House Rules Changes Affecting Committee 
April 26, 2023 
Procedure in the 118th Congress (2023-2024) 
Jane A. Hudiburg 
As agreed to in the House, H.Res. 5, a resolution adopting the rules of the House of 
Analyst on Congress and 
Representatives, provided amendments to the rules, as well as separate orders, that affect 
the Legislative Process 
committee procedure in the 118th Congress (2023-2024). The House also agreed to two separate 
  
resolutions that established a select committee and a select subcommittee. The House did not 
reestablish separate orders in force during the 117th Congress that enabled committee members to 
 
participate remotely in hearings and markups during pandemic-related “covered periods,” as 
designated by the Speaker. 
Amendments to Rule X redesignated the Committee on Education and Labor and the Committee on Oversight and Reform as 
the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Oversight and Accountability, clarified that the 
Committee on Homeland Security’s jurisdiction includes “cybersecurity” as it relates to the functions of the Department of 
Homeland Security, reestablished a prior requirement for a committee-adopted authorization and oversight plan, and codified 
into the standing rules previous separate orders that enabled the Committee on Agriculture to have six subcommittees. 
Amendments to Rule XI directed the Committee on Ethics to adopt committee rules providing for a process to receive 
complaints from the public. H.Res. 5 struck provisions that required the committee to adopt rules related to the treatment of 
evidence in investigations, and it codified into standing rules earlier separate orders that directed the committee to form an 
investigative subcommittee when a Member is indicted on a criminal charge. 
H.Res. 5 amended clause 8(c) of Rule II to remove clarifying text related to the continuing of litigation matters from 
Congress to Congress that was added in the 116th Congress. It also struck a provision from clause 3(b) of Rule XIII, which 
had previously exempted the Committee on Rules from the requirement that committees include in their written reports the 
numbers of votes cast for and against, and the names of members voting for and against, measures and matters decided by 
record (rollcall) votes. 
The rules package also included separate orders that affect committee procedure for the duration of the 118th Congress but are 
not incorporated into the standing rules of the House: 
  Any records of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol shall 
be transferred to the Committee on House Administration not later than January 17, 2023. 
  Any individual deposed by a committee may be accompanied by two personal, nongovernmental attorneys. 
Committee members, staff designated by the chair or ranking member, and an official reporter are also 
permitted to attend the deposition. 
  Each full standing committee (except the Committee on Ethics) shall hold a “Member Day” hearing. 
  Committee chairs may allow nongovernmental witnesses to appear remotely at committee proceedings, 
within certain limits. 
  The Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic is established as a select subcommittee of the 
Committee on Oversight and Accountability. 
Apart from the rules package, the House agreed to H.Res. 11, establishing a Select Committee on the Strategic Competition 
between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, and H.Res. 12, establishing a Select Subcommittee on the 
Weaponization of the Federal Government as a subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary. The select committee and 
subcommittee are to serve in an investigatory capacity during the 118th Congress. 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
General Committee Procedure ........................................................................................................ 1 
Termination of Remote Participation of Committee Members ................................................. 1 
Remote Appearance of Witnesses ............................................................................................. 2 
Committee Authorization and Oversight Plans ......................................................................... 2 
Scope of Authority to Act in Continuing Litigation Matters ..................................................... 3 
Deposition Authority ................................................................................................................. 3 
Member Day Hearings .............................................................................................................. 4 
Committee on House Administration .............................................................................................. 4 
Transfer of Certain Committee Records to the Committee on House Administration .............. 4 
Committee on Education and the Workforce ................................................................................... 4 
Designating Committee on Education and the Workforce ........................................................ 4 
Committee on Ethics ....................................................................................................................... 5 
Acceptance of Information from the Public .............................................................................. 5 
Empaneling Investigative Subcommittee of Committee on Ethics ........................................... 5 
Treatment of Evidence in Committee and Subcommittee Investigations ................................. 5 
Committee on Homeland Security .................................................................................................. 6 
Cybersecurity ............................................................................................................................ 6 
Committee on Rules ........................................................................................................................ 6 
Record Votes on Measures Reported by the Committee on Rules ............................................ 6 
Committee on Agriculture ............................................................................................................... 6 
Subcommittees of the Committee of Agriculture ...................................................................... 6 
Committee on Oversight and Accountability .................................................................................. 6 
Designating Committee on Oversight and Accountability ........................................................ 6 
Information to Committees of Congress on Request ................................................................ 7 
Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic ................................................................. 7 
Separate Resolutions ....................................................................................................................... 8 
Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the 
Chinese Communist Party ...................................................................................................... 8 
Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government as a Select 
Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary ................................................................. 9 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 10 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Introduction 
In January 2023, the House agreed to H.Res. 5, a resolution “Adopting the Rules of the House of 
Representatives for the One Hundred Eighteenth Congress.” This report summarizes provisions 
affecting committee procedure in the 118th Congress (2023-2024) as provided for in H.Res. 5 and 
in two subsequent resolutions.1  
H.Res. 5 provided amendments to the standing rules of the House, as well as separate orders, that 
affect committee procedure in the 118th Congress.2 Several of these changes apply to general 
committee procedure, while others concern specific committees, such as modifications to the 
name, jurisdiction, or procedures of certain House committees, as well as the establishment of a 
select subcommittee for the duration of the Congress. The House also agreed to two additional 
resolutions (H.Res. 11 and H.Res. 12) that established a select committee and a select 
subcommittee, respectively, to conduct investigations during the 118th Congress.  
General Committee Procedure 
Termination of Remote Participation of Committee Members 
The House did not re-adopt orders in force during the 117th Congress that enabled committee 
members to participate remotely in hearings and markups during pandemic-related “covered 
periods,” as designated by the Speaker. In the 118th Congress, Members must be physically 
present at committee meetings in order to participate. 
The 117th Congress rules package, H.Res. 8, and provisions of H.Res. 965 (116th Congress) had 
enabled House committees to conduct official committee proceedings remotely under specified 
circumstances.3 Pursuant to these earlier resolutions, committees could conduct entirely virtual or 
hybrid meetings, and Members participating remotely could vote and be counted toward required 
quorums.  
                                                 
1 This report does not consider changes related to the budget process, floor proceedings, or the administration of 
Congress (i.e., salaries, staff training, and membership requirements on boards and commissions). For more 
information about changes to House rules affecting floor procedure, see CRS Report R47490, 
House Rules Changes 
Affecting Floor Proceedings in the 118th Congress (2023-2024), by Jane A. Hudiburg. For more information about 
budget process changes in the 118th Congress, see CRS Report R47384, 
Changes to House Rules Affecting the 
Congressional Budget Process Included in H.Res. 5 (118th Congress), by James V. Saturno and Megan S. Lynch. 
2 See H.Res. 5; U.S. Congress, House, 
Rules of the House of Representatives, One Hundred Eighteenth Congress, 
prepared by Cheryl L. Johnson, Clerk of the House of Representatives, 118th Cong., 1st sess., 2023; U.S. Congress, 
House, 
Constitution, Jefferson’s Manual and the Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States One 
Hundred Seventeenth Congress (hereinafter
 House Manual), 116th Cong., 2nd sess., 2021 (Washington: GPO, 2021); 
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, 
H. Res. 5, Adopting the Rules for the 118th Congress, 
Section-by-Section 
Analysis (hereinafter 
Section-by-Section), 118th Cong., 1st sess., 2023. For information on changes to committee 
procedure in the 117th Congress, see CRS Report R46804, 
House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 
117th Congress (2021-2022), by Jane A. Hudiburg. 
3 For more information about remote committee proceedings in the 116th and 117th Congresses, see CRS Report 
R46804, 
House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), by Jane A. 
Hudiburg. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Remote Appearance of Witnesses 
Pursuant to a separate order, in the 118th Congress, committee chairs may allow nongovernmental 
witnesses to appear remotely at committee proceedings, provided that they follow certain 
requirements contained in regulations submitted by the chair of the Committee on Rules for 
publication in 
the Congressional Record. Such witnesses may be accompanied by counsel. Any 
oath taken may be administered by the chair of the committee or a member designated by the 
chair.4 
According to the “Regulations for the Remote Participation of Committee Witnesses,” 
nongovernmental witnesses may testify remotely if the majority leader has provided written 
approval of the remote participation, and the chair of the committee has determined that such 
testimony is “necessary” and the witness is unable to participate in person “due to extreme 
hardship or other exceptional circumstances.” The committee “may only utilize a software 
platform certified by the Chief Administrative Officer,” and witnesses appearing in a remote 
capacity must “agree to remain on the platform until excused by the chair.”5 
Committee Authorization and Oversight Plans 
H.Res. 5 amended clause 2(d) of Rule X to reestablish a requirement last in force during the 115th 
Congress (2017-2018) that each standing committee—other than the Committees on 
Appropriations, Ethics, and Rules—adopt an authorization and oversight plan relating to 
programs and agencies within the committee’s jurisdiction.  
During the first session of a Congress, each covered committee is to adopt the plan in an open 
meeting not later than March 1 and simultaneously summit the plan to the Committee on 
Oversight and Accountability and the Committee on House Administration. Not later than April 
15, and in consultation with the Speaker, the majority leader, and the minority leader, the 
Committee on Oversight and Accountability shall report to the House the plans submitted by the 
standing committees, together with any recommendations the committees or House leadership 
“may make to ensure the most effective coordination of authorization and oversight plans and 
otherwise to achieve the objectives of this clause.”6 
“To the maximum extent possible,” each authorization and oversight plan shall include: 
  a list of agencies or programs that have lapsed authorizations or have permanent 
authorizations that have not been comprehensively reviewed by the committee of 
jurisdiction within the past three Congresses;  
  a description of programs and agencies to be authorized during the current or 
following Congresses;  
  a description of any oversight needed to support program and agency 
authorizations; and 
  recommendations for moving such programs and agencies from mandatory to 
discretionary funding, if applicable.  
Optional content includes: 
                                                 
4 Oaths are administered pursuant to clause 2(m)(2) of Rule XI. 
5 The Rules Committee’s Regulations for the Remote Participation of Committee Witnesses is available at 
https://rules.house.gov/press-releases/118th-congress-regulations. 
6 H.Res. 5. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
  “recommendations for the consolidation or termination of such programs or 
agencies that are duplicative, unnecessary, or inconsistent with the appropriate 
roles and responsibilities of the Federal Government;”  
  “recommendations for changes to existing law related to Federal rules, 
regulations, statutes, and court decisions affecting such programs and agencies 
that are inconsistent with the authorities of the Congress under Article I of the 
Constitution;” and 
  descriptions of any other oversight activities the committee deems necessary.  
Scope of Authority to Act in Continuing Litigation Matters 
H.Res. 5 amended clause 8(c) of Rule II to strike the phrase 
including, but not limited to, the 
issuance of subpoenas, which was added to the rule via the 117th Congress rules package (H.Res. 
8).7 As amended in the 118th Congress, clause 8(c) states that the House, the Speaker, a 
committee, or a chair of a committee has the authority to “take such steps as may be appropriate” 
to continue an investigation spanning more than one Congress. 
According to the 117th Congress Rules Committee’s 
Section-by-Section Analysis of H.Res. 5, 
which was prepared by the committee’s majority staff, the addition of 
including, but not limited 
to, the issuance of subpoenas clarified that committees and their chairs, if previously authorized, 
had the authority to “immediately reissue subpoenas, prior to the organization of their 
committees, to ensure litigation can continue uninterrupted.”8 In the 118th Congress, however, the 
committee’s majority staff found the phrase to be “superfluous,” and the House, by agreeing to 
this technical change in H.Res. 5, restored clause 8(c) to the text contained in the 115th Congress 
and 116th Congress House rules.9 
Deposition Authority 
A separate order reestablishes separate orders in force during the prior Congress relating to 
deposition authority and provides a new clause specifying the persons permitted to attend 
committee depositions. As in earlier Congresses, the separate order states that the chair of a 
standing committee (excluding the Rules Committee) and the chair of the Permanent Select 
Committee on Intelligence “may order the taking of depositions, including pursuant to subpoena, 
by a member or counsel of such committee” after consulting with the ranking member of the 
committee. In addition, such depositions “shall be subject to regulations issued by the chair of the 
Committee on Rules and printed in the 
Congressional Record.”10  
The 118th Congress separate order stipulates that deponents may be accompanied by two 
personal, nongovernmental attorneys “to advise them of their rights.” Committee members, staff 
designated by the chair or ranking member, and an official reporter are also permitted to attend a 
deposition. 
                                                 
7 See CRS Report R46804, 
House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), 
by Jane A. Hudiburg. 
8 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, 
Adopting the Rules for the 117th Congress, 
Section-by-Section Analysis 
(117th Cong., 1st sess., 2021). 
9 
Section-by-Section, 118th Congress. 
10 The Rules Committee’s Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority is available at https://rules.house.gov/press-
releases/118th-congress-regulations. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Member Day Hearings 
A separate order reestablished, with one revision, a separate order from the 117th Congress that 
requires committees to hold Member Day hearings. That is, during the first session of the 
Congress (or the first or second session for the Committee on Rules11) each standing committee 
(except the Committee on Ethics) shall hold a “Member Day” hearing, enabling House Members, 
regardless of whether or not they serve on the committee, to testify on proposed legislation within 
the committee’s jurisdiction.  
The 117th Congress separate order contained, after reference to standing committees, the phrase 
or each subcommittee thereof (other than a subcommittee on oversight), enabling the Member 
Day hearing requirement to be fulfilled at the subcommittee level. H.Res. 5 removed those words, 
restoring the requirement from the 116th Congress that the Member Day hearing be held at the full 
committee level. 
Committee on House Administration 
Transfer of Certain Committee Records to the Committee on House 
Administration 
A separate order directed the transfer of any records of the Select Committee to Investigate the 
January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol to the Committee on House Administration not 
later than January 17, 2023. Such records “shall become the records of the Committee on House 
Administration.” 
Committee on Education and the Workforce 
Designating Committee on Education and the Workforce 
The rules package redesignated the Committee on Education and Labor, changing the 
committee’s name to the Committee on Education and the Workforce. H.Res. 5 strikes 
Labor from clauses 1(e) and 3(d) of Rule X and inserts 
the Workforce. 
Since its establishment in 1867 (40th Congress), the committee has operated under several names: 
Education and Labor (40th-47th, 80th-103rd, 110th, 111th, 116th, and 117th Congresses); Education 
(48th-79th Congresses); Economic and Educational Opportunities (104th Congress); and Education 
and the Workforce (105th-109th, 112th-115th, and 118th Congresses). In its recent history, the 
committee has been designated the Committee on Education and the Workforce under periods of 
Republican House majority and the Committee on Education and Labor under periods of 
Democratic majority. 
                                                 
11 The separate orders in the 116th, 117th, and 118th Congresses allowed the Committee on Rules to hold its Member 
Day hearing during the second session of the Congress. According to the 116th Congress’s Committee on Rules, a 
second session hearing enables Members to testify on proposed rules changes for the upcoming Congress. U.S. 
Congress, House Committee on Rules, 
H.Res. 6, Adopting the Rules for the 116th Congress, 
Section-by-Section 
Analysis, 116th Cong., 1st sess., 2019. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Committee on Ethics12 
Acceptance of Information from the Public 
H.Res. 5 amended clause 3(r) of Rule XI to add a subparagraph (2) that directs the Committee on 
Ethics to adopt rules providing for a process to receive complaints from the public. The process 
should include a method for submitting outside information to the committee in “electronic 
form.” 
Empaneling Investigative Subcommittee of Committee on Ethics 
H.Res. 5 amends clause 3(b) of Rule XI to add a subparagraph (9), codifying into House rules 
earlier separate orders that directed the Committee on Ethics to form an investigative 
subcommittee when a Member is indicted on a criminal charge. As initially established by H.Res. 
451 (110th Congress, 2007-2008) and reestablished as separate orders in subsequent Congresses, 
the text of subparagraph (9) instructs the committee to empanel an investigative subcommittee to 
review the allegations whenever a Member is indicted or otherwise formally charged with 
criminal conduct in a court of the United States or any state not later than 30 days after the date of 
such indictment or charge. If the committee chooses not to empanel a subcommittee, it is required 
to submit a report to the House describing the reasons for not empaneling an investigative 
subcommittee, as well as the actions, if any, the committee took in response to the allegations.13  
Treatment of Evidence in Committee and Subcommittee 
Investigations 
The rules package strikes two subparagraphs from clause 3(p) of Rule XI that had instructed the 
Committee on Ethics to adopt committee rules related to the use of court documents and exhibits 
as evidence in its investigations. According to the Rules Committee’s 
Section-by-Section 
Analysis, these subparagraphs are unnecessary because the Committee on Ethics has already 
adopted such rules.14 
Subparagraph (9) required the committee to state in its rules the committee’s authority, or an 
investigative subcommittee’s authority, to examine the trial transcript and associated exhibits for 
a trial that resulted in a criminal conviction. Subparagraph (5)(E) required that the committee 
adopt a rule stating that a respondent to a committee investigation must receive written notice 
whenever the committee or investigative subcommittee uses as evidence criminal trial transcripts 
or exhibits. 
                                                 
12 H.Res. 5 also, in a separate order, directs the Speaker to establish a bipartisan task force “to conduct a comprehensive 
review of House ethics rules and regulations.” This task force shall “submit recommended improvements to the 
Speaker, the Majority Leader, the Minority Leader, and the respective chairs and ranking minority members of the 
committees on Ethics and Rules.” The establishment and possible impact of this task force is outside of the scope of 
this report.  
13 H.Res. 451 (110th Congress); CRS Report 98-15, 
House Committee on Ethics: A Brief History of Its Evolution and 
Jurisdiction, by Jacob R. Straus. 
14 
Section-by-Section, 118th Congress
. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
Committee on Homeland Security 
Cybersecurity 
H.Res. 5 amended clause 1(j)(3) of Rule X to add subparagraph (G) Cybersecurity. This 
amendment clarifies that the jurisdiction of the Committee on Homeland Security includes 
cybersecurity as it relates to “functions of the Department of Homeland Security.” According to 
the Committee on Rules, the clarification will not alter other committees’ jurisdictions, and 
“committees currently holding jurisdiction over cybersecurity functions of DHS will retain a 
shared jurisdictional interest in such functions.”15 
Committee on Rules 
Record Votes on Measures Reported by the Committee on Rules 
The rules package amended clause 3(b) of Rule XIII to strike the provision that previously 
exempted the Committee on Rules from the requirement that committees include in their written 
reports the number of votes cast for and against, and the names of Members voting for and 
against, measures and matters decided by record (rollcall) votes. Previously, this provision stated 
that the requirement to depict record votes in committee reports applied only “to the maximum 
extent practicable to a report by the Committee on Rules on a rule, joint rule, or the order of 
business.”16 
Committee on Agriculture 
Subcommittees of the Committee of Agriculture 
H.Res. 5 codified in the standing rules separate orders in force in prior Congresses that allowed 
the Committee on Agriculture to have not more than six subcommittees rather than be limited to 
five subcommittees (or six if one subcommittee is on oversight), pursuant to clause 5(d) of Rule 
X. 
Committee on Oversight and Accountability 
Designating Committee on Oversight and Accountability 
The rules package amended House rules to redesignate the Committee on Oversight and Reform 
the Committee on Oversight and Accountability. H.Res. 5 struck each occurrence of 
Committee 
on Oversight and Reform in the standing rules and replaced it with 
Committee on Oversight and 
Accountability. 
In previous Congresses, the committee has operated under different names. In 1927, the 
committee was established as the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, 
                                                 
15 
Section-by-Section, 118th Congress. 
16 
House Manual, §835. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
consolidating 11 separate committees that investigated such expenditures. In 1953, the House 
changed its name to the Committee on Government Operations.17 In 1995, the committee 
assumed the jurisdictions of the Committee on the Post Office and Civil Service and the 
Committee on the District of Columbia, which were abolished, and was designated the 
Committee on Government Reform and Oversight. Since then, it has also operated under the 
name Government Reform (106th-111th Congresses), Oversight and Government Reform (112th-
115th Congresses), Oversight and Reform (116th-117th Congresses), and now Oversight and 
Accountability. 
Information to Committees of Congress on Request 
A separate order clarifies that the chair of the Committee on Oversight and Accountability shall 
be one of the seven members of the committee making any official request for information 
pursuant to Section 2954, Title 5, of the 
United States Code, a provision colloquially known as 
the “Seven Member Rule.”18 Section 2954 provides that, on request of the House Committee on 
Government Operations (now the Committee on Oversight and Accountability), “or of any seven 
members thereof,” an executive agency “shall submit any information requested of it relating to 
any matter within the jurisdiction of the committee.” In the 118th Congress, the seven-committee-
member minimum for such requests must include the chair of the Committee on Oversight and 
Accountability. 
Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic 
In a separate order, H.Res. 5 established the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic 
as a select subcommittee of the Committee on Oversight and Accountability. For the duration of 
the 118th Congress, the select subcommittee is to investigate and report on, among several 
subjects: 
  the origins of the Coronavirus pandemic; 
  the effectiveness of the use of taxpayer funds for virus-relief programs; 
  waste or fraud regarding those funds; 
  pandemic-related federals laws or regulations implemented or considered; 
  the “development of vaccines and treatments, and vaccination policies for 
Federal employees and the armed forces;”  
  the “societal impacts of closing schools;” and 
  “protection of whistleblowers who provide information on waste, fraud, abuse, 
and improper activities related to the coronavirus pandemic.” 
The Speaker is to appoint to the select committee not more than 16 members and to designate, 
from this membership, the chair.19 (Seven members shall be appointed in consultation with the 
                                                 
17 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Government Reform, 
Activities of the House Committee on Government 
Reform, 106-1053, 106th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001). 
18 “An Executive agency, on request of the Committee on Government Operations of the House of Representatives, or 
of any seven members thereof, or on request of the Committee on Governmental Affairs of the Senate, or any five 
members thereof, shall submit any information requested of it relating to any matter within the jurisdiction of the 
committee” (5 U.S.C §2954). 
19 H.Res. 5, which established the select committee, was subsequently amended by H.Res. 78, changing the 
composition of the select committee from not more than 12 members to not more than 16 members. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
minority leader.20) The chair and ranking minority member of the Committee on Oversight and 
Accountability shall serve on the select committee as 
ex officio members but have no vote on the 
select committee or be counted for purposes of establishing a quorum. For purposes of the 
subcommittee, the members are to be treated as members of the Committee on Oversight and 
Accountability. However, membership to the subcommittee will not count against the House 
rules’ limitation of Members’ service to not more than four subcommittees of the standing 
committees.21 
The select subcommittee does not have subpoena power or legislative authority, and, thus, cannot 
report legislation. However, the full Oversight and Accountability Committee or its chair “may 
authorize and issue subpoenas to be returned at the select subcommittee,” and the select 
subcommittee can from “time to time” report to the House or any House committee the results of 
its investigations or legislative recommendations.22  
Not later than January 2, 2025, the select subcommittee is to issue a final report, and 30 days after 
that report is filed, the select subcommittee shall cease to exist. With respect to any litigation 
matter, the Committee on the Oversight and Accountability is designated as the select 
subcommittee’s “successor in interest” and “shall take such steps as may be appropriate to ensure 
continuation of such litigation matter.”23 
Separate Resolutions 
Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United 
States and the Chinese Communist Party 
In a separate resolution, H.Res. 11, the House established a Select Committee on the Strategic 
Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party. The select 
committee’s “sole authority” is to “investigate and submit policy recommendations on the status 
of the Chinese Communist Party’s economic, technological, and security progress and its 
competition with the United States.” Accordingly, the select committee may hold public hearings 
in the performance of this investigative function.  
The Speaker is to appoint to the select committee not more than 24 members and to designate, 
from this membership, the chair.24 (Eleven members are to be appointed in consultation with the 
minority leader.25) The Speaker and the minority leader shall serve on the select committee as 
ex 
officio members but have no vote on the select committee or be counted for purposes of 
establishing a quorum. Each leader may appoint a staff member in support of his or her service. 
The select committee does not have legislative jurisdiction. In other respects, with specified 
exceptions, it “shall have the authorities and responsibilities of, and shall be subject to the same 
                                                 
20 H.Res. 78. 
21 Clause 5(b)(2)(A) of Rule X. 
22 H.Res. 5. Clause 2(m)(3)(A)(i) of Rule XI enables the committee (or the chair of the committee if delegated such 
authority by committee rules) to authorize and issue subpoenas. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability’s 
committee rules, 118th Congress, provide that the chair of the committee may authorize and issue subpoenas.  
23 Clause 8(c) of Rule II. 
24 H.Res. 11, which established the select committee, was subsequently amended by H.Res. 78, changing the 
composition of the select committee from not more than 16 members to not more than 24 members. 
25 H.Res. 78. 
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House Rules Changes Affecting Committee Procedure in the 118th Congress 
 
limitations and restrictions as, a standing committee of the House.”26 These authorities include the 
power to authorize and issue subpoenas for testimony and documents, pursuant to clause 2(m) of 
Rule XI. 
H.Res. 11 enables the select committee to report to the House or any committee “from time to 
time” the results of its investigations, as well as any “detailed findings, policy recommendations, 
and legislative proposals.” Policy recommendations are to be submitted to the “relevant standing 
committees not later than December 31, 2023,” and reports to the House are to be submitted by 
December 31, 2024. Within 30 days of these respective dates for completion, the 
recommendations and reports shall be made available to the public “in widely accessible formats” 
and in unclassified form but may include “a classified annex, a law enforcement-sensitive annex, 
or both.” 
Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal 
Government as a Select Subcommittee of the Committee on the 
Judiciary 
H.Res. 12 established the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government 
as a select investigative subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary. The select 
subcommittee is to investigate, among other subjects, the authority of the executive branch to 
“facilitate action against American citizens, including the extent, if any, to which illegal or 
improper, unconstitutional, or unethical activities were engaged in by the executive branch or 
private sector against citizens of the United States.”27 
On February 1, 2023, the House agreed to a unanimous consent request that raised the select 
subcommittee’s membership threshold from the number set by H.Res. 12, as amended by H.Res. 
78. According to this agreement, the composition of the select subcommittee shall be “not more 
than 21 Members, Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner appointed by the Speaker, of whom 
not more than 9 shall be appointed in consultation with the Minority Leader.”28  
The select subcommittee’s membership shall include the chair and ranking minority member of 
the Committee on the Judiciary. For purposes of the subcommittee, the members are to be treated 
as members of the full committee. However, membership on the subcommittee will not count 
against the limitation in House rules on Members’ service on not more than four subcommittees.29 
The select subcommittee does not have subpoena power. However, the Committee on the 
Judiciary or its chair “may authorize and issue subpoenas to be returned at the select 
                                                 
26 The exceptions are as follows: Service does not count on limitations in clause 5(b)(2) of Rule X (Members cannot 
serve on more than two standing committees or more than four subcommittees); the select committee does not have to 
prepare an authorization and oversight plan (clause 2(d) of Rule X); and, like the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence, the subcommittee may vote to “close up to five additional, consecutive days of hearings” (clause 
2(g)(2)(D) of Rule XI). 
27 See H.Res. 12 for a complete list of investigative authorities. 
28 H.Res. 12, as amended by H.Res. 78, specified the select subcommittee’s membership as “the chair and ranking 
minority member of the Committee on the Judiciary, together with not more than 12 other Members, Delegates, or the 
Resident Commissioner appointed by the Speaker, of whom not more than 9 shall be appointed in consultation with the 
minority leader.” 
29 Clause 5(b)(2)(A) of Rule X. 
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subcommittee.”30 In addition, the select subcommittee “shall be authorized to receive information 
available to the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence,” pursuant to clause 11 of Rule X.31  
The select subcommittee has no legislative authority, so it cannot report legislation. The 
subcommittee, though, may report the results of its investigations, findings, or any legislative 
recommendations to the House or to any House committee. 
Not later than January 2, 2025, the select subcommittee is to issue a final report and may, prior to 
that date, issue “such interim reports as it may deem necessary.”32 Thirty days after the final 
report is filed, the select subcommittee shall cease to exist. The Committee on the Judiciary is 
authorized to act as the successor of the select subcommittee with respect to any litigation matter 
and is authorized to “take such steps as may be appropriate to ensure continuation of such 
litigation matter.”33 
 
 
Author Information 
 Jane A. Hudiburg 
   
Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process     
 
 
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30 H.Res. 12. Clause 2(m)(3)(A)(i) of Rule XI enables the committee (or the chair of the committee if delegated such 
authority by committee rules) to authorize and issue subpoenas. The Committee on the Judiciary’s committee rules, 
118th Congress, provide that the chair of the committee may authorize and issue subpoenas following consultation with 
the ranking minority member.  
31 H.Res. 12. 
32 H.Res. 12. 
33 H.Res. 12; clause 8(c) of Rule II. 
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