the leadership or Committee on Rules, rather than the committee of jurisdiction, might have formed the chief obstacle to consideration.

Forms of Discharge and Conditions of Floor Action

Although House action on these 33 measures took a wide variety of forms, some patterns are discernible. First, each of the three methods of discharge provided by the rule was represented in similar numbers. Relative to how often each method was attempted, however, the frequency with which further action occurred varied markedly:

  • Nine measures were reported after petitions were filed on the measures themselves. Eight of these received floor consideration (6% of the 138 unreported measures on which petitions were filed).
  • Thirteen measures were reported after petitions were filed on special rules for their consideration. Nine of these received floor consideration (13% of the 72 unreported measures for which petitions on special rules were filed).13
  • Eleven measures had already been reported before petitions were filed on special rules for their consideration. Only four of these received floor consideration, but these made up 36% of the 11 reported measures for which petitions on special rules were filed.14

The 33 measures also were distributed roughly equally among the various courses of events through which they might or might not reach the floor:

  • Petitions on 12 of the measures were entered on the discharge calendar. Just six of these measures, however, reached the floor through the discharge procedure itself; the other six were called up through other procedures.
  • Ten other measures reached the floor, by procedures other than discharge, even though the petitions remained pending.
  • In the remaining 11 cases, the discharge petitions remained pending, and the measures were reported, but never actually considered.

As Table 6 shows, however, the different courses of subsequent action were not evenly distributed among the three forms of discharge attempt. Overall, measures on which discharge was sought reached the floor more often under other procedures than under the discharge rule itself. This pattern, however, did not appear among petitions that were filed directly on measures, but only among those filed on special rules for considering measures, and especially on rules for measures already reported. Among measures that were subjected to discharge attempts and reached the floor, the proportions that did so under procedures other than discharge itself were

  • 50% when the petitions were filed directly on unreported measures,
  • 80% when they were filed on special rules for unreported measures, and
  • 100% when they were was filed on special rules for reported measures.

Among the same measures, the proportions that reached the floor even though the discharge petitions remained pending were

  • 25% when the petitions were filed directly on unreported measures;
  • 50% when they were filed on special rules for unreported measures, and
  • 75% when they were filed on special rules for reported measures.

These figures indicate that measures became increasingly likely to reach the floor under alternative procedures, rather than pursuant to the discharge rule itself, the more directly the form of the discharge effort represented a challenge to the normal control of the floor agenda by the leadership and the Committee on Rules. In other words, the relationships shown in Table 6 suggest that the Committee on Rules has tended to respond vigorously to potential direct infringements of its special role in regulating the floor agenda, but has not always found it necessary to forestall potential infringements only of the general gatekeeping role common to all committees.15

Table 6. Methods of Discharge and Conditions of Floor Action, 1967-2002

Conditions of floor actiona

Petition filed on:b

Total

Unreported
measure

Special
rule for
unreported
measure

Special
rule for
reported
measure

Discharge

4

2

0

6

Other procedure,
after entry of petition

2

3

1c

6

Other procedure,
with petition still pending

2

5d

3c

10

Reported only; no floor action

1

3e

7

11

Total

9

13

11

33

Source: Table 8.

a. See "Discharge Attempt: Action" and "Floor Action" in Table 8.

b. See "Discharge Attempt: Form" in Table 8.

c. On one measure in each of these cells, some floor action had also occurred before any petition was filed.

d. In one case, a second petition, on the unreported measure itself, was also filed.

e. In one case, only the special rule, not the underlying measure, was reported.

Finally, the 11 measures that were only reported, and not considered on the floor, are also unequally distributed among the forms of discharge. Seven of the 11 had been reported before the petitions were filed, and so presumably represent situations in which the Committee on Rules found no preemptive action necessary to maintain its usual control of the floor agenda. The remaining four, however, were reported after the discharge petitions were filed, and in these cases the reports may have been intended to counter the discharge attempt. One of these petitions was filed directly on the measure, so that reporting the measure rendered the discharge attempt moot. Two others were filed on special rules for considering measures, so that reporting the measures did not preclude subsequent discharge and adoption of the rules, but such events did not occur. The fourth was also filed on a special rule, and the Committee on Rules then reported the rule, but no member of the Committee invoked the rule permitting him or her to call up a reported special rule not considered within seven legislative days.16

Conditions of Floor Action and Legislative Success

Table 7 shows how many of the 22 measures on which discharge was sought, and that ultimately reached the floor under various procedures, received favorable action from the House. Presumably, a measure on which a discharge petition obtains the full 218 signatures required is supported by a majority of the House. Of the 12 measures on which a petition was entered, nevertheless, the House passed only six. All six of the rejected measures were constitutional amendments, which require a two-thirds vote for passage.

Of these 12 measures, only six were considered under the discharge procedure itself, mostly during the earlier years of the period covered. Five of the six were constitutional amendments, and four of the five were defeated. The only other measure the House adopted pursuant to the discharge procedure itself was an amendment of its rules – changing the discharge rule itself to make signatures public.

Table 7. House Disposition of Measures on Which Discharge Was Sought, by Conditions of Floor Action, 1967-2002

Conditions of Floor Action

Total

Constitutional
Amendments

Other Measures

Adopted

Rejected

Passed

Rejected

Discharge

6

1

4

1a

0

Other procedure,
after entry of petition

6

0

2

4

0

Other procedure,
without entry of petition

10

0

1

9

0

Total

22

1

7

14

0

Source: Table 8.

a. Amendment to House Rules, adopted.

Correspondingly, of the 16 measures considered under other procedures, whether or not the petitions were entered, three (all of them constitutional amendments) were defeated. The House passed the other 13, none of which was a constitutional amendment. Ten of these 13 became law, including all four that reached the floor after the petitions were entered. In summary, Table 7 shows that during the period covered, when a discharge effort has succeeded in bringing to the floor a measure that required the support only of an ordinary voting majority, the likelihood that the House would pass the measure has been excellent.

Information Displayed on Measures Receiving Action

Each entry in Table 8 identifies the measure on which discharge was attempted by number and notes its subject (proposed constitutional amendments include the notation "AMENDMENT"). The table also notes the committee(s) to which the measure was referred, or from which it was reported. It next shows which of the forms of discharge petition was filed, how many signatures it obtained, and whether it resulted in a discharge motion being offered on the floor. The following two columns note key events in floor action on the measure, under the discharge rule itself or under other procedures, respectively. These events include actions taken on related special rules and alternative measures. The last column notes the final status of the measure. Throughout, the table provides the numbers of any related measures and the dates of key actions. The following paragraphs detail the significance and use of each of these items.

Form of Discharge Action

Table 8 indicates whether a discharge petition was filed (1) directly on an unreported measure, (2) on a special rule for considering an unreported measure, or (3) on a special rule for considering a reported measure. It also gives the date the petition was filed, and, where applicable, the resolution number of the special rule.17

Number of Signatures

Table 8 notes which petitions obtained the full 218 signatures required before a motion to discharge may be offered on the House floor. Also, from the 103rd Congress forward, it notes the number of signatures obtained by each other petition. Before the House amended the rule in that Congress to make signatures to pending discharge petitions publicly available, they were treated as confidential except when the full 218 were obtained.

Action on Discharge Motion

Once the 218 signatures are obtained, a motion to discharge is entered on a special discharge calendar. Beginning seven legislative days thereafter, the motion may be offered on the second or fourth Monday of each month, except during the last six days of a session. Table 8 notes whether and when this motion was offered. On several occasions during the period examined, after a discharge motion was entered, the House instead accepted a unanimous consent request that the committee be discharged and the measure be considered at a specific time. Table 8 treats the acceptance of such a request as equivalent to the adoption of a discharge motion. When a petition does not obtain 218 signatures, of course, no discharge motion can be offered on the floor, and no discharge vote can occur.

Floor Action

Table 8 reports action pursuant to the discharge rule itself in one column, and that pursuant to other procedures in a separate column. In either case, the pertinent column notes whether the measure was (1) reported from committee after the petition was filed, (2) taken up on the floor, and (3) passed or rejected. If the measure was considered under the terms of a special rule, the table also records floor action on the rule. For measures not considered in Committee of the Whole, the table identifies the procedure under which consideration took place.

Sometimes, although floor action does not take place on the measure that is the subject of the discharge procedure, it does occur on some other measure on the same subject. This action may occur because the committee of referral reports the other measure; the leadership schedules it for floor consideration; or the Committee on Rules reports a special rule for considering it. If discharge is sought on a special rule, another possibility is that the Committee on Rules may report a different special rule, providing for consideration of the same measure or an alternative measure. Actions of these kinds may represent attempts to forestall or preempt consideration of the measure on which the petition was filed, or at least to forestall its consideration under the terms of the original special rule. Table 8 identifies cases in which such actions occurred, noting the numbers of the alternative measures and special rules.

Occasionally, a discharge petition is filed on a special rule for considering a measure after it has already received some floor consideration. (The campaign finance legislation of the 107th Congress is an example, as already mentioned.) In the column on alternative floor action, Table 8 notes any floor consideration that occurred on a measure before a discharge petition was filed, but distinguishes this action with an asterisk (*). Similarly, when a measure was reported from committee after a petition was filed, although the measure then received no actual floor consideration, Table 8 also notes this event in the column for alternative floor action, but in italics.

Final Status

A discharge attempt may succeed in bringing the measure in question (or an alternative) to the floor under either the discharge procedure itself or some other procedure, yet the measure considered may still fail to achieve enactment. The House may consider the measure and reject it, or the measure may fail at a later stage of the legislative process. Table 8 notes whether each measure listed became law or (for concurrent or simple resolutions, and for joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments) otherwise attained final congressional approval. For measures that did not reach final approval, the table notes the last point in the legislative process the measure reached. This information indicates whether a measure failed or succeeded through the discharge effort itself, or because of conditions occurring at other some point in the process.

Timing of Action

Table 8 does not supply a date for every legislative action it lists. It does, however, identify dates on which

  • measures were referred or, where pertinent, reported;
  • discharge petitions were filed;
  • the required number of signatures was obtained; and
  • key floor actions took place.

The rule requires a petition to be filed at least 30 legislative days after the date of referral. The interval between referral and filing may suggest how urgent the measure's supporters felt the matter to be, or how much confidence they had in the committee of referral. Similarly, the interval from filing to obtaining 218 signatures, as well as the number of signatures obtained, may indicate the breadth and intensity of support for a measure.

Finally, the interval between the filing or entering of the discharge petition and floor action on the measure may suggest whether the committee of jurisdiction, the House leadership, or the Committee on Rules was attempting to supersede or forestall action pursuant to the discharge procedure. This information accordingly helps to suggest the effectiveness of the discharge procedure in eliciting responsive action by these organs. Such an effect might be inferred, for example, if, after a discharge petition is entered but before the discharge motion can be offered on the floor, the committee reports the measure or the Committee on Rules reports a special rule.

Table 8. Measures on Which Discharge Petitions Were Filed and Which Became Available for Floor Action, 1967-2002

Measure and Subject

Committee Action

Discharge Attempt

 

Floor Actiona

Final
Status

Form

Action

 

Under
Discharge
Procedureb

Under
O
ther
Procedures

90th Congress (1967-1968)

none

91st Congress (1969-1970)

H.J.Res. 264
Equal rights AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 1/16/69

Filed 6/11/70 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 7/20/70; committee discharged

 

Measure considered under one-hour rule, 8/10/70
Measure passed

 

Senate did not conclude consideration

H.R. 17555
Fair employment

Reported by Education and Labor, 8/21/70

Filed 12/9/70 on H.Res. 1273 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

H.R. 18214
Consumer Protection Agency

Reported by Government Operations, 7/30/70

Filed 12/18/70 on H.Res. 1294 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

92nd Congress (1971-1972)

H.J.Res. 191,
School prayer AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 1/22/71

Filed 4/1/71 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 9/21/71; committee discharged

 

Measure considered under one-hour rule, 11/8/71
Measure rejected

 

House did not act further

H.J.Res. 620,
School busing AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 5/6/71

Filed 10/4/71 on H.Res. 610 for unreported measure

signers not completed

 

 

Rule reported, 8/1/72

House did not act

H.J.Res. 253,
District of Columbia representation AMENDMENT

Reported by Judiciary, 2/29/72

Filed 5/1/72
on H.Res. 950 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

93rd Congress (1973-1974)

none

94th Congress (1975-1976)

H.R. 7590
Audit of Federal Reserve agencies

Reported by Banking, Currency, and Housing, 7/10/75

Filed 10/7/95 on H.Res. 746 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

H.R. 9725
Strip mining

Reported by Interior and Insular Affairs, 3/12/76

Filed 4/7/76 on H.Res. 1107 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

95th Congress (1977-1978)

none

96th Congress (1979-1980)

H.J.Res. 74
School busing AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 1/15/79

Filed 3/21/79 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 6/27/79; committee discharged

 

Measure considered under one-hour rule, 7/24/79
Measure rejected

 

House did not act further

H.R. 3567
Soft drink distributor antitrust exemption

Referred to Judiciary, 4/10/79

Filed 5/8/80 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 5/29/80

 

 

Measure reported, 6/20/80
Measure considered by suspension of rules
Measure passed
S. 598 passed in lieu

P.L. 96-308

H.R. 3263
Regulatory reform

Referred to Judiciary, 3/27/79

Filed 7/2/80 on unreported measure

signers not completed

 

 

Measure reported, 9/25/80

House did not act

97th Congress (1981-1982)

H.J.Res. 350
Balanced budget AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 10/29/81

Filed 7/12/82 on H.Res. 450 for unreported measure

218 signers obtained 9/29/82

 

 

Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 604)
Alternate rule adopted, 10/1/84
Measure considered
Measure rejected

House did not act further

98th Congress (1983-1984)

H.R. 500
Interest and dividend withholding

Referred to Ways and Means, 1/6/83

Filed 3/17/83 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 5/4/83

 

 

Measure reported, 5/13/83
Alternate measure (H.R. 2973) reported, 5/13/83
Alternate measure considered by suspension of rules
Alternate measure passed

P.L. 98-67

H.R. 1510
Immigration

Reported by Judiciary, 5/13/83; Agriculture, 6/27/83; Energy and Commerce, Education and Labor, 6/28/83; Ways and Means discharged by terms of referral, 6/27/83

Filed 10/28/83 on H.Res. 338 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

Alternate rule reported, 6/8/84 (H.Res. 519)
Alternate rule adopted
Measure considered
Measure passed
S. 529 passed in lieu

in Conference

H.R. 3
Bankruptcy courts

Reported by Judiciary, 2/24/83; Appropriations discharged by terms of referral, 3/18/83

Filed 11/2/83 on H.Res. 346 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

Alternate rule reported, 3/20/84 (H.Res. 465) for consideration of alternate measure (H.R. 5174)
Alternate rule adopted, 3/21/84
Alternate measure considered
Alternate measure passed

P.L. 98-353

H.R. 5345
School religious group meetings

Reported by Education and Labor, 4/26/84

Filed 6/21/84 on H.Res. 510 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

* Measure considered by suspension of rules, 5/15/84
* Measure rejected
Rule reported (H.Res. 554) for Senate amendment to H.R. 1310, including similar provisions
Rule considered by suspension of rules, 7/24/84
Rule adopted
Measure considered by suspension of rules
Measure passed

P.L. 98-377

99th Congress (1985-1986)

H.R. 945
Gun control

Referred to Judiciary, 2/6/85

Filed 10/22/85 on H.Res. 290 for unreported measure

218 signers obtained 3/13/86

 

 

Alternate rule reported, 3/19/86 (H.Res. 403) for alternate measure (H.R. 4332)
Alternate rule adopted, 4/9/86
Alternate measure considered
Alternate measure adopted
S. 49 adopted in lieu

P.L. 99-308

H.R. 20
Savings and loan regulation

Reported by Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs, 6/18/85

Filed 7/22/86 on H.Res. 480 for reported measure

signers not completed

 

 

 

House did not act

100th Congress (1987-1988)

none

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

101st Congress (1989-1990)

H.J.Res. 350
Flag burning AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 6/29/89

Filed 3/28/90 on H.Res. 350 for unreported measure

signers not completed

 

 

Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 417)
Alternate rule adopted, 6/21/90
Measure considered by suspension of rules
Measure rejected
Alternate measure considered by suspension of rules (H.R. 5091)
Alternate measure rejected

House did not act further

H.J.Res. 268
Balanced budget AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 5/11/89

Filed 5/24/90 on H.Res. 391 for unreported measure

218 signers obtained 6/19/90

 

 

Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 434)
Alternate rule adopted, 7/17/90
Measure considered under one-hour rule
Measure rejected

House did not act further

102nd Congress (1991-1992)

H.J.Res. 290
Balanced budget AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 6/26/91

Filed 5/20/92 on H.Res. 450 for unreported measure

218 signers
obtained 5/20/92;
committee discharged by unanimous consent

 

Rule adopted, 6/10/92
Measure considered
Measure rejected

 

House did not act further

103rd Congress (1993-1994)

H.Res. 134
Publish discharge motion signatures

Referred to Rules, 3/18/93

Filed 5/27/93 on unreported measure

218 signers obtained 9/8/93;
committee discharged by unanimous consent

 

Measure considered under one-hour rule, 9/28/93
Measure agreed to

 

House adopted

H.R. 1025
Handgun purchases ("Brady bill")

Referred to Judiciary, 2/22/93

Filed 10/7/93 on unreported measure

10 signers

 

 

Rule reported, 11/9/93 (H.Res. 302)
Measure reported, 11/10/93
Rule adopted, 11/10/93
Measure considered
Measure passed

P.L. 103-159

H.J.Res. 103
Balanced budget AMENDMENT

Referred to Judiciary, 2/4/93

Filed 2/24/94 on H.Res. 331 for unreported measure

218 signers obtained 2/24/94;
committee discharged by unanimous consent

 

Rule adopted, 3/16/94
Measure considered
Measure rejected

 

House did not act further

H.J.Res. 131
Pearl Harbor remembrance day

Referred to Post Office, 3/3/93

Filed 5/25/94 on unreported measure

7 signers

 

 

Measure reported, 7/12/94
Measure considered by unanimous consent
Measure passed

P.L. 103-308

S. 1458
Aircraft manufacturer liability

Reported by Public Works, 5/24/94 (referred to Public Works, Judiciary, 3/18/94)

Filed 5/26/94 on H.Res. 405 for unreported measure

160 signers

 

 

Measure reported, 6/24/94 (Judiciary)
Measure considered by suspension of rules
Measure passed

P.L. 103-298

104th Congress (1995-1996)

H.R. 125
Semi-automatic assault weapons

Referred to Judiciary, 1/4/95

(1) Filed 3/15/95 on unreported measure

26 signers

 

 

Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 388)
Alternate rule adopted, 3/22/96
Measure considered under one-hour rule
Measure passed

 

 

 

(2) Filed 2/23/96 on H.Res. 364 for unreported measure

3 signers

 

 

 

Senate did not act

H.R. 1710
Terrorism

Referred to Judiciary, 5/25/95

Filed 11/7/95 on H.Res. 240 for unreported measure

2 signers

 

 

Measure reported, 12/5/95

House did not act

H.R. 1627
Pesticides and food safety

Referred to Agriculture,
Commerce, 5/12/95

Filed 5/25/96 on H.Res. 443 for unreported measure

41 signers

 

 

Measure reported, 6/11/96 (Agriculture), 7/23/96 (Commerce)
Measure considered by suspension of rules, 7/23/96
Measure passed

P.L. 104-170

H.R. 2275
Endangered Species Act amendments

Referred to Resources,
Agriculture, 9/7/95

Filed 7/17/96 on H.Res. 466 for unreported measure

51 signers

 

 

Measure reported, 9/9/96 (Resources)
Agriculture discharged by terms of referral, 9/9/96

House did not act

105th Congress (1997-1998)

H.R. 3580
Supplemental appropriations

Reported by Appropriations, 3/27/96

Filed 6/25/98 on H.Res. 473 for reported measure

45 signers

 

 

 

House did not act

106th Congress (1999-2000)

H.R. 417
Campaign finance

Referred to House Administration, Education and Workforce, Government Reform, Judiciary, Ways and Means, Rules, 1/19/99

(1) Filed 4/14/99 on H.Res. 122 for unreported measure

202 signers

 

 

Measure reported adversely, 8/5/99 (House Administration)
Other committees discharged by terms of referral, 8/5/99
Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 283)
Alternate rule adopted, 9/14/99
Measure considered
Measure passed

Senate did not act

 

 

(2) Filed 4/20/99 on H.Res. 126 for unreported measure

3 signers (one additional signature withdrawn)

 

 

 

 

107th Congress (2001-2002)

H.R. 2356
Campaign finance

Reported adversely by House Administration, 7/10/01; Energy and Commerce, Judiciary discharged by terms of referral, 7/10/01

Filed 7/30/01on H.Res. 203 for reported measure

218 signers obtained 1/24/02

 

 

* Rule reported (H.Res. 188)
* Rule rejected, 7/12/01
Alternate rule reported (H.Res. 304)
Alternate rule adopted, 2/12/02
Measure considered
Measure passed

P.L. 107-155

Source: U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Calendars of the United States House of Representatives and History of Legislation, Final edition [95th-106th Congresses] (Washington: GPO [various years]). Congressional Legislative Information System database on legislative status, available at http://www.congress.gov/. Records of discharge petitions and signatures thereto in the Legislative Resource Center of the House of Representatives (also available for recent Congresses at http://clerkweb.house.gov/mbrcmtee/legis/pastleg.htm). The author expresses appreciation to the Office of the Clerk for assistance with access to these records, and to Hettie J. Beth for assistance in compiling the data reported.

Notes: Italics indicate the reporting of a measure, after a petition was filed, when no further floor action took place. Asterisks (*) indicate floor action that occurred before any petition was filed.

a. Floor action on the measure took place in Committee of the Whole unless otherwise indicated.

b. Including action pursuant to unanimous consent requests with equivalent effect after petition obtained full number of signatures.

Footnotes

1.

U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, compiled by Charles W. Johnson, Parliamentarian, 106th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Doc. 106-320 (Washington: GPO, 2001), sec. 892. Hereafter cited as House Manual.

2.

The mechanics of the rule are described in more detail in CRS Report 97-552, The Discharge Rule in the House: Principal Features and Uses, by [author name scrubbed].

3.

Including unanimous consent requests with equivalent effects.

4.

For data on the use of earlier forms of the discharge rule, see Tables 2 and 3 in CRS Report 90-84, The Discharge Rule in the House of Representatives: Procedure, History, and Statistics, by [author name scrubbed] (out of print; available only from author at [phone number scrubbed]). Reprinted in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, Subcommittee on Rules of the House, Discharge Petition Disclosure: H.Res. 134, hearing, 103rd Cong., 1st sess., Sept. 14, 1993 (Washington: GPO, 1993), pp. 239-240. See also [author name scrubbed], Control of the House Floor Agenda: Implications from the Use of the Discharge Rule, 1931-1994, paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Sept. 1, 1994, pp. 6-8.

5.

Corresponding measures may have been taken up by subsequent Congresses without use of the discharge procedure. This report takes no account of subsequent action of this kind.

6.

Comparable information for the 72nd through 100th Congresses (1931-1988) appears in Table 11 of Beth, Discharge Rule: Procedure (archived CRS Report 90-84), pp. 93-108. Reprinted in Subcommittee on Rules of the House, Discharge Petition Disclosure, pp. 274-289.

7.

The Committee on Rules could render a petition to discharge a special rule ineffective by reporting the rule, but in that case any member of the Committee on Rules may call up the special rule after seven legislative days and with one day's notice. House Rule XIII, clause 6(d), in House Manual, sec. 861.

8.

Beth, Control of the Floor Agenda, pp. 13-14, 20-23.

9.

On this change in rules, see Subcommittee on Rules of the House, Discharge Petition Disclosure.

10.

They may be examined by request at the Legislative Resource Center, Office of the Clerk, B106 Cannon House Office Building. For recent Congresses, they are also posted on the Clerk's Web site at http://clerkweb.house.gov/mbrcmtee/legis/pastleg.htm.

11.

Calendars of the United States House of Representatives and History of Legislation is published by the Clerk of the House and distributed to congressional offices each day the House is in session. Its index appears in the first issue published during each week. The contents of this document are cumulative throughout the Congress, so that the final edition for each Congress is a useful compilation of information about its actions.

12.

George Hager, "Appeal of 'A to Z' Puts Leaders in a Precarious Position," Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, vol. 52, June 25, 1994, pp. 1681-1684. George Hager, "Gephardt Pledges Votes on Cuts As 'A to Z' Holds at 204 Signers," Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, vol. 52, July 2, 1994, p. 1773.

13.

Throughout the discussion, one case in which petitions were filed both on the unreported measure itself and on a special rule for its consideration is included in this category.

14.

Two of these four measures had also received some floor action before the petition was filed.

15.

On this point, I am indebted to discussions with my colleague [author name scrubbed].

16.

House Rule XIII, clause 6(d). House Manual, sec. 861.

17.

The implications of all three methods of discharge are more fully explained in CRS Report 97-552, The Discharge Rule in the House: Principal Features and Uses, by [author name scrubbed].