Expedited Procedures in the House: Variations Enacted into Law







Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress



Congress enacts expedited, or fast-track, procedures into law when it wants to increase the
likelihood that one or both houses of Congress will vote in a timely way on a certain measure or
kind of measure. These procedures are enacted as rule-making provisions of law pursuant to the
constitutional power of each house to adopt its own rules. The house to which a set of expedited
procedures applies may act unilaterally to waive, suspend, amend, or repeal them.
Sets of expedited procedures, as they affect the House of Representatives, can have as many as
eight components. These components address the definition of the measure to which the
procedures apply, the measure’s introduction and its referral, its consideration in committee, the
priority the measure enjoys for House floor consideration, the process of debating and amending
it on the floor, and coordination with the Senate.
There are variations with respect to each of these components among the fast-track procedures
now in force that can affect the legislative process in the House. Some of these variations can
make it considerably more or less likely that the measures to which these procedures apply can
progress through most or all stages of the House’s legislative process within the time limits
specified by law. For example, some expedited procedures place a time limit on House committee
consideration of any measures subject to which those procedures. Such a time limit ensures that
the measures cannot be kept from the House floor because the committee to which they were
referred chooses not to report them. Also of particular importance is whether or not fast-track
procedures permit the measures in question to be amended. Allowing any amendments to be
offered to a measure creates the possibility of a disagreement with the Senate that can delay or
prevent the measure’s enactment.
Most sets of expedited procedures are incomplete in that they do not ensure that, if an eligible
measure enjoys majority support in both houses, those majorities will be able to move the
measure through the various stages of the legislative process, in committee and on the floor, and
present it to the President within the time period permitted by law. However, such incomplete
procedures are not necessarily defective. The House may deliberately choose to adopt fast-track
procedures that preserve the usual discretion of its committees as well as the ability of its majority
party leaders to control the House’s floor agenda.






The Nature and Effects of Expedited Procedures............................................................................1
Components of Expedited Procedures.............................................................................................2
Variations Enacted Into Law...........................................................................................................3
Defini ti on ..................................................................................................................... ............. 3
Introduc tion ............................................................................................................................... 4
Referr al ....................................................................................................................... ............... 5
Committee Consideration..........................................................................................................5
Priority for Floor Consideration................................................................................................7
House Floor Debate...................................................................................................................8
House Floor Amendments.........................................................................................................9
Coordination with the Senate..................................................................................................10
Complete and Incomplete Procedures...........................................................................................12
Author Contact Information..........................................................................................................15






Expedited procedures, also known as “fast-track” procedures, are enacted into law to increase the
likelihood that one or both houses of Congress will vote in a timely way on a certain measure or 1
kind of measure.
These procedures are enacted into law as what are sometimes called rule-making provisions of
law. They are given this designation because Congress enacts them pursuant to the constitutional
authority of each house to write its own rules. Even though expedited procedures are included in
laws, they have the same force and effect as the standing rules that either house adopts by simple 2
House or Senate resolution to govern its own organization and procedure. The house to which a
set of expedited procedures applies may act unilaterally to waive, suspend, amend, or repeal
them, without the concurrence of the other house or the President. The House of Representatives
also may agree to a special rule, reported by the House Rules Committee, that supersedes some or
all of the elements that are included in a set of expedited procedures.
Most measures that Representatives and Senators introduce every two years do not survive all the
stages of the legislative process, for lack of time or political support or both. This result is
generally accepted as an unavoidable and even desirable characteristic of how Congress does its
business. From time to time, however, Congress has decided in advance that it will be important
for one or both houses to have an opportunity to act within a limited period of time on a certain
bill or resolution or on a certain kind of measure. In those cases, Congress has enacted special
procedures that apply only to those measures and that are intended to put them on a legislative 3
fast track—to expedite their progress through some or all of the stages of the legislative process.
These procedures are most likely to be enacted when Congress delegates to the President or
another executive branch official the authority to issue a regulation or take some other action. As
part of this delegation of authority, Congress may reserve the right to pass its own judgment on
the proposed regulation or action by passing a joint resolution to approve or disapprove it before
it takes effect. To facilitate action on such a joint resolution, Congress may write into law special
procedures for considering it. However, these special expedited procedures are available only for
a limited period of time. Thereafter, Congress still can pass a joint resolution of approval or
disapproval, but it must do so under its regular legislative procedures.
Well-known examples of fast-track procedures are those appearing in the War Powers Act and the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended. Congress also has enacted the same kinds of procedures in other
circumstances in which it chose to decide in advance how it would consider certain measures. A
good example of this is the expedited procedures in the Congressional Budget Act, as amended,
that govern House and Senate floor consideration of budget resolutions and reconciliation bills.
The general nature and characteristics of expedited procedures are discussed in CRS Report 98-
888, “Fast-Track” or Expedited Procedures: Their Purposes, Elements, and Implications. That

1 This report was written by Stanley Bach, formerly a Senior Specialist in the Legislative Process at CRS.
2 U.S. House of Representatives, Constitution, Jefferson’s Manual and Rules of the House of Representatives of the
United States, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Doc. 108-241 (Washington: GPO, 2005), pp. 1059-1060.
3 These measures are referred to here as eligible measures, in that they are eligible for consideration under the
expedited procedures.





report is concerned primarily with what different sets of expedited procedures have in common,
and how those common characteristics differ from the regular legislative process in the House
and Senate. This complementary report focuses more on the differences among various sets of
expedited procedures that have been enacted into law and remain in force. This report is
concerned only with fast-track procedures affecting the House of Representatives; it does not
address such procedures as they affect the legislative process in the Senate.

Not all expedited procedures are the same. Some sets of these procedures include provisions on
certain subjects that other sets of fast-track procedures do not address. Even when different sets of
expedited procedures address the same subject, they do not always deal with that subject in the
same way. In some cases, the practical consequences of these differences are minimal. In other
cases, there are important differences in how much assurance expedited procedures offer
Members that they will be able to cast timely votes on whether to pass or defeat the measures to
which those procedures apply.
Sets of expedited procedures can have as many as eight components, addressing the following
subjects and questions (from the perspective of the House):
1. Definition. How does the statute define the measure or measures to which the expedited
procedures apply?
2. Introduction. Does the statute provide for automatic, mandatory, or discretionary
introduction of the measure (or each of the measures) to which the expedited procedures
apply?

3. Referral. Does the statute govern referral of each eligible measure to committee?


4. Committee consideration. Does the statute ensure that the committee to which the measure
is referred cannot kill it by inaction?
5. Priority for floor consideration. Does the statute make the measure privileged for House
floor consideration?
6. House floor debate. Does the statute impose a time limit on how long the House may
debate the measure, if and when it is called up for consideration?

7. House floor amendments. Does the statute bar or restrict floor amendments to the measure?


8. Coordination with the Senate. Does the statute include provisions governing House action
on a Senate measure that the Senate passes under its corresponding expedited procedures?
There are several different ways in which expedited procedures can address each of these
questions. Alternatively, fast-track procedures may fail to address one or more of these questions
in any way.






Varieties of expedited procedures that Congress has enacted can be identified by examining those
provisions that are reprinted in the section of the House Rules and Manual on “‘Congressional 4
Disapproval’ Provisions Contained in Public Laws.” This compilation includes, with several
exceptions, all fast-track procedures affecting the House that have been enacted into law and that 5
remain in force. Examining how these various procedures address each of the eight issues listed
above reveals how sets of expedited procedures can and do differ, especially in the assurance they
provide that a majority of Representatives can act, within the limited time available under the
statute in question, on the measures that have been placed on the legislative fast track.
The first question that can arise in comparing different sets of expedited procedures is how each
set of procedures identifies the bills or resolutions to which it applies. Each set of fast-track
procedures is available for considering one or more specific measures or kinds of measures. Does
the statute leave any ambiguity about the measures to which its expedited procedures apply?
The House Rules and Manual for the 109th Congress contains 53 sets of expedited procedures.6
Half of them avoid definitional ambiguity by including in the law the exact text of each measure
that can be considered under the expedited procedures the law creates. (This text usually includes
one or more blanks to be filled in so as to identify the regulation or other matter to be approved or
disapproved.) For example, the Pension Reform Act includes expedited procedures to consider 7
certain resolutions, and states that, for this purpose:

4 House Rules and Manual, pp. 1060-1231.
5 One exception is the fast-track procedures for acting on budget resolutions and reconciliation bills. These are included
in a separate compilation of budget process provisions of law that is printed in the immediately preceding section of the
House Rules and Manual. (However, the provisions of Title X of the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control
Act, on rescissions and deferrals, are included among the expedited procedures.) Also, the fast-track procedures of the
Line Item Veto Act remain in law but are not included in the compilation because the Supreme Court has declared that
act to be unconstitutional. On the other hand, the compilation reprints the expedited procedures governing plans to
reorganize the executive branch, even though the legal authority to implement those procedures has lapsed. The House
parliamentarian explains that “[t]hese provisions are carried in this compilation because other Acts have incorporated
their procedures by reference.House Rules and Manual, p. 1068. The compilation includes some expedited
procedures for considering either simple House resolutions or concurrent resolutions, the constitutional force of which
may be in doubt in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919 (1983). Excluded from the
House Manual are any fast-track procedures that apply only to the Senate, not to the House.
6 This counts each set of expedited procedures written into law and reprinted in the House Rules and Manual,
regardless of whether the law makes those procedures applicable to one measure, one kind of measure, or several
different kinds of measures. It also counts provisions of a law that make a measure or certain measures subject to a set
of expedited procedures that are identified as having previously been enacted into law. Because there are different (and
defensible) ways in which these procedures could be counted, not too much weight should be given to the precise
numbers and percentages given in this report. For example, one law may include a single set of fast-track procedures
and make them applicable to different measures that are defined in various other sections of the statute. Another law,
on the other hand, may include the expedited procedures that are applicable to each of several measures, even though
all those sets of procedures are identical.
7 All references to, and quotations from, specific laws derive from the excerpts from those laws that are reprinted in the
House Rules and Manual.





resolution means only a joint resolution, the matter after the resolving clauses of which is
as follows: The proposed revised schedule transmitted to Congress by the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation on ________ is hereby approved,” the blank space therein being filled
with the date on which the corporations message proposing the rate was delivered.
It may be possible to define the content of a measure with clarity and precision but without
actually presenting its text. However, failing to include the actual text of the measure may create
uncertainty as to whether a specific measure does or does not qualify for consideration under
expedited procedures. For example, the Marine Fisheries Conservation Act creates fast-track
procedures for considering a “fishery agreement resolution,” defined as a resolution “the effect of
which is to prohibit the entering into force and effect of any governing international fishery
agreement, bycatch reduction agreement, or Pacific Insular Area fishery agreement the text of
which is transmitted to the Congress pursuant to subsection (a)....” (Italics added.) The potential
problem arises because of the phrase “the effect of which”; that phrase could be interpreted to
encompass any resolution that arguably would have the indirect effect of making it impossible,
perhaps for political or economic reasons, for the United States to enter into an international
fishery agreement.
Similarly, Section 204 of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 authorizes the
Secretary of the Interior to implement presidential recommendations with respect to certain public
lands unless the House and Senate agree, within a 90-day period, to a concurrent resolution
“indicating otherwise.” The statute is silent as to what kinds of provisions in a concurrent
resolution would qualify as “indicating otherwise.”
Should there be disagreement as to whether a particular measure qualifies for consideration under
expedited procedures, the Speaker presumably would resolve the question in ruling on a point of
order or in deciding whether to recognize a Member for the purpose of invoking those
procedures. The need for such determinations can be minimized by including in each law
establishing expedited procedures as clear and precise a definition as possible of the measures to
which those procedures are to apply.
Most expedited procedures apply to certain measures, however defined, only if Members choose
to introduce those measures. In the majority of sets of procedures found in the House Rules and
Manual, the statute allows any Member to introduce the measure or presumes that a Member will 8
do so. Very few of the sets of fast-track procedures require that a measure be introduced. One
exception, Section 151 of the Trade Act of 1974, provides that bills implementing trade
agreements are to be introduced (by request) by the majority and minority leaders of the House
and Senate or their designees. In another exception, the nuclear non-proliferation provisions of
the Atomic Energy Act (Sec. 130) mandate introduction by directing the committees of
jurisdiction to report resolutions of approval or disapproval:
Not later than forty-five days of continuous session of Congress after the date of transmittal
to the Congress of any submission of the President..., the Committee on Foreign Relations of
the Senate and the Committee on International Relations of the House of Representatives,

8 Not all statutes are constructed in this way. For example, the Federal Salary Act of 1967 applies expedited procedures
to a bill or joint resolution only if the measure is introduced by the majority leader of the House or Senate.





shall each submit a report to its respective House on its views and recommendations
respecting such Presidential submission together with a resolution...stating in substance that
the Congress approves or disapproves such submission, as the case may be....
One reason for omitting a mandatory introduction requirement presumably is that there is no need
for either or both houses to invest time in acting on a measure under expedited procedures if no
Member is interested enough to introduce it voluntarily. On the other hand, requiring introduction
can assure that Congress has the maximum time to consider and act on a measure under expedited
procedures. When the time period available for congressional action under those procedures is
triggered by an event, such as receipt of a presidential message (as in the case just quoted),
requiring that the measure be introduced on the same day or the first day of session thereafter (as
in the case of Section 151 of the Trade Act) leaves as much time as possible for both houses and 9
their committees to consider it.
Once a measure is introduced, it is to be referred to, and considered by, the appropriate House
committee or committees. In the largest number of cases (roughly 40% of the total), expedited
procedures provide for eligible measures to be referred to committee in accordance with the
House’s normal procedures. In other words, the Speaker is to refer these measures on the basis of
committee jurisdictions as defined in the House’s standing rules and as supplemented by well-
established referral precedents and practices. In another one-quarter of the cases, the statutes are
silent on the matter of committee referral, which arguably has the same effect: leaving the
measures in question to be referred by the same means and on the basis of the same criteria
applicable to all other bills and resolutions. In roughly one-third of the cases, however, fast-track
procedures specifically identify the House (and often the Senate) committees to which eligible
measures are to be referred.
Among the most significant elements of expedited procedures are those governing committee
consideration. Under the House’s regular procedures, its committees usually can choose not to act
on measures referred to them; this is the case with the vast majority of introduced measures. In
such cases, those measures die at the end of the Congress. A majority of the House can prevent
this from happening by invoking a procedure by which it can vote to discharge a committee from
further consideration of a measure that was referred to it. However, this procedure can be time 10
consuming, is not invoked very often, and rarely has been used successfully. Thus, if expedited
procedures do not prevent committees from killing eligible measures by inaction, the procedures
fail to ensure the ability of a majority of the House to vote in a timely way on passing those
measures.

9 In the case of the Trade Act provisions governing implementing bills, there are time limits on House and Senate
committee consideration. Most other expedited procedures impose time limits on congressional consideration
generally, including both committee and floor action in one or both houses, as the case may be.
10 Measures also can come to the House floor without having been reported from committee by means of special rules,
motions to suspend the rules, and unanimous consent requests. However, none of these devices is likely to be used over
the objections of the committee of jurisdiction.





Roughly three-quarters of the expedited procedures in the House Rules and Manual prevent
committees from effectively killing eligible measures by failing to act on them. These procedures
generally impose a deadline for committee action and either require the committee to report the
measure in question by that deadline or provide a mechanism for the committee to be discharged
if it fails to report in a timely way.
The War Powers Act and the National Emergencies Act are unique in directing the House
committee of jurisdiction to report the measure in question within a specified number of days
(though not necessarily with a favorable recommendation) and in presuming that the committee 11
will comply with this requirement. For example, Section 6 of the War Powers Act provides for
certain measures to be referred to the House Committee on International Relations (or the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations), and then directs that:
such committee shall report one such joint resolution or bill, together with its
commendations, not later than twenty-four calendar days before the expiration of the sixty-
day period . . . , unless such House shall otherwise determine by the yeas and nays.
Both of these laws were enacted in the mid-1970s and are among the earliest fast-track
procedures that remain in force. Many of the expedited procedures that have been enacted since
then impose similar time limits on committee action, but also deal with a question that the War
Powers and National Emergency Acts fail to address. What happens if the committee of
jurisdiction does not report an eligible measure within the time allowed for that committee to act?
Almost two-thirds of the sets of expedited procedures anticipate this possibility by providing for
the committee of jurisdiction to be discharged without recourse to the difficult discharge
procedures of House Rule XV.
In a few instances, committee discharge is automatic. If a committee fails to report, within a
specified number of days, an eligible measure that was referred to it, that committee is
automatically discharged from further consideration of the measure. For example, Section 115 of
the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 provides that:
Upon the expiration of 60 days of continuous session after the introduction of the first
resolution of repository siting approval with respect to any site, each committee to which
such resolution was referred shall be discharged from further consideration of such
resolution, and such resolution shall be referred to the appropriate calendar, unless such
resolution or an identical resolution was previously reported by each committee to which it
was referred.
A more common provision found in sets of expedited procedures is to allow the House to decide
by majority vote whether to discharge a committee from further consideration of an eligible
measure that the committee failed to report within the time period allowed by law. This motion
may be nondebatable or it may be debatable for an hour. In either case, the motion is a privileged
one, so that Members supporting the measure are able to secure a vote on whether the committee
in question should be prevented from killing the measure by failing to report it.
What is perhaps more interesting is that more than one-quarter of the compiled expedited
procedures do allow committee inaction to kill measures that otherwise could receive fast-track

11 The expedited procedures of the National Emergencies Act also are incorporated by reference in the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act.





consideration. These sets of procedures do not require the committee of jurisdiction to report an
eligible measure that was referred to it. Furthermore, the same procedures do not include any
provisions that enable a majority of the House to remove that measure from the committee’s
jurisdiction and bring it to the floor for consideration.
For example, the Marine Fisheries Conservation Act defines an eligible measure as one that
contains certain provisions and is reported by what is now the House Committee on Natural
Resources within 45 days after the House receives a certain document from the President.
However, the statute does not direct the committee to report any measure within that 45-day
period. Instead it simply provides that “[a]ny fishery agreement resolution upon being reported
shall immediately be placed on the appropriate calendar.” (Italics added). The statute provides no
special means to take such a resolution from the custody of the committee if the committee fails
to report it. This omission creates the possibility that the resolution will die at the end of the
Congress without the full House having had an opportunity to vote on it.
Similarly, the Arms Export Control Act contains five identical sets of expedited procedures for
considering measures to prohibit various proposed actions by the executive branch. With respect
to the House, these procedures state only that:
For the purpose of expediting the consideration and enactment of joint resolutions under
this subsection [or paragraph], a motion to proceed to the consideration of any such joint
resolution after it has been reported by the appropriate committee shall be treated as highly
privileged in the House of Representatives. (Italics added.)
If the committee fails to report such a joint resolution, that measure enjoys no procedural
advantage over any other measures on which committees have not acted.
Thus, a key question to ask of any expedited procedures is whether or not they give the full
House an opportunity to vote on (or at least vote to consider) eligible measures without regard to
whether those measures are supported by the committee(s) with jurisdiction over them. More
often than not, the expedited procedures now in force provide this opportunity, but roughly one in
four do not.
To ensure that the House has an opportunity to debate and vote on an eligible measure, it is
necessary but not sufficient for expedited procedures to prevent that measure from being killed by
committee inaction. Those procedures also must make it possible for the measure to reach the
House floor after the committee has reported it or has been discharged from considering it further.
Most bills and resolutions that House committees report cannot simply be raised on the floor for
consideration at any time because those measures are not privileged to interrupt the House’s
regular daily order of business. In practice, measures reach the House floor either by unanimous
consent or as privileged interruptions of this order of business. The most common way for
measures to become privileged is to be called up under a motion to suspend the rules or by a
special rule from the Rules Committee. If expedited procedures do not give an eligible measure
priority access to the floor, that measure must rely on reaching the floor in one of these ways, just
like other reported bills and resolutions. Consequently, there is a real possibility that the House
may not consider the measure at all, and an even greater possibility that the House may not act on
it within the deadline imposed by law.





The War Powers Act and the National Emergencies Act again are unique in providing that eligible
measures reported from committee “shall become the pending business of the House in question. .
. .” Instead, most fast-track procedures authorize any Member to make a privileged motion to take
up an eligible measure that is no longer in the custody of a House committee. In some cases, this
motion may be made as soon as the committee of jurisdiction has reported the measure or has
been discharged. In others, a day or more must elapse before the motion is in order. In some
cases, the motion is not debatable; in others, it is debatable for an hour. Whatever these minor
differences may be, most expedited procedures enable the House, by simple majority vote, to 12
decide whether it wishes to act on an eligible measure.
The exceptions are the sets of expedited procedures that do not provide for calling up eligible
measures on the House floor by majority vote. In the Nuclear Waste Policy Act, the committee of
jurisdiction is discharged automatically if it fails to report an eligible measure within a specified
number of days. The act then goes on to provide that “[i]t shall be in order for the Speaker to
recognize a Member favoring a resolution to call up a resolution of repository siting approval 13
after it has been on the appropriate calendar for 5 legislative days.” The Speaker is empowered
to decide whether the House will consider such a resolution; the House cannot decide by majority
vote to call it up if the Speaker does not arrange for its consideration.
The nuclear non-proliferation provisions of the Atomic Energy Act provide for motions to
consider certain measures but not others. Section 130 of the act makes in order privileged and
nondebatable motions to consider certain concurrent resolutions. However, the same section
includes different procedures for considering certain joint resolutions. Such a joint resolution is to
be considered in the Senate under the provisions of Section 601(b)(4) of the International Security
Assistance and Arms Export Control Act of 1976, which provides for a privileged motion to
consider a measure to which it applies. But Section 130 does not apply these same provisions to
the House. Instead, Section 130 states that:
For the purpose of expediting the consideration and passage of joint resolutions reported or
discharged pursuant to the provisions of this subsection, it shall be in order for the
Committee on Rules of the House of Representatives to present for consideration a
resolution of the House of Representatives providing procedures for the immediate
consideration of a joint resolution under this subsection which may be similar, if applicable,
to the procedures set forth in section 601(b)(4) of the International Security Assistance and
Arms Export Control Act of 1976. (Italics added.)
In effect, this provision states only that the House Rules Committee may (or may not) do what it
would be empowered to do anyway.
Unlike in the Senate, measures cannot be filibustered on the House floor. In one way or another,
the House can, by majority vote, control how long it chooses to debate a bill or resolution.
Nonetheless, expedited procedures that provide for calling up eligible measures on the House

12 In some instances, this privileged motion is in order only after the committee of jurisdiction has reported the
measure.
13 The expedited procedures for considering these resolutions are laid out in Section 115 of the act. Sections 135 and
146 of the same act incorporate those procedures by reference and make them applicable to other measures.





floor typically limit how long Members can debate each of them. With only a few exceptions, this
limit takes the form of a maximum number of hours that are to be available for debating a
measure on the House floor. The War Powers and National Emergencies Acts, on the other hand,
provide that eligible measures shall, when reported from committee, “become the pending
business” of the House (or Senate) and “shall be voted on within three calendar days thereafter,” 14
without establishing minimum or maximum times for debate during that three-day period.
Section 151 of the Trade Act of 1974 contains both kinds of time limits. That section limits to not
more than 20 hours the House floor debate on certain trade-related bills and resolutions. The same
section also states that “[a] vote on final passage of the bill or resolution shall be taken [on the th
House floor] on or before the close of the 15 day after the bill or resolution is reported by the
committee or committees...to which it was referred, or after such committee or committees have 15
been discharged from further consideration of the bill or resolution.”
It bears emphasizing that, even if time limits on debate are not included in expedited procedures,
the House can, by majority vote, end debate on eligible measures, either by agreeing to a motion
to order the previous question or by agreeing to a special rule from the Rules Committee that
limits the time for general debate and the amending process in Committee of the Whole. Thus, the
failure of some expedited procedures to include time limits on debate does not necessarily mean
that measures considered under those procedures will be debated for longer than measures
considered under fast-track procedures that do include such time limits.
Expedited procedures often are designed to do more than ensure that Members of the House can
vote within a limited time on passing eligible bills or resolutions. These procedures often are
intended to enable both houses of Congress to complete the entire legislative process with respect
to those measures within a fixed number of days.
For this purpose, whether or not expedited procedures prohibit amendments to eligible bills or
resolutions is particularly important. If a set of fast-track procedures permits the House (or the
Senate, or both) to amend an eligible measure on the floor, those procedures cannot assure that
both houses will be able to complete the legislative process within a set time. This remains true
even if there are limits on floor debate, ensuring that each house can vote promptly on whether to
pass that measure, and even if majorities in both houses favor it. Once either house amends any
measure, that action creates the likelihood of a legislative difference between the two houses that
may be resolved either through an exchange of amendments or through negotiations in a
conference committee. There is no way in which any expedited procedures can compel the House
and Senate to reach an agreement by either means within a certain time (or at all, for that matter).
Naturally, expedited procedures that neither provide for motions to take up eligible measures on
the House floor nor limit floor debate on them also do not govern whether or not those measures

14 The House or Senate may otherwise determine by yeas and nays.
15 On the other hand, Section 152 of the Act (which also is incorporated by reference in Section 153) contains one but
not both limits. Section 152 limits the number of hours for House floor debate on other resolutions, but it does not
require that votes on final passage take place within a specified number of days.





are subject to floor amendments. On the other hand, fast-track procedures that limit floor debate 16
on eligible bills and resolutions almost always prohibit amendments to those measures as well.
When expedited procedures do explicitly permit House floor amendments, the procedures
typically impose narrow limits and strict definitions on the amendments that Members may offer.
For example, Section 153 of the Trade Act of 1974 governs House floor consideration of joint
resolutions disapproving certain presidential recommendations with respect to one or more
countries. Section 153 also bars floor amendments to any such joint resolution, except that the
prohibition “shall not apply to any amendment to a resolution which is limited to striking out or
inserting the names of one or more countries or to striking out or inserting a with-respect-to
clause.”
The only House floor amendments permitted under several other statutes are those that reverse
the effect of the measure that the House is considering. Section 130 of the Atomic Energy Act
governs congressional consideration of joint resolutions by which Congress can either approve or
disapprove certain presidential submissions. No floor amendments are in order, except that during
consideration of a joint resolution of approval, the majority leader or his designee can offer an
amendment to replace “does” with “does not”, thereby transforming the measure into a joint
resolution of disapproval. In similar fashion, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act governs
House consideration of resolutions stating that the House either “does not favor” or “does not
object” to certain proposed energy actions. The only floor amendment permitted to such a
resolution is an amendment in the nature of a substitute that replaces the text of the resolution
with the alternate text, thereby reversing the measure’s effect.
Even when expedited procedures bar floor amendments in both houses to concurrent or joint
resolutions or to bills, they still may contain additional procedures to coordinate action between
the two houses.
To understand the potential problem these additional procedures address, imagine a set of
expedited procedures that provides maximum periods of time for committee consideration and
then for floor action in each house on a joint resolution of disapproval. Assume that the House
passes H.J.Res. 1 under these procedures shortly before the end of the period permitted by law for
Congress to enact the joint resolution with the benefit of expedited procedures. If the Senate
passes S.J.Res. 1 at about the same time, both houses will have passed identical resolutions, but
the two houses will not have passed the same resolution. Therefore, the legislative process
remains incomplete. When the House receives S.J.Res. 1 from the Senate, there may not be
enough time remaining for the House to use the fast-track procedures to consider the Senate
measure both in committee and on the House floor.
Many sets of expedited procedures do not address this potential problem.17 In some instances,
however, there are procedures providing that, if the House receives a Senate joint or concurrent

16 Among the few exceptions are the fast-track procedures of the Marine Fisheries Conservation Act and Title X of the
Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act (in the case of rescission bills).
17 In some cases, the issue would not arise because the expedited procedures apply only to House resolutions (or Senate
resolutions), even though the effect of adopting those resolutions may be questionable in light of the Supreme Court’s
decision in the Chadha case mentioned earlier.





resolution before the House passes its own corresponding measure, the House is to continue
considering its own measure but then is to vote instead on final passage of the Senate measure.
For example, Section 115 of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 provides in part:
If the House receives from the Senate a resolution of repository siting approval with
respect to any site, then the following procedures shall apply:
(A) The resolution of the Senate with respect to such site shall not be referred to a
committee.
(B) With respect to the resolution of the House with respect to such site—
(I) the procedure with respect to that or any other resolutions of the House with
respect to such site shall be the same as if no resolution from the Senate with respect to
such site had been received; but
(ii) on any vote on final passage of a resolution of the House with respect to such
site, a resolution from the Senate with respect to such site where the text is identical
shall be automatically substituted for the resolution of the House.
The War Powers Act and the National Emergencies Act, enacted in the 1970s,18 include expedited
procedures that attempt to deal with the potential delays and procedural problems attributable to
substantive differences between House and Senate versions of the same measure. The War
Powers Act contains provisions very similar to the following paragraph of the National
Emergencies Act:
In the case of any disagreement between the two Houses of Congress with respect to a
joint resolution passed by both Houses, conferees shall be promptly appointed and the
committee of conference shall make and file a report with respect to such joint resolution
within six calendar days after the day on which managers on the part of the Senate and the
House have been appointed. Notwithstanding any rule in either House concerning the
printing of conference reports or concerning any delay in the consideration of such reports,
such report shall be acted on by both Houses not later than six calendar days after the
conference report is filed in the House in which such report is filed first. In the event the
conferees are unable to agree within forty-eight hours, they shall report back to their
respective Houses in disagreement.
The goal of this paragraph is to expedite appointment of conferees, deliberations of the
conference committee, and House and Senate floor consideration of the resulting conference
report. However, these procedures leave many questions unanswered. For example, what
constitutes prompt appointment of conferees, and do these procedures in any way nullify
Senators’ rights to debate the motions that the Senate must adopt before it can appoint its
conferees? Furthermore, this paragraph is silent on what is to happen if House and Senate
conferees cannot reach an agreement within 48 hours after being appointed and file a report in
disagreement. In other words, this paragraph demonstrates the difficulty—and ultimately, the
impossibility—of compelling the House and Senate to resolve a substantive policy agreement,
much less to do so quickly.

18 And the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which incorporates the procedures contained in the
National Emergencies Act.






One useful way to summarize this analysis is to distinguish between complete and incomplete sets
of expedited procedures. As defined here, a complete set of procedures ensures that, if an eligible
bill or resolution enjoys majority support in both houses, those majorities will be able to move the
measure through the various stages of the legislative process, in committee and on the floor, and
present it to the President within the time period permitted by the statute.
To meet these requirements, a complete set of expedited procedures:
1. requires the committee (or committees) to which the measure is referred in either house to
report it within a fixed number of days or be discharged (either automatically or by simple
majority vote) from considering it further;

2. allows the measure to be called up (again, either automatically or by simple majority vote)


for immediate or prompt floor consideration in both houses;

3. limits the time available for debating the measure on the floor of either house;


4. bars any amendments to the measure in either house; and
5. includes the kind of provision, quoted above, for a final House vote on a Senate measure
(or a final Senate vote on a House measure).
To minimize uncertainty, it also is useful, though not essential, for the expedited procedures to
include the exact text (with blanks to be filled in) of the measures to which the procedures are to
apply.
If expedited procedures lack one or more of these provisions, they leave open the possibility of
delay in the legislative process that can prevent the process from being completed within the time
permitted by law. Of course, that process can continue to completion after the statutory time
period elapses, but not with the benefit of fast-track consideration. Furthermore, most expedited
procedures have been enacted to facilitate congressional consideration of resolutions to
disapprove executive branch actions, which generally may take effect as soon as the stipulated
time period ends. Thus, disapproving such an action at a later date involves the added difficulty of
requiring Congress to reverse or nullify some action that already has taken place or some decision
that already has begun to be implemented.
By these standards, most of the expedited procedures included in the House Rules and Manual
are incomplete. Few of the sets of procedures in the Manual include the last two of the five
elements listed above: a total ban on amendments and a mechanism to expedite House action on
an eligible Senate measure. If the latter element is set aside as being useful but perhaps less
essential than the other four, roughly a third of the procedures qualify as complete.
Although most expedited procedures are incomplete by the criteria used here, that is not to say
that those procedures are necessarily defective. Although it is possible that some elements are
missing from these procedures because of oversights in drafting, it is far more likely that these
omissions represent intentional policy decisions made by members.





For example, the House may decide deliberately to accord the same deference to the judgments of
its committees regarding measures eligible for fast-track consideration as it does regarding all
other measures. If so, the House may provide for an eligible measure to receive expedited
consideration on the House floor only if it has been reported by the committee to which it was
referred. As previously discussed, for example, the Arms Export Control Act makes eligible
measures privileged for House floor action only after being reported by the appropriate 19
committee. As noted earlier, the Marine Fisheries Conservation Act defines an eligible measure
as one that has a stated effect and that has been reported by the appropriate House (or Senate)
committee.
In addition, concerns about the House’s floor schedule, as well as the agendas of its committees,
can lead the House to prefer sets of fast-track procedures that are incomplete.
Complete sets of expedited procedures can effectively force eligible measures onto committees’
agendas, regardless of other demands on the committees’ time and attention. Procedures to
discharge House committees, either automatically or by majority vote if they fail to report eligible
measures, give committees an incentive to consider and report those measures, whether favorably
or otherwise. This incentive is even greater if an eligible measure is given priority for House floor
action, whether the committee reported it or was discharged from considering it further. If a
committee recognizes that the House may consider an eligible measure, regardless of the
committee’s opinion or action, the committee is likely to at least review the bill or resolution
carefully so that the committee and its members are prepared for the floor debate on that measure.
Furthermore, complete sets of fast-track procedures provide for the House to consider each
eligible measure on the floor at times that are largely beyond the control of the majority party
leadership. The date on which an eligible measure can be called up for floor consideration
depends on three factors: (1) the date of the triggering event, which usually is determined by the
executive branch and which marks the start of the period allowed for congressional action under
the expedited procedures; (2) the length of time permitted under the statute for committee action;
and (3) when a Member makes the privileged motion to call up the measure for House floor
consideration.
The regular procedures of the House give the majority party leadership, acting through the
Speaker or the Rules Committee, dominant control over the House’s floor schedule, in regard to
both what measures the House considers and when it considers them. Complete expedited
procedures can intrude substantially on that authority and discretion. Majority party leaders have
little or no control over when an eligible measure becomes available for floor action; and, in most 20
cases, any Member then can move that the House consider it.
From the perspective of the majority party leadership, this diminution of its control over the floor
agenda may not be a significant problem if a set of expedited procedures applies only to one bill
or resolution. On the other hand, should multiple expedited procedures be utilized, it might
arguably intrude on the agendas of the House and its committees, and on the capacity of the
House’s majority party leaders, in committee and on the floor, to manage those agendas.

19 This leaves open the possibility that the committee could report an eligible measure either unfavorably or without
recommendation. However, a committee has little incentive to do so unless it confronts the prospect of automatic
discharge or discharge by majority vote if it fails to report the measure at all.
20 The House can defeat this motion, but only after time has been consumed on the floor and Members have had to take
positions on the issue.





There is a final point, mentioned at the beginning of this report, to consider when evaluating the
implications of expedited procedures for the House: these procedures only have as much force
and effect as the House chooses to give them at any point in time. As rule-making provisions
enacted into law, fast-track procedures have as much weight as the House’s standing rules, but no
more.
The fact that an expedited procedure is contained in a rule making statute does not mean that
another law must be passed in order to alter it. It is sufficient that a majority of Members of either
chamber agree to ignore, subtract, or add to the expedited procedure in order to change the way in
which its features apply in that chamber at a given time. Because Article I, Section 5 of the
Constitution gives each chamber of Congress the power to determine the rules of its proceedings,
expedited procedure statutes can (like all rules of the House or Senate) be set aside, altered, or
amended by either chamber at any time. As House Parliamentarian Emeritus Charles W. Johnson
observes, “the House may change or waive the rules governing its proceedings. This is so even 21
with respect to rules enacted by statute.” These changes can be accomplished, for example, by
the adoption of a special rule from the House Committee on Rules, by suspension of the rules, or 22
by unanimous consent agreement.
The ability to “rewrite” rule making statutes is more than theoretical. In fact, some Members have
argued that the House routinely alters expedited procedures when they come up. During debate
on adoption of one expedited procedure statute, then House Committee on Rules Chairman
Claude D. Pepper observed of the use of expedited procedures in that chamber:
Expedited procedures for House consideration are unnecessary and usually a hindrance ...
More often than not, the House has set aside or modified expedited procedures in order to
allow Members to consider matters that have become concerns but were not anticipated
when the expedited procedures were written. In the few instances in which the House has
made use of expedited procedures, we usually defeated the legislation and later reconsidered 23
the matter under a special rule granted by the [Rules] Committee.”
One scholar, whose research reinforces this argument, observed, “Of the 27 [joint resolutions of
approval or disapproval he had studied] that became available for consideration by the House, all
were in fact taken up on the House floor. Just two, however, reached the floor under the terms of 24
the statutory procedures that normally govern their consideration.” The other resolutions came
before the House under terms dictated by a special rule, under the suspension of the rules
procedure, or by unanimous consent.

21 William Holmes Brown, Charles W. Johnson, House Practice, A Guide to the Rules, Precedents, and Procedures of
the House, 108th Cong., 1st sess., (Washington: GPO, 2003) ch.50, §4, p. 826.
22 Although the same Constitutional authority to determine rules resides equally in both houses of Congress, because of
the nature of the Senate, expedited procedures are arguably more permanent and binding in that chamber than they are
in the House. Because the Senate operates largely by unanimous consent, should that consent could not be obtained ,
altering a rule making statute would, in all likelihood, require a super majority vote, either to obtain the 60 votes
needed for cloture or the 2/3 present and voting necessary to suspend the rules. Thus, while the House can by majority
vote change the terms of a rule making statute, it is in practice, much harder for the Senate to do so.
23 Rep. Claude D. Pepper, remarks in the House, Congressional Record, vol. 134, July 7, 1988, p. 17071.
24 CRS Memorandum, Use of Privileged Resolution of Disapproval and Approval, 1989-1998, by Richard S. Beth,
March 13, 2000, p. 13.





Christopher M. Davis
Analyst on the Congress and Legislative Process
cmdavis@crs.loc.gov, 7-0656