{
  "id": "RS22649",
  "type": "CRS Report",
  "typeId": "REPORTS",
  "number": "RS22649",
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  "source": "EveryCRSReport.com, University of North Texas Libraries Government Documents Department",
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      "source": "EveryCRSReport.com",
      "id": 444666,
      "date": "2015-08-31",
      "retrieved": "2016-04-06T18:29:20.759883",
      "title": "Senate Committee Hearings: The \u201cMinority Witness Rule\u201d",
      "summary": "Congressional Research Service\n7-5700\nwww.crs.gov\nRS22649\nSummary\nWhen a Senate committee other than the Appropriations Committee holds a hearing, the minority party members of the panel have the right to call witnesses of their choosing to testify during at least one day of that hearing. Paragraph 4(d) of Senate Rule XXVI\u2014known as the \u201cminority witness rule\u201d\u2014states:\nWhenever any hearing is conducted by a committee (except the Committee on Appropriations) upon any measure or matter, the minority on the committee shall be entitled, upon request made by a majority of the minority members to the chairman before the completion of such hearing, to call witnesses selected by the minority to testify with respect to the measure or matter during at least one day of hearing thereon.\nIf the minority\u2019s request to call witnesses comes after a hearing has begun, it will necessitate the continuation of the hearing on an additional day to accommodate minority witnesses.\nContents\nMajority Prerogatives and Minority Witnesses\t1\n\nContacts\nAuthor Contact Information\t2\n\nWhen a Senate committee other than the Appropriations Committee holds a hearing, the minority party members of the panel have the right to call witnesses of their choosing to testify during at least one day of that hearing. Paragraph 4(d) of Senate Rule XXVI, known as the \u201cminority witness rule,\u201d states:\nWhenever any hearing is conducted by a committee (except the Committee on Appropriations) upon any measure or matter, the minority on the committee shall be entitled, upon request made by a majority of the minority members to the chairman before the completion of such hearing, to call witnesses selected by the minority to testify with respect to the measure or matter during at least one day of hearing thereon.\nIf the minority\u2019s request to call witnesses comes after a hearing has begun, it will necessitate the continuation of the hearing on an additional day to accommodate minority witnesses.\nThe minority witness rule was contained in Section 114(a) of the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970 and was subsequently made a part of the standing rules of the Senate. The committee report accompanying the 1970 act said of the creation of a minority witness rule:\nBy custom, committees ordinarily honor requests from their minority party members to call certain witnesses. [This section] will make this a matter of right. It provides that during any hearing of a committee, those members shall be entitled, during at least one day of the hearing, to call as witnesses persons they select. We don\u2019t look upon this as an authorization for delaying tactics but rather as good legislative practice.\nRule XXVI is rarely formally invoked, however. In practice, the rule has largely served as a \u201cbackstop\u201d that gives the minority party members of Senate committees procedural recourse if the majority refuses to invite witnesses they request. In the vast majority of hearings, the majority does invite minority witnesses after consultation and negotiation with minority Senators and staff.\nIn comparison to the House of Representatives\u2014which has a similar minority witness rule\u2014the rules and precedents of the Senate give Senators far more individual influence over the scheduling and consideration of legislation. That, in conjunction with the tradition of comity that generally governs the chamber, means that Senators have rarely found it necessary to invoke Rule XXVI to have their views represented. Occasionally, however, a majority of the minority party members have invoked Rule XXVI to have their witnesses heard from at a hearing.\nMajority Prerogatives and Minority Witnesses\nAlthough paragraph 4(d) of Senate Rule XXVI gives the minority the right to witnesses of their choosing during one hearing day, a committee majority maintains control over the scheduling and logistics of that hearing. In addition, ordinary Senate and committee rules governing hearings apply equally to any hearing in which minority witnesses testify.\nIt is up to the chairman of the committee to set the day and location of the requested testimony under a reasonable schedule. Although the committee majority members must invite the witnesses chosen by the minority party, they are not precluded from inviting additional witnesses of their own choosing.\nThe committee chairman maintains control over the logistics of how the minority witnesses will testify (i.e., individually or in panels) and also determines whether or not to administer the oath to the witnesses in keeping with its normal practices.\nAs is the case with other witnesses, a minority witness may decline an invitation to testify before a Senate committee or subcommittee. The committee can elect to issue a subpoena for his or her testimony under the normal procedures of the Senate and the committee, but it is not required to do so.\nThe scope of testimony under the minority witness rule is generally limited by the subject of the hearing. A committee is not required to permit testimony by minority witnesses or questioning by Senators that strays from the announced subject of the hearing. If the committee chooses, of course, it may broaden the scope of its inquiry or permit non-relevant debate as it sees fit.\n\nAuthor Contact Information\n\nChristopher M. Davis\nAnalyst on Congress and the Legislative Process\ncmdavis@crs.loc.gov, 7-0656",
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    {
      "source": "University of North Texas Libraries Government Documents Department",
      "sourceLink": "https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc821614/",
      "id": "RS22649_2007Apr24",
      "date": "2007-04-24",
      "retrieved": "2016-03-19T13:57:26",
      "title": "Senate Committee Hearings: The \u201cMinority Witness Rule\u201d",
      "summary": "This report discusses the \"minority witness rule.\"  When a Senate committee, other than the Appropriations Committee, holds a hearing, the minority party members of the panel have the right to call witnesses of their choosing to testify during at least one day of that hearing.",
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      "topics": [
        {
          "source": "LIV",
          "id": "Congress",
          "name": "Congress"
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        {
          "source": "LIV",
          "id": "Congressional committees (Senate)",
          "name": "Congressional committees (Senate)"
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        {
          "source": "LIV",
          "id": "Congressional hearings",
          "name": "Congressional hearings"
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  "topics": [
    "Appropriations",
    "Legislative Process"
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}