Multiple referral is the process through which a bill is referred to a second committee after the first is finished acting.
In theUnited States House of Representatives, proposedlegislation can be sent to more than oneCongressional committee due to a 1975 rules change. Reasons for referring legislation to more than one committee can include: a change in the most important issues; complexity of the legislation; or problems fitting the bill into the jurisdiction of only one committee.
However, as a result of a January 1995 change of the House rules, legislation may not be sent to multiple committees simultaneously. Under those same rules, theSpeaker of the House must designate one or more primary committees in a joint referral.
In a split referral, legislation is divided into sections, with each part sent to the appropriate committee.
In asequential referral, legislation is first sent to one committee, then to the next.
In the Senate, multiple referral can occur when jointly motioned by the leaders of both parties (almost never), or when the Senate grantsunanimous consent.
(*) Sinclair, Barbara (1997).Unorthodox Lawmaking: New Legislative Processes in the U.S. Congress. CQ Press.ISBN 1-56802-276-X
This article relating tolaw in the United States or its constituent jurisdictions is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information. |