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Comments on House Rules Tables: In Comparative Perspective
Donald R. Wolfensberger
Updated January 2023
Most major legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives goes through the Committee on Rules that uses 鈥渟pecial rules,鈥 which are simple resolutions, e.g., H. Res. 123, to set the terms of debate and amendment on the House floor. Minor, non-controversial bills, on the other hand, may be considered by unanimous consent or under a suspension of the rules 鈥揳 process that allows for 40-minutes of debate, no amendments, and requires a two-thirds vote for passage.
Special rules are debatable for one-hour, half of which is allocated by the majority party manager of the rule to a minority party member of the Rules Committee. The rule is then voted on after the 鈥減revious question鈥 is ordered (do we want to debate this rule further and even change it?). Adoption of the special rule then allows for the privileged consideration of the bill in question, at which point the bill鈥檚 authorizing committee chairman or a designee and a minority party member of the committee manage the debate time and oversee the amendment process.
The special rule may provide for one of three kinds of amendment processes on the authorizing committee bill: (a) an open rule, that allows any House member to offer a germane amendment; (b) a structured rule, that allows for consideration only of those amendments specified in the Rules Committee report on the rule; or, (c) a closed rule that prevents any floor amendments from being offered. The Rules Committee has not reported an open rule since the 114th Congress (2015-16), meaning all bills considered under a special rule over the last three Congresses have either been under structured or closed rules (see Table 1.). In the most recent Congress, the 117th Congress (2021-22), a majority of the special rules, 60%, were closed rules, and the rest, 40%, were structured rules.
The other tables in this comparative study delve into complex aspects of special rules. Tables 2(a) and 2(b) examine what are called, 鈥渟elf-executing rules鈥 which provide that, upon adoption of the special rule the House will have already automatically adopted an amendment to the bill so that it will not require a separate vote after general debate is concluded. The amendment to be automatically adopted is one that either has been recommended by the committee reporting the bill (鈥渃ommittee鈥), or one that has originated in the Rules Committee (鈥渘ew鈥).听
As the data shows, self-executing rules have been growing in number over time, with 68% of all rules in the 117th containing self-executing provisions (Table 2(a)). Likewise, the percent of new amendments being self-executed now comprise the vast majority of self-executing rules, 88% v. 12% 听for committee amendments.
Table 3. lists all the individual bills considered under special rules in the most recent, 117th Congress, differentiating between reported (R) and non-reported (NR) bills, and whether they were considered under a structured (S) or closed (C) rule.
Finally, Table 5 compares the numbers and percentages of unreported bills considered under special rules, from the 109th Congress (2005-06) to the 117th Congress (2021-22), and what types of rules they were considered under. Again, the trend has been toward more and more closed rules for unreported bills, comprising 67% of all closed rules. And Table 6. lists all the unreported measures considered in the 117th Congress.
Conclusions: The Rules Committee is frequently referred to as 鈥渢he Speaker鈥檚 committee.鈥 听That鈥檚 because the majority party leadership tightly controls the process under which bills are brought to the House floor. It is obvious from the data trends revealed in these tables that the leadership is exercising tighter and tighter control over what bills are considered and under what procedures, with more unreported bills being brought to the floor, circumventing the committee markup, deliberation, and reporting procedures. And, more and more bills are being considered under tightly circumscribed amendment procedures 鈥搈ost with no floor amendments being allowed. Ultimately, though, Members have the final say on whether they support these trends. And, most special rules are adopted along party-line votes, meaning majority party Members support their leaders鈥 scheduling decisions.
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Understanding Political Compromise
In this large project CCPS Director David Barker with Shaun Bowler (University of California-Riverside) and Christopher Jan Carman (Glasgow University) seeks to understand the psychological and institutional causes of compromise鈥攂y citizens as well as lawmakers鈥攊n the US and Europe.
Leighley, J., & Oser, J. (2018). 听Perspectives on Politics,听16(2), 328-344. doi:10.1017/S1537592717003073
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