[House Prints, 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]








   118th Congress     }                               {     RCP 118-19
                                 COMMITTEE PRINT  
     1st Session      }                               {     
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                    RULES ADOPTED BY THE COMMITTEES 
                    OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 

                               ----------                              

                             118th Congress
                               2023-2024

                               ----------                              

                            compiled by the

                           COMMITTEE ON RULES







                 [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]








             Printed for the use of the Committee on Rules  
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
   118th Congress     }                               {    RCP 118-19
                                 COMMITTEE PRINT  
     1st Session      }                               {     
_______________________________________________________________________

                                     




                    RULES ADOPTED BY THE COMMITTEES

                    OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                               __________

                             118th Congress

                               2023-2024

                               __________

                            compiled by the

                           COMMITTEE ON RULES







        [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]







             Printed for the use of the Committee on Rules  
                             _________
                              
                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE
                 
53-578                   WASHINGTON : 2023 
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
                           COMMITTEE ON RULES

                      TOM COLE, Oklahoma, Chairman
MICHAEL C. BURGESS, Texas, Vice      JAMES P. McGOVERN, Massachusetts,   
    Chair                                Ranking Member
GUY RESCHENTHALER, Pennsylvania      MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania
MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota        JOE NEGUSE, Colorado
THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky              TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ, New Mexico
RALPH NORMAN, South Carolina
CHIP ROY, Texas
ERIN HOUCHIN, Indiana
NICHOLAS A. LANGWORTHY, New York
                  Kelly Dixon Chambers, Staff Director
                  Don Sisson, Minority Staff Director
                                 ------                                

          Subcommittee on Rules and Organization of the House

                    MICHAEL C. BURGESS, Texas, Chair
TOM COLE, Oklahoma                   MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania, 
GUY RESCHENTHALER, Pennsylvania,         Ranking Member
  Vice Chair                         JAMES P. McGOVERN, Massachusetts
THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky
ERIN HOUCHIN, Indiana
                    Jennifer Belair, Staff Director
               Caitlin Hodgkins, Minority Staff Director
                                 ------                                

             Subcommittee on Legislative and Budget Process

                  MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota, Chair
TOM COLE, Oklahoma                   TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ, New 
RALPH NORMAN, South Carolina,            Mexico,
    Vice Chair                         Ranking Member
CHIP ROY, Texas                      JOE NEGUSE, Colorado
NICHOLAS A. LANGWORTHY, New York
                    Steve Waskiewicz, Staff Director
               Caitlin Hodgkins, Minority Staff Director  
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                Part I--Standing Committees of the House

                                                                   Page
Committee on Agriculture.........................................     2
Committee on Appropriations......................................    24
Committee on Armed Services......................................    36
Committee on the Budget..........................................    49
Committee on Education and the Workforce.........................    59
Committee on Energy and Commerce.................................    76
Committee on Ethics..............................................    85
Committee on Financial Services..................................   113
Committee on Foreign Affairs.....................................   127
Committee on Homeland Security...................................   146
Committee on House Administration................................   156
Committee on the Judiciary.......................................   178
Committee on Natural Resources...................................   187
Committee on Oversight and Accountability........................   203
Committee on Rules...............................................   215
Committee on Science, Space, and Technology......................   225
Committee on Small Business......................................   235
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure...................   251
Committee on Veterans' Affairs...................................   269
Committee on Ways and Means......................................   283

      Part II--Select and Permanent Select Committees of the House

Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.......................   293
Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United 
  States and the Chinese Community Party.........................   319

                Part III--Congressional Joint Committees

Joint Economic Committee.........................................   327
Joint Committee on the Library...................................   332
Joint Committee on Printing......................................   335
Joint Committee on Taxation......................................   340

                                Appendix

Rule X. Organization of Committees...............................   341
Rule XI. Procedures of Committees and Unfinished Business........   369
Rule XIII. Calendars and Committee Reports.......................   392
      
=======================================================================


                PART I--STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE

=======================================================================

      
                        Committee on Agriculture

  GLENN THOMPSON, Pennsylvania, 
             Chairman

DAVID SCOTT, Georgia, Ranking Member FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma
JIM COSTA, California                AUSTIN SCOTT, Georgia, Vice 
JAMES P. McGOVERN, Massachusetts     Chairman
ALMA S. ADAMS, North Carolina        ERIC A. ``RICK'' CRAWFORD, 
ABIGAIL DAVIS SPANBERGER, Virginia   Arkansas
JAHANA HAYES, Connecticut            SCOTT DesJARLAIS, Tennessee
SHONTEL M. BROWN, Ohio               DOUG LaMALFA, California
SHARICE DAVIDS, Kansas               DAVID ROUZER, North Carolina
ELISSA SLOTKIN, Michigan             TRENT KELLY, Mississippi
YADIRA CARAVEO, Colorado             DON BACON, Nebraska
ANDREA SALINAS, Oregon               MIKE BOST, Illinois
MARIE GLUESENKAMP PEREZ, Washington  DUSTY JOHNSON, South Dakota
DONALD G. DAVIS, North Carolina      JAMES R. BAIRD, Indiana
JILL N. TOKUDA, Hawaii               TRACEY MANN, Kansas
NIKKI BUDZINSKI, Illinois            RANDY FEENSTRA, Iowa
ERIC SORENSEN, Illinois              MARY E. MILLER, Illinois
GABE VASQUEZ, New Mexico             BARRY MOORE, Alabama
JASMINE CROCKETT, Texas              KAT CAMMACK, Florida
JONATHAN L. JACKSON, Illinois        BRAD FINSTAD, Minnesota
GREG CASAR, Texas                    JOHN W. ROSE, Tennessee
CHELLIE PINGREE, Maine               RONNY JACKSON, Texas
SALUD O. CARBAJAL, California        MARCUS J. MOLINARO, New York
ANGIE CRAIG, Minnesota               MONICA De La CRUZ, Texas
DARREN SOTO, Florida                 NICHOLAS A. LANGWORTHY, New York
SANFORD G. BISHOP, Georgia           JOHN S. DUARTE, California
                                     ZACHARY NUNN, Iowa
                                     MARK ALFORD, Missouri
                                     DERRICK VAN ORDEN, Wisconsin
                                     LORI CHAVEZ-DEREMER, Oregon
                                     MAX L. MILLER, Ohio

      RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS

                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)

                      Rule I.--General Provisions

    (a) Applicability of House Rules.--(1) The Rules of the 
House shall govern the procedure of the Committee and its 
subcommittees, and the Rules of the Committee on Agriculture so 
far as applicable shall be interpreted in accordance with the 
Rules of the House, except that a motion to recess from day to 
day, and a motion to dispense with the first reading (in full) 
of a bill or resolution, if printed copies are available, are 
non-debatable privileged motions in the Committee and its 
subcommittees. (See Appendix A for the applicable Rules of the 
U.S. House of Representatives.)
    (2) As provided in clause 1(a)(1) of House rule XI, each 
Subcommittee is part of the Committee and is subject to the 
authority and direction of the Committee and its rules so far 
as applicable. (See also Committee rules III, IV, V, VI, VII, 
VIII and XI, infra.)
    (b) Authority to Conduct Investigations.--The Committee and 
its subcommittees, after consultation with the Chairman of the 
Committee, may conduct such investigations and studies as they 
may consider necessary or appropriate in the exercise of their 
responsibilities under rule X of the Rules of the House and in 
accordance with clause 2(m) of House rule XI.
    (c) Authority to Print.--The Committee is authorized by the 
Rules of the House to have printed and bound testimony and 
other data presented at hearings held by the Committee and its 
subcommittees. All costs of stenographic services and 
transcripts in connection with any meeting or hearing of the 
Committee and its subcommittees shall be paid from applicable 
accounts of the House described in clause 1(k)(1) of House rule 
X in accordance with clause 1(c) of House rule XI. (See also 
paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Committee rule IX.)
    (d) Vice Chairman.--The Member of the majority party on the 
Committee or Subcommittee designated by the Chairman of the 
full Committee shall be the vice chairman of the Committee or 
Subcommittee in accordance with clause 2(d) of House rule XI.
    (e) Presiding Member.--If the Chairman of the Committee or 
Subcommittee is not present at any Committee or Subcommittee 
meeting or hearing, the vice chairman shall preside. If the 
Chairman and vice chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee are 
not present at a Committee or Subcommittee meeting or hearing 
the ranking Member of the majority party who is present shall 
preside in accordance with clause 2(d) of House rule XI.
    (f) Publication of Rules.--The Committee's Rules shall be 
publicly available in electronic form and published in the 
Congressional Record not later than 60 days after the Chair is 
elected in each odd-numbered year as provided in clause 2(a) of 
House rule XI.
    (g) Joint Committee Reports of Investigation or Study.--A 
report of an investigation or study conducted jointly by more 
than one committee may be filed jointly, provided that each of 
the committees complies independently with all requirements for 
approval and filing of the report.

 Rule II.--Committee Business Meetings--Regular, Additional and Special

    (a) Regular Meetings.--Regular meetings of the Committee, 
in accordance with clause 2(b) of House rule XI, shall be held 
on the first Wednesday of every month to transact its business 
if notice is given pursuant to clause 2(g)(3) of House rule XI. 
The Chairman shall provide each Member of the Committee, as far 
in advance of the day of the regular meeting as practicable, a 
written agenda of such meeting. Items may be placed on the 
agenda by the Chairman or a majority of the Committee. (See 
paragraph (f) of Committee rule XI for provisions that apply to 
meetings of subcommittees.)
    (b) Additional Meetings.--(1) The Chairman may call and 
convene, as he or she considers necessary, which may not 
commence earlier than the third calendar day (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such a day) on which Members have notice thereof 
after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee or after concurrence with the Ranking Minority 
Member, additional meetings of the Committee for the 
consideration of any bill or resolution pending before the 
Committee or for the conduct of other Committee business. The 
Committee shall meet for such additional meetings pursuant to 
the notice from the Chairman.
    (2) A hearing or meeting may begin sooner than specified in 
clause (1) (in which case, the chair shall make the 
announcement specified at the earliest possible time) if the 
Committee so determines by majority vote in the presence of the 
number of Members required under the Rules of the Committee for 
the transaction of business.
    (3) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of a measure or matter the Chair shall 
cause the text of such measure or matter to be made publicly 
available in electronic form.
    (c) Special Meetings.--If at least three Members of the 
Committee desire that a special meeting of the Committee be 
called by the Chairman, those Members may file in the offices 
of the Committee their written request to the Chairman for such 
special meeting. Such request shall specify the measure or 
matters to be considered. Immediately upon the filing of the 
request, the Majority Staff Director (serving as the clerk of 
the Committee for such purpose) shall notify the Chairman of 
the filing of the request. If, within 3 calendar days after the 
filing of the request, the Chairman does not call the requested 
special meeting to be held within 7 calendar days after the 
filing of the request, a majority of the Members of the 
Committee may file in the offices of the Committee their 
written notice that a special meeting of the Committee will be 
held, specifying the date and hour thereof, and the measures or 
matter to be considered at that special meeting in accordance 
with clause 2(c)(2) of House rule XI. The Committee shall meet 
on that date and hour. Immediately upon the filing of the 
notice, the Majority Staff Director (serving as the clerk) of 
the Committee shall notify all Members of the Committee that 
such meeting will be held and inform them of its date and hour 
and the measure or matter to be considered, and only the 
measure or matter specified in that notice may be considered at 
that special meeting.

          Rule III.--Open Meetings and Hearings; Broadcasting

    (a) Open Meetings and Hearings.--Each meeting for the 
transaction of business, including the markup of legislation, 
and each hearing by the Committee or a Subcommittee shall be 
open to the public unless closed in accordance with clause 2(g) 
of House rule XI.
    (b) Broadcasting and Photography.--Whenever a Committee or 
Subcommittee meeting for the transaction of business, including 
the markup of legislation, or a hearing is open to the public, 
the Committee shall:
    (1) to the maximum extent practicable provide audio and 
video coverage of each hearing or meeting for the transaction 
of business in a manner that allows the public to easily listen 
to and view the proceedings and shall maintain the recordings 
of such coverage in a manner that is easily accessible to the 
public; and
    (2) make each hearing or meeting for the transaction of 
business open to coverage by television, radio, and still 
photography in accordance with clause 4 of House rule XI. When 
such audio and visual coverage is conducted in the Committee or 
Subcommittee, written notice to that effect shall be provided 
to each Member. The Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee 
shall not limit the number of television or still cameras 
permitted in a hearing or meeting room to fewer than two 
representatives from each medium (except for legitimate space 
or safety considerations, in which case pool coverage shall be 
authorized).
    (c) Closed Meetings--Attendees.--No person other than 
Members of the Committee or Subcommittee and such congressional 
staff and departmental representatives as the Committee or 
Subcommittee may authorize shall be present at any business or 
markup session that has been closed to the public as provided 
in clause 2(g)(1) of House rule XI.
    (d) Addressing the Committee.--A Committee Member may 
address the Committee or a Subcommittee on any bill, motion, or 
other matter under consideration (See Committee rule VIII (e) 
relating to questioning a witness at a hearing). The time a 
Member may address the Committee or Subcommittee for any such 
purpose shall be limited to 5 minutes, except that this time 
limit may be waived by unanimous consent. A Member shall also 
be limited in his or her remarks to the subject matter under 
consideration, unless the Member receives unanimous consent to 
extend his or her remarks beyond such subject.
    (e) Meetings to Begin Promptly.--Subject to the presence of 
a quorum, each meeting or hearing of the Committee and its 
subcommittees shall begin promptly at the time so stipulated in 
the public announcement of the meeting or hearing.
    (f) Prohibition on Proxy Voting.--No vote by any Member of 
the Committee or Subcommittee with respect to any measure or 
matter may be cast by proxy.
    (g) Location of Persons at Meetings.--No person other than 
the Committee or Subcommittee Members and Committee or 
Subcommittee staff may be seated in the rostrum area during a 
meeting of the Committee or Subcommittee unless by unanimous 
consent of Committee or Subcommittee.
    (h) Consideration of Amendments and Motions.--A Member, 
upon request, shall be recognized by the Chairman to address 
the Committee or Subcommittee at a meeting for a period limited 
to 5 minutes on behalf of an amendment or motion offered by the 
Member or another Member, or upon any other matter under 
consideration, unless the Member receives unanimous consent to 
extend the time limit. Every amendment or motion made in 
Committee or Subcommittee shall, upon the demand of any Member 
present, be reduced to writing, and a copy thereof shall be 
made available to all Members present. Such amendment or motion 
shall not be pending before the Committee or Subcommittee or 
voted on until the requirements of this paragraph have been 
met.
    (i) Demanding Record Vote.--
          (1) A record vote of the Committee or Subcommittee on 
        a question or action shall be ordered on a demand by 
        one-fifth of the Members present.
          (2) The Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee may 
        postpone further proceedings when a record vote is 
        ordered on the question of approving a measure or 
        matter or on adopting an amendment. If the Chairman 
        postpones further proceedings:
                  (A) the Chairman may resume such postponed 
                proceedings, after giving Members adequate 
                notice, at a time chosen in consultation with 
                the Ranking Minority Member; and
                  (B) notwithstanding any intervening order for 
                the previous question, the underlying 
                proposition on which proceedings were postponed 
                shall remain subject to further debate or 
                amendment to the same extent as when the 
                question was postponed.
    (j) Submission of Motions or Amendments in Advance of 
Business Meetings.--The Committee and Subcommittee Chairman may 
request and Committee and Subcommittee Members should, insofar 
as practicable, cooperate in providing copies of proposed 
amendments or motions to the Chairman and the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee or the Subcommittee twenty-four hours 
before a Committee or Subcommittee business meeting.
    (k) Points of Order.--No point of order against the hearing 
or meeting procedures of the Committee or Subcommittee shall be 
entertained unless it is made in a timely fashion.
    (l) Limitation on Committee Sittings.--The Committee or 
subcommittees may not sit during a joint session of the House 
and Senate or during a recess when a joint meeting of the House 
and Senate is in progress.
    (m) Prohibition of Wireless Telephones.--Use of wireless 
phones for vocal conversation during a Committee or 
Subcommittee hearing or meeting is prohibited.

                           Rule IV.--Quorums

    (a) Working Quorum.--One-third of the Members of the 
Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for taking 
any action, other than as noted in paragraphs (b) and (c).
    (b) Majority Quorum.--A majority of the Members of the 
Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for:
          (1) the reporting of a bill, resolution, or other 
        measure (See clause 2(h)(1) of House rule XI, and 
        Committee rule IX);
          (2) the closing of a meeting or hearing to the public 
        pursuant to clauses 2(g), 2(k)(5), and 2(k)(7) of House 
        rule XI;
          (3) the authorizing of a subpoena as provided in 
        clause 2(m)(3) of House rule XI (See also Committee 
        rule VII); and
          (4) as where required by a Rule of the House.
    (c) Quorum for Taking Testimony.--Two Members of the 
Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for the 
purpose of taking testimony and receiving evidence.

                            Rule V.--Records

    (a) Maintenance of Records.--The Committee shall keep a 
complete record of all Committee and Subcommittee action which 
shall include:
          (1) in the case of any meeting or hearing 
        transcripts, a substantially verbatim account of 
        remarks actually made during the proceedings, subject 
        only to technical, grammatical, and typographical 
        corrections authorized by the person making the remarks 
        involved, and
          (2) written minutes, which shall include a record of 
        all Committee and Subcommittee action, a record of all 
        votes on any question, and a tally on all record votes.
          The result of each such record vote shall be made 
        publicly available in electronic form within 48 hours 
        of such record vote. Not later than 24 hours after 
        adoption of an amendment, or 48 hours after the 
        disposition or withdrawal of any other amendment, to a 
        measure or matter, the chair of the Committee shall 
        cause the text of such amendment adopted thereto to be 
        made publicly available in electronic form. Information 
        so available for public inspection shall include a 
        description of the amendment, motion, order, or other 
        proposition; the name of each Member voting for and 
        each Member voting against such amendment, motion, 
        order, or other proposition; and the names of those 
        Members present but not voting.
    (b) Access to and Correction of Records.--Any public 
witness, or person authorized by such witness, during Committee 
office hours in the Committee offices and within 10 calendar 
days of the close of hearings, may obtain a transcript copy of 
that public witness's testimony and make such technical, 
grammatical, and typographical corrections as authorized by the 
person making the remarks involved as will not alter the nature 
of testimony given. There shall be prompt return of such 
corrected copy of the transcript to the Committee. Members of 
the Committee or Subcommittee shall receive copies of 
transcripts for their prompt review and correction and prompt 
return to the Committee. The Committee or Subcommittee may 
order the printing of a hearing record without the corrections 
of any Member or witness if it determines that such Member or 
witness has been afforded a reasonable time in which to make 
such corrections and further delay would seriously impede the 
consideration of the legislative action that is subject of the 
hearing. The record of a hearing shall be closed 10 calendar 
days after the last oral testimony, unless the Committee or 
Subcommittee determines otherwise. Any person requesting to 
file a statement for the record of a hearing must so request 
before the hearing concludes and must file the statement before 
the record is closed, unless the Committee or Subcommittee 
determines otherwise. The Committee or Subcommittee may reject 
any statement in light of its length or its tendency to defame, 
degrade, or incriminate any person.
    (c) Property of the House.--All Committee and Subcommittee 
records (including hearings data, charts, and files) shall be 
kept separate and distinct from the congressional office 
records of the Members serving as Chairman. Such records shall 
be the property of the House, and all Members of the House 
shall have access thereto. The Majority Staff Director shall 
promptly notify the Chairman and the Ranking Minority Member of 
any request for access to such records.
    (d) Availability of Archived Records.--The records of the 
Committee at the National Archives and Records Administration 
shall be made available for public use in accordance with House 
rule VII. The Chairman shall notify the Ranking Minority Member 
of the Committee of the need for a Committee order pursuant to 
clause 3(b)(3) or clause 4(b) of such House rule, to withhold a 
record otherwise available.
    (e) Special Rules for Certain Records and Proceedings.--A 
stenographic record of a business meeting of the Committee or 
Subcommittee may be kept, and thereafter may be published, if 
the Chairman of the Committee, after consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member, determines there is need for such a 
record. The proceedings of the Committee or Subcommittee in a 
closed meeting, evidence or testimony in such meeting, shall 
not be divulged unless otherwise determined by a majority of 
the Committee or Subcommittee.
    (f) Electronic Availability of Committee Publications.--To 
the maximum extent feasible, the Committee shall make its 
publications available in electronic form.

                     Rule VI.--Power to Sit and Act

    For the purpose of carrying out any of its function and 
duties under House rules X and XI, the Committee and each of 
its subcommittees is authorized to sit and act at such times 
and places within the United States whether the House is in 
session, has recessed, or has adjourned and to hold such 
hearings.

              Rule VII.--Subpoenas, Depositions, and Oaths

    (a) Issuance of Subpoenas.--In accordance with clause 2(m) 
of House rule XI, a subpoena may be authorized and issued by a 
majority of the Committee or by the Chairman in consultation 
with the Ranking Minority Member. Such consultation shall occur 
at least 48 hours in advance of a subpoena being issued under 
such authority. Authorized subpoenas shall be signed by the 
Chairman of the Committee or by any Member designated by the 
Committee.
    (b) Oaths.--The Chairman of the Committee, or any member of 
the Committee designated by the Chairman, may administer oaths 
to any witnesses.
    (c) Deposition Authority.--
          (1) The Chairman, upon consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member, may order the taking of depositions, 
        including pursuant to subpoena, by a Member or counsel 
        of the Committee.
          (2) Depositions taken under the authority prescribed 
        in this subsection shall be subject to regulations 
        issued by the chair of the Committee on Rules and 
        printed in the Congressional Record.''
          (3) The Regulations for the Use of Deposition 
        Authority as issued by the Committee on Rules pursuant 
        to H. Res. 5 titled--Adopting the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives for the One Hundred Eighteenth 
        Congress, and for other purposes--are incorporated by 
        reference and shall be considered the rules of the 
        Committee.

                     Rule VIII.--Hearing Procedures

    (a) Power to Hear.--For the purpose of carrying out any of 
its functions and duties under House rules X and XI, the 
Committee and its subcommittees are authorized to sit and hold 
hearings at any time or place within the United States whether 
the House is in session, has recessed, or has adjourned. (See 
Committee rule VI and paragraph (f) of Committee rule XI for 
provisions relating to Subcommittee hearings and meetings.)
    (b) Announcement.--The Chairman of the Committee shall, 
after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee, make a public announcement of the date, place, and 
subject matter of any Committee hearing at least 1 week before 
the commencement of the hearing. The Chairman of a Subcommittee 
shall schedule a hearing only after consultation with the 
Chairman of the Committee and the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Subcommittee. After such consultation, the Chairman of the 
Subcommittee shall consult the Chairmen of the other 
subcommittees and shall request the Majority Staff Director to 
make a public announcement of the date, place, and subject 
matter of such hearing at least 1 week before the hearing. If 
the Chairman of the Committee or the Subcommittee, with 
concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or 
Subcommittee, determines there is good cause to begin the 
hearing sooner, or if the Committee or Subcommittee so 
determines by majority vote, a quorum being present for the 
transaction of business, the Chairman of the Committee or 
Subcommittee, as appropriate, shall request the Majority Staff 
Director to make such public announcement at the earliest 
possible date. The clerk of the Committee shall promptly notify 
the Daily Digest Clerk of the Congressional Record and shall 
promptly enter the appropriate information into the Committee 
scheduling service of the House information system as soon as 
possible after such public announcement is made.
    (c) Scheduling of Witnesses.--
          (1) Except as otherwise provided in this rule, the 
        scheduling of witnesses and determination of the time 
        allowed for the presentation of testimony at hearings 
        shall be at the discretion of the Chairman of the 
        Committee or Subcommittee, unless a majority of the 
        Committee or Subcommittee determines otherwise.
          (2) The Regulations for the remote participation of 
        Committee witnesses as issued by the Committee on Rules 
        pursuant to H. Res. 5 titled--Adopting the Rules of the 
        House of Representatives for the One Hundred Eighteenth 
        Congress, and for other purposes--are incorporated by 
        reference and shall be considered the rules of the 
        Committee.
    (d) Written Statement; Oral Testimony.--(1) Each witness 
who is to appear before the Committee or a Subcommittee, shall 
insofar as practicable file with the Majority Staff Director of 
the Committee, at least 2 working days before the day of his or 
her appearance, a written statement of proposed testimony. 
Witnesses shall provide sufficient copies of their statement 
for distribution to Committee or Subcommittee Members, staff, 
and the news media. Insofar as practicable, the Committee or 
Subcommittee staff shall distribute such written statements to 
all Members of the Committee or Subcommittee as soon as they 
are received, as well as any official reports from departments 
and agencies on such subject matter. All witnesses may be 
limited in their oral presentations to brief summaries of their 
statements within the time allotted to them at the discretion 
of the Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee, in light of 
the nature of the testimony and the length of time available.
    (2) As noted in paragraph (b) of Committee rule VII, the 
Chairman of the Committee, or any Member designated by the 
Chairman, may administer an oath to any witness.
    ``(3) In the case of a witness appearing in a non-
governmental capacity, a written statement of proposed 
testimony shall include:
          (i) a curriculum vitae;
          (ii) a disclosure of the amount and source (by agency 
        and program) of any Federal grant (or subgrant thereof) 
        or contract (or subcontract thereof) received during 
        the past 36 months by the witness or by an entity 
        represented by the witness;
          (iii) a disclosure of the amount and country of 
        origin of any payment or contract related to the 
        subject matter of the hearing originating with a 
        foreign government received during the past 36 months 
        by the witness or by an entity represented by the 
        witness; and
          (iv) a disclosure of whether the witness is a 
        fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a director, 
        officer, advisor, or resident agency) of any 
        organization or entity that has an interest in the 
        subject matter of the hearing.
    Such statements, with appropriate redactions to protect the 
privacy of witnesses, shall be made publicly available in 
electronic form 24 hours before the witness appears to the 
extent practicable, but not later than 1 day after the witness 
appears.
    (e) Questioning of Witnesses.--Committee or Subcommittee 
Members may question witnesses only when they have been 
recognized by the Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee for 
that purpose. Each Member so recognized shall be limited to 
questioning a witness for 5 minutes until such time as each 
Member of the Committee or Subcommittee who so desires has had 
an opportunity to question the witness for 5 minutes; and 
thereafter the Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee may 
limit the time of a further round of questioning after giving 
due consideration to the importance of the subject matter and 
the length of time available. All questions put to witnesses 
shall be germane to the measure or matter under consideration. 
Unless a majority of the Committee or Subcommittee determines 
otherwise, no Committee or Subcommittee staff shall interrogate 
witnesses.
    (f) Extended Questioning for Designated Members.--
Notwithstanding paragraph (e), the Chairman and Ranking 
Minority Member may designate an equal number of Members from 
each party to question a witness for a period not longer than 
60 minutes.
    (g) Witnesses for the Minority.--When any hearing is 
conducted by the Committee or any Subcommittee upon any measure 
or matter, the minority party Members on the Committee or 
Subcommittee shall be entitled, upon request to the Chairman by 
a majority of those minority Members before the completion of 
such hearing, to call witnesses selected by the minority to 
testify with respect to that measure or matter during at least 
1 day of hearing thereon as provided in clause 2(j)(1) of House 
rule XI.
    (h) Summary of Subject Matter.--Upon announcement of a 
hearing, to the extent practicable, the Committee shall make 
available immediately to all Members of the Committee a concise 
summary of the subject matter (including legislative reports 
and other material) under consideration. In addition, upon 
announcement of a hearing and subsequently as they are 
received, the Chairman of the Committee or Subcommittee shall, 
to the extent practicable, make available to the Members of the 
Committee any official reports from departments and agencies on 
such matter. (See paragraph (f) of Committee rule XI.)
    (i) Open Hearings.--Each hearing conducted by the Committee 
or Subcommittee shall be open to the public, including radio, 
television, and still photography coverage, except as provided 
in clause 4 of House rule XI (See also paragraph (b) of 
Committee rule III.). In any event, no Member of the House may 
be excluded from nonparticipatory attendance at any hearing 
unless the House by majority vote shall authorize the Committee 
or Subcommittee, for purposes of a particular series of 
hearings on a particular bill or resolution or on a particular 
subject of investigation, to close its hearings to Members by 
means of the above procedure.
    (j) Hearings and Reports.--(1)(i) The Chairman of the 
Committee or Subcommittee at a hearing shall announce in an 
opening statement the subject of the investigation. A copy of 
the Committee rules (and the applicable provisions of clause 2 
of House rule XI, regarding hearing procedures, an excerpt of 
which appears in Appendix A thereto) shall be made available to 
each witness upon request. Witnesses at hearings may be 
accompanied by their own counsel for the purpose of advising 
them concerning their constitutional rights. The Chairman of 
the Committee or Subcommittee may punish breaches of order and 
decorum, and of professional ethics on the part of counsel, by 
censure and exclusion from the hearings; but only the full 
Committee may cite the offender to the House for contempt.
    (ii) Whenever it is asserted by a Member of the Committee 
that the evidence or testimony at a hearing may tend to defame, 
degrade, or incriminate any person, or it is asserted by a 
witness that the evidence or testimony that the witness would 
give at a hearing may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
the witness, such testimony or evidence shall be presented in 
executive session, notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 
(i) of this rule, if by a majority of those present, there 
being in attendance the requisite number required under the 
Rules of the Committee to be present for the purpose of taking 
testimony, the Committee or Subcommittee determines that such 
evidence or testimony may tend to defame, degrade, or 
incriminate any person. The Committee or Subcommittee shall 
afford a person an opportunity to voluntarily appear as a 
witness; and the Committee or Subcommittee shall receive and 
shall dispose of requests from such person to subpoena 
additional witnesses.
    (iii) No evidence or testimony taken in executive session 
may be released or used in public sessions without the consent 
of the Committee or Subcommittee. In the discretion of the 
Committee or Subcommittee, witnesses may submit brief and 
pertinent statements in writing for inclusion in the record. 
The Committee or Subcommittee is the sole judge of the 
pertinence of testimony and evidence adduced at its hearings. A 
witness may obtain a transcribed copy of his or her testimony 
given at a public session. If given at an executive session, a 
transcribed copy of testimony may be obtained when authorized 
by the Committee or Subcommittee. (See paragraph (c) of 
Committee rule V.)
    (2) A proposed investigative or oversight report shall be 
considered as read if it has been available to the Members of 
the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such day) in advance of their consideration.

            Rule IX.--The Reporting of Bills and Resolutions

    (a) Filing of Reports.--The Chairman shall report or cause 
to be reported promptly to the House any bill, resolution, or 
other measure approved by the Committee and shall take or cause 
to be taken all necessary steps to bring such bill, resolution, 
or other measure to a vote. No bill, resolution, or measure 
shall be reported from the Committee unless a majority of the 
Committee is actually present. A Committee report on any bill, 
resolution, or other measure approved by the Committee shall be 
filed within 7 calendar days (not counting days on which the 
House is not in session) after the day on which there has been 
filed with the Majority Staff Director of the Committee a 
written request, signed by a majority of the Committee, for the 
reporting of that bill or resolution. The Majority Staff 
Director of the Committee shall notify the Chairman immediately 
when such a request is filed.
    (b) Content of Reports.--Each Committee report on any bill 
or resolution approved by the Committee shall include as 
separately identified sections:
          (1) a statement of the intent or purpose of the bill 
        or resolution;
          (2) a statement describing the need for such bill or 
        resolution;
          (3) a statement of Committee and Subcommittee 
        consideration of the measure, including a summary of 
        amendments and motions offered and the actions taken 
        thereon;
          (4) the results of each record vote on any amendment 
        in the Committee and Subcommittee and on the motion to 
        report the measure or matter, including the total 
        number of votes cast for and against, and the names of 
        Members voting for and against such amendment or motion 
        (See clause 3(b) of House rule XIII);
          (5) the oversight findings and recommendations of the 
        Committee with respect to the subject matter of the 
        bill or resolution, as required pursuant to clause 
        3(c)(1) of House rule XIII and clause 2(b)(1) of House 
        rule X;
          (6) the detailed statement described in House rule 
        XIII clause 3(c)(2) and section 308(a) of the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974 if the bill or 
        resolution provides new budget authority (other than 
        continuing appropriations), new spending authority 
        described in section 401(c)(2) of such Act, new credit 
        authority, or an increase or decrease in revenues or 
        tax expenditures, except that the estimates with 
        respect to new budget authority shall include, when 
        practicable, a comparison of the total estimated 
        funding level for the relevant program (or programs) to 
        the appropriate levels under current law;
          (7) the estimate of costs and comparison of such 
        estimates, if any, prepared by the Director of the 
        Congressional Budget Office in connection with such 
        bill or resolution pursuant to section 402 of the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974 if submitted in timely 
        fashion to the Committee;
          (8) a statement of general performance goals and 
        objectives, including outcome-related goals and 
        objectives, for which the measure authorizes funding;
          (9) an estimate by the Committee of the costs that 
        would be incurred in carrying out the bill or joint 
        resolution in the fiscal year in which it is reported 
        and in each of the five fiscal years following that 
        fiscal year (or for the authorized duration of any 
        program authorized by the bill or joint resolution if 
        less than five years) (see clause 3(d)(1) of House rule 
        XIII), together with--(i) a comparison of these 
        estimates with those made and submitted to the 
        Committee by any Government agency when practicable and 
        (ii) a comparison of the total estimated funding level 
        for the relevant program (or programs) with appropriate 
        levels under current law (The provisions of this clause 
        do not apply if a cost estimate and comparison prepared 
        by the Director of the Congressional Budget Office 
        under section 402 of the Congressional Budget Act of 
        1974 has been timely submitted prior to the filing of 
        the report and included in the report);
          (10) a list of congressional earmarks, limited tax 
        benefits, and limited tariff benefits in the bill or in 
        the report (and the name of any Member, Delegate, or 
        Resident Commissioner who submitted a request to the 
        Committee for each respective item included in such 
        list) or a statement that the proposition contains no 
        congressional earmarks, limited tax benefits, or 
        limited tariff benefits;
          (11) the changes in existing law (if any) shown in 
        accordance with clause 3 of House rule XIII;
          (12) the determination required pursuant to section 
        5(b) of P.L. 92-463, if the legislation reported 
        establishes or authorizes the establishment of an 
        advisory committee;
          (13) the information on Federal and intergovernmental 
        mandates required by section 423(c) and (d) of the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974, as added by the 
        Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (P.L. 104-4);
          (14) a statement regarding the applicability of 
        section 102(b)(3) of the Congressional Accountability 
        Act (P.L. 104-1);
          (15) a statement indicating whether any provision of 
        the measure establishes or reauthorizes a program of 
        the Federal Government known to be duplicative of 
        another Federal program. The Statement shall at a 
        minimum explain whether--
                  (A) any such program was included in any 
                report from the Government Accountability 
                Office to Congress pursuant to section 21 of 
                P.L. 111-139; or
                  (B) the most recent catalog of Federal 
                Domestic Assistance, published pursuant to the 
                Federal Program Information Act (P.L. 95-220, 
                as amended by P.L. 98-169), identified other 
                programs related to the program established or 
                reauthorized by the measure; and
          (16) a statement estimating the number of directed 
        rule makings required by the measure.
    (c) Supplemental, Minority, Additional, or Dissenting 
Views.--If, at the time of approval of any measure or matter by 
the Committee, any Member of the Committee gives notice of 
intention to file supplemental, minority, additional, or 
dissenting views (including in electronic form), all Members 
shall be entitled to not less than 2 subsequent calendar days 
(excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when 
the House is in session on such date) in which to file such 
written and signed views with the Clerk of the Committee. When 
time guaranteed by this paragraph has expired (or, if sooner, 
when all separate views have been received), the Committee may 
arrange to file its report with the Clerk of the House not 
later than 1 hour after the expiration of such time. All such 
views (in accordance with clause 2(l) of House rule XI and 
clause 3(a)(1) of House rule XIII), as filed by one or more 
Members of the Committee, shall be included within and made a 
part of the report filed by the Committee with respect to that 
bill or resolution.
    (d) Printing of Reports.--The report of the Committee on 
the measure or matter noted in paragraph (a) above shall be 
printed in a single volume, which shall:
          (1) include all supplemental, minority, additional, 
        or dissenting views that have been submitted by the 
        time of the filing of the report; and
          (2) bear on its cover a recital that any such 
        supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
        (and any material submitted under clause 3(a)(1) of 
        House rule XII) are included as part of the report.
    (e) Immediate Printing; Supplemental Reports.--Nothing in 
this rule shall preclude--
          (1) the immediate filing or printing of a Committee 
        report unless timely request for the opportunity to 
        file supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting 
        views has been made as provided by paragraph (c); or
        (2) the filing by the Committee of any supplemental 
        report on any bill or resolution that may be required 
        for the correction of any technical error in a previous 
        report made by the Committee on that bill or 
        resolution.
    (f) Availability of Printed Hearing Records.--For hearings 
held related to any reported bill or resolution, the Committee 
shall make every reasonable effort to have the record of such 
hearings printed and available for distribution to the Members 
of the House prior to the consideration of such bill or 
resolution by the House. Each printed hearing of the Committee 
or any of its subcommittees shall include a record of the 
attendance of the Members.
    (g) Committee Prints.--All Committee or Subcommittee prints 
or other Committee or Subcommittee documents, other than 
reports or prints of bills, that are prepared for public 
distribution shall be approved by the Chairman of the Committee 
or the Committee prior to public distribution.
    (h) Post Adjournment Filing of Committee Reports.--(1) 
After an adjournment of the last regular session of a Congress 
sine die, an investigative or oversight report approved by the 
Committee may be filed with the Clerk at any time, provided 
that if a Member gives notice at the time of approval of 
intention to file supplemental, minority, additional, or 
dissenting views, that Member shall be entitled to not less 
than 7 calendar days in which to submit such views for 
inclusion with the report.
    (2) After an adjournment of the last regular session of a 
Congress sine die, the Chairman of the Committee may file at 
any time with the Clerk the Committee's activity report for 
that Congress pursuant to clause 1(d)(1) of House rule XI 
without the approval of the Committee, provided that a copy of 
the report has been available to each Member of the Committee 
for at least 7 calendar days and the report includes any 
supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
submitted by a Member of the Committee.
    (3) All reports of committees may be delivered to the Clerk 
in electronic form.
    (i) Conference.--The Chairman is directed to offer a motion 
under clause 1 of House rule XXII whenever the Chairman 
considers it appropriate.

                  Rule X.--Other Committee Activities

    (a) Authorization and Oversight Plan.--
          (1) Not later than March 1 of the first session of a 
        Congress, the Committee shall, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Member, in a meeting that is open to the 
        public, adopt its authorization and oversight plan for 
        that Congress. Such plan shall be submitted 
        simultaneously to the Committee on Oversight and 
        Accountability and the Committee on House 
        Administration.
          (2) Each such plan shall include, with respect to 
        programs and agencies within the committee's 
        jurisdiction, and to the maximum extent practicable--
                  (A) a list of such programs or agencies with 
                lapsed authorizations that received funding in 
                the prior fiscal year or, in the case of a 
                program or agency with a permanent 
                authorization, which has not been subject to a 
                comprehensive review by the committee in the 
                prior three Congresses;
                  (B) a description of each such program or 
                agency to be authorized in the current 
                Congress;
                  (C) a description of each such program or 
                agency to be authorized in the next Congress, 
                if applicable;
                  (D) a description of any oversight to support 
                the authorization of each such program or 
                agency in the current Congress; and
                  (E) recommendations for changes to existing 
                law for moving such programs or agencies from 
                mandatory funding to discretionary 
                appropriations, where appropriate.
          (3) Each such plan may include, with respect to the 
        programs and agencies within the Committee's 
        jurisdiction--
                  (A) 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;
                  (B) 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
                  (C) a description of such other oversight 
                activities as the committee may consider 
                necessary.
          (4) In the development of such plan, the Chairman 
        shall coordinate with other committees of jurisdiction 
        to ensure that programs and agencies are subject to 
        routine, comprehensive authorization efforts.
          (5) The Committee and its appropriate subcommittees 
        shall review and study, on a continuing basis, the 
        impact or probable impact of tax policies affecting 
        subjects within its jurisdiction as provided in clause 
        2(c) of House rule X.
    (b) Annual Appropriations.--The Committee shall, in its 
consideration of all bills and joint resolutions of a public 
character within its jurisdiction, ensure that appropriations 
for continuing programs and activities of the Federal 
government and the District of Columbia government will be made 
annually to the maximum extent feasible and consistent with the 
nature, requirements, and objectives of the programs and 
activities involved. The Committee shall review, from time to 
time, each continuing program within its jurisdiction for which 
appropriations are not made annually in order to ascertain 
whether such program could be modified so that appropriations 
therefor would be made annually.
    (c) Budget Act Compliance: Views and Estimates (See 
Appendix B).--Not later than 6 weeks after the President 
submits his budget under section 1105(a) of Title 31, United 
States Code, or at such time as the Committee on the Budget may 
request, the Committee shall, submit to the Committee on the 
Budget (1) its views and estimates with respect to all matters 
to be set forth in the concurrent resolution on the budget for 
the ensuing fiscal year (under section 301 of the Congressional 
Budget Act of 1974) that are within its jurisdiction or 
functions; and (2) an estimate of the total amounts of new 
budget authority, and budget outlays resulting therefrom, to be 
provided or authorized in all bills and resolutions within its 
jurisdiction that it intends to be effective during that fiscal 
year.
    (d) Budget Act Compliance: Recommended Changes.--Whenever 
the Committee is directed in a concurrent resolution on the 
budget to determine and recommend changes in laws, bills, or 
resolutions under the reconciliation process, it shall promptly 
make such determination and recommendations and report a 
reconciliation bill or resolution (or both) to the House or 
submit such recommendations to the Committee on the Budget, in 
accordance with the Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
    (e) Conference Committees.--Whenever in the legislative 
process it becomes necessary to appoint conferees, the Chairman 
shall, after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, 
determine the number of conferees the Chairman deems most 
suitable and then recommend to the Speaker as conferees, in 
keeping with the number to be appointed by the Speaker as 
provided in clause 11 of House rule I, the names of those 
Members of the Committee of not less than a majority who 
generally supported the House position and who were primarily 
responsible for the legislation. The Chairman shall, to the 
fullest extent feasible, include those Members of the Committee 
who were the principal proponents of the major provisions of 
the bill as it passed the House and such other Committee 
Members of the majority party as the Chairman may designate in 
consultation with the Members of the majority party. Such 
recommendations shall provide a ratio of majority party Members 
to minority party Members no less favorable to the majority 
party than the ratio of majority party Members to minority 
party Members on the Committee. In making recommendations of 
Minority Party Members as conferees, the Chairman shall consult 
with the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee.
    (f) Hearing on Waste, Fraud, and Abuse.--(1) The Committee, 
or a Subcommittee, shall hold at least one hearing during each 
120-day period following the establishment of the Committee on 
the topic of waste, fraud, abuse, or mismanagement in 
Government programs which the Committee may authorize.
    (2) A hearing described in subparagraph (1) shall include a 
focus on the most egregious instances of waste, fraud, abuse, 
or mismanagement as documented by any report the Committee has 
received from a Federal Office of the Inspector General or the 
Comptroller General of the United States.
    (g) Hearing on Agency Financial Statements.--The Committee 
or a Subcommittee, shall hold at least one hearing in any 
session in which the Committee has received disclaimers of 
agency financial statements from auditors of any Federal agency 
that the Committee may authorize to hear testimony on such 
disclaimers from representatives of any such agency.
    (h) Hearing on GAO High-Risk-List.--The Committee or a 
Subcommittee, shall hold at least one hearing on issues raised 
by reports issued by the Comptroller General of the United 
States indicating that Federal programs or operations that the 
Committee may authorize are at high risk for waste, fraud, and 
mismanagement, known as the `high-risk-list' or the `high-risk 
series'.
    (i) Member Day Hearing.--During the first session of a 
Congress, the Committee will hold a hearing at which it 
receives testimony from Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
Commissioner on proposed legislation within its jurisdiction.
    (j) Activities Report.--(1) Not later than January 2 of 
each odd-numbered year, the Committee shall submit to the House 
a report on the activities of the Committee. After adjournment 
sine die of the last regular session of a Congress, or after 
December 15 of an even-numbered year, whichever occurs first, 
the Chair may file the report, a copy of which shall be made 
available to each Member of the Committee for at least 7 
calendar days, with the Clerk of the House at any time.
    (2) Such report shall include separate sections summarizing 
the legislative and oversight activities of the Committee 
during that Congress.
    (3) The oversight section of such report shall include a 
summary of the oversight plans submitted by the Committee 
pursuant to clause 2(d) of House rule X, a summary of the 
actions taken and recommendations made with respect to each 
such plan, and a summary of any additional oversight activities 
undertaken by the Committee, and any recommendations made or 
actions taken with respect thereto.

                        Rule XI.--Subcommittees

    (a) Number and Composition.--There shall be such 
subcommittees as specified in paragraph (c) of this rule. Each 
of such subcommittees shall be composed of the number of 
Members set forth in paragraph (c) of this rule, including ex 
officio Members.\1\ The Chairman may create additional 
subcommittees of an ad hoc nature as the Chairman determines to 
be appropriate, subject to any limitations provided for in the 
House Rules.
    (b) Ratios.--On each Subcommittee, there shall be a ratio 
of majority party Members to minority party Members which shall 
be consistent with the ratio on the full Committee. In 
calculating the ratio of majority party Members to minority 
party Members, there shall be included the ex officio Members 
of the subcommittees and ratios below reflect that fact.
    (c) Jurisdiction.--Each Subcommittee shall have the 
following general jurisdiction and number of Members:

General Farm Commodities, Risk Management, and Credit (25 members, 14 
        majority and 11 minority)

    Policies, statutes, and markets relating to commodities 
including barley, cotton, cottonseed, corn, grain sorghum, 
honey, mohair, oats, other oilseeds, peanuts, pulse crops, 
rice, soybeans, sugar, wheat, and wool; the Commodity Credit 
Corporation; risk management policies and statutes, including 
Federal Crop Insurance; producer data and privacy issues; 
agricultural credit; and related oversight of such issues.

Forestry (9 members, 5 majority and 4 minority)

    Policies and statutes relating to forestry and all forests 
under the jurisdiction of the Committee on Agriculture; 
regulatory issues impacting national forests; and related 
oversight of such issues.

Conservation, Research, and Biotechnology (13 members, 7 majority and 6 
        minority)

    Policies and statutes related to resource conservation; 
pest and disease management, including pesticides; 
bioterrorism; adulteration and quarantine matters; research, 
education, and extension; biotechnology; and related oversight 
of such issues.

Nutrition, Foreign Agriculture, and Horticulture (19 members, 10 
        majority and 9 minority)

    Policies, statutes, and markets relating to horticulture, 
including fruits, vegetables, nuts, and ornamentals; bees; and 
organic agriculture; policies and statutes relating to 
marketing and promotion orders; policies and statutes relating 
to nutrition, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance 
Program and domestic commodity distribution and consumer 
initiative; policies and statutes related to foreign 
agricultural assistance and trade promotion; and related 
oversight of such issues.

Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry (21 members, 11 majority and 10 minority)

    Policies, statutes, and markets relating to all livestock, 
poultry, dairy, and seafood, including all products thereof; 
the inspection, marketing, and promotion of such commodities 
and products; aquaculture; animal welfare; grazing; and related 
oversight of such issues.

Commodity Markets, Digital Assets, and Rural Development (25 members, 
        13 majority and 12 minority)

    Policies, statutes, and markets relating to commodity 
exchanges; rural development; energy; rural electrification; 
and related oversight of such issues.
    (d) Referral of Legislation.--
    (1)(a) In General.--All bills, resolutions, and other 
matters referred to the Committee shall be referred to all 
subcommittees of appropriate jurisdiction within 2 weeks after 
being referred to the Committee. After consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member, the Chairman may determine that the 
Committee will consider certain bills, resolutions, or other 
matters.
    (b) Trade Matters.--Unless action is otherwise taken under 
subparagraph (3), bills, resolutions, and other matters 
referred to the Committee relating to foreign agriculture, 
foreign food or commodity assistance, and foreign trade and 
marketing issues will be considered by the Committee.
    (2) The Chairman, by a majority vote of the Committee, may 
discharge a Subcommittee from further consideration of any 
bill, resolution, or other matter referred to the Subcommittee 
and have such bill, resolution, or other matter considered by 
the Committee. The Committee having referred a bill, 
resolution, or other matter to a Subcommittee in accordance 
with this rule may discharge such Subcommittee from further 
consideration thereof at any time by a vote of the majority 
Members of the Committee for the Committee's direct 
consideration or for reference to another Subcommittee.
    (3) Unless the Committee, a quorum being present, decides 
otherwise by a majority vote, the Chairman may refer bills, 
resolutions, legislation, or other matters not specifically 
within the jurisdiction of a Subcommittee, or that is within 
the jurisdiction of more than one Subcommittee, jointly or 
exclusively as the Chairman deems appropriate, including 
concurrently to the subcommittees with jurisdiction, 
sequentially to the subcommittees with jurisdiction (subject to 
any time limits deemed appropriate), divided by subject matter 
among the subcommittees with jurisdiction, or to an ad hoc 
subcommittee appointed by the Chairman for the purpose of 
considering the matter and reporting to the Committee thereon, 
or make such other provisions deemed appropriate.
    (e) Participation and Service of Committee Members on 
Subcommittees.--(1) The Chairman and the Ranking Minority 
Member shall serve as ex officio Members of all subcommittees 
and shall have the right to vote on all matters before the 
subcommittees. The Chairman and the Ranking Minority Member may 
not be counted for the purpose of establishing a quorum.
    (2) Any Member of the Committee who is not a Member of the 
Subcommittee may have the privilege of sitting and 
nonparticipatory attendance at Subcommittee hearings or 
meetings in accordance with clause 2(g)(2) of House rule XI. 
Such Member may not:
          (i) vote on any matter;
          (ii) be counted for the purpose of a establishing a 
        quorum;
          (iii) participate in questioning a witness under the 
        5-Minute Rule, unless permitted to do so by the 
        Subcommittee Chairman in consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member or a majority of the Subcommittee, a 
        quorum being present;
          (iv) raise points of order; or
          (v) offer amendments or motions.
    (f) Subcommittee Hearings and Meetings.--(1) Each 
Subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold hearings, receive 
evidence, and make recommendations to the Committee on all 
matters referred to it or under its jurisdiction after 
consultation by the Subcommittee Chairman with the Committee 
Chairman. (See Committee rule VIII.)
    (2) After consultation with the Committee Chairman, 
Subcommittee Chairmen shall set dates for hearings and meetings 
of their subcommittees and shall request the Majority Staff 
Director to make any announcement relating thereto. (See 
paragraph (b) of Committee rule VIII.) In setting the dates, 
the Committee Chairman and Subcommittee Chairman shall consult 
with other Subcommittee Chairmen and relevant Committee and 
Subcommittee Ranking Minority Members in an effort to avoid 
simultaneously scheduling Committee and Subcommittee meetings 
or hearings to the extent practicable.
    (3) Notice of all Subcommittee meetings shall be provided 
to the Chairman and the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee by the Majority Staff Director.
    (4) Subcommittees may hold meetings or hearings outside of 
the House if the Chairman of the Committee and other 
Subcommittee Chairmen and the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Subcommittee is consulted in advance to ensure that there is no 
scheduling problem. However, the majority of the Committee may 
authorize such meeting or hearing.
    (5) The provisions regarding notice and the agenda of 
Committee meetings under paragraph (a) of Committee rule II and 
special or additional meetings under paragraph (b) of Committee 
rule II shall apply to Subcommittee meetings.
    (6) If a vacancy occurs in a Subcommittee chairmanship, the 
Chairman may set the dates for hearings and meetings of the 
Subcommittee during the period of vacancy. The Chairman may 
also appoint an acting Subcommittee Chairman until the vacancy 
is filled.
    (g) Subcommittee Action.--(1) Any bill, resolution, 
recommendation, or other matter forwarded to the Committee by a 
Subcommittee shall be promptly forwarded by the Subcommittee 
Chairman or any Subcommittee Member authorized to do so by the 
Subcommittee.
    (2) Upon receipt of such recommendation, the Majority Staff 
Director of the Committee shall promptly advise all Members of 
the Committee of the Subcommittee action.
    (3) The Committee shall not consider any matters 
recommended by subcommittees until 2 calendar days have elapsed 
from the date of action, unless the Chairman or a majority of 
the Committee determines otherwise.
    (h) Subcommittee Investigations.--No investigation shall be 
initiated by a Subcommittee without prior consultation with the 
Chairman of the Committee or a majority of the Committee.

             Rule XII.--Committee Budget, Staff, and Travel

    (a) Committee Budget.--The Chairman, in consultation with 
the majority Members of the Committee and the minority Members 
of the Committee, shall prepare a preliminary budget for each 
session of the Congress. Such budget shall include necessary 
amounts for staff personnel, travel, investigation, and other 
expenses of the Committee and subcommittees. After consultation 
with the Ranking Minority Member, the Chairman shall include an 
amount budgeted to minority Members for staff under their 
direction and supervision. Thereafter, the Chairman shall 
combine such proposals into a consolidated Committee budget and 
shall take whatever action is necessary to have such budget 
duly authorized by the House.
    (b) Committee Staff.--
          (1) The Chairman shall appoint and determine the 
        remuneration of, and may remove, the professional and 
        clerical employees of the Committee not assigned to the 
        minority. The professional and clerical staff of the 
        Committee not assigned to the minority shall be under 
        the general supervision and direction of the Chairman, 
        who shall establish and assign the duties and 
        responsibilities of such staff members and delegate 
        such authority as he or she determines appropriate. 
        (See clause 9 of House rule X)
          (2) The Ranking Minority Member of the Committee 
        shall appoint and determine the remuneration of, and 
        may remove, the professional and clerical staff 
        assigned to the minority within the budget approved for 
        such purposes. The professional and clerical staff 
        assigned to the minority shall be under the general 
        supervision and direction of the Ranking Minority 
        Member of the Committee who may delegate such authority 
        as he or she determines appropriate.
          (3) From the funds made available for the appointment 
        of Committee staff pursuant to any primary or 
        additional expense resolution, the Chairman shall 
        ensure that each Subcommittee is adequately funded and 
        staffed to discharge its responsibilities and that the 
        minority party is fairly treated in the appointment of 
        such staff (See clause 6(d) of House rule X).
    (c) Committee Travel.--(1) Consistent with the primary 
expense resolution and such additional expense resolution as 
may have been approved, the provisions of this rule shall 
govern official travel of Committee Members and Committee staff 
regarding domestic and foreign travel (See clause 8 of House 
rule X). Official travel for any Member or any Committee staff 
member shall be paid only upon the prior authorization of the 
Chairman. Official travel may be authorized by the Chairman for 
any Committee Member and any Committee staff member in 
connection with the attendance of hearings conducted by the 
Committee and its subcommittees and meetings, conferences, 
facility inspections, and investigations which involve 
activities or subject matter relevant to the general 
jurisdiction of the Committee. Before such authorization is 
given there shall be submitted to the Chairman in writing the 
following:
                  (i) The purpose of the official travel;
                  (ii) The dates during which the official 
                travel is to be made and the date or dates of 
                the event for which the official travel is 
                being made;
                  (iii) The location of the event for which the 
                official travel is to be made; and
                  (iv) The names of Members and Committee staff 
                seeking authorization.
          (2) In the case of official travel of Members and 
        staff of a Subcommittee to hearings, meetings, 
        conferences, facility inspections, and investigations 
        involving activities or subject matter under the 
        jurisdiction of such Subcommittee to be paid for out of 
        funds allocated to the Committee, prior authorization 
        must be obtained from the Subcommittee Chairman and the 
        full Committee Chairman. Such prior authorization shall 
        be given by the Chairman only upon the representation 
        by the applicable Subcommittee Chairman in writing 
        setting forth those items enumerated in clause (1).
          (3) Within 60 days of the conclusion of any official 
        travel authorized under this rule, there shall be 
        submitted to the Committee Chairman a written report 
        covering the information gained as a result of the 
        hearing, meeting, conference, facility inspection, or 
        investigation attended pursuant to such official 
        travel.
          (4) Local currencies owned by the United States shall 
        be made available to the Committee and its employees 
        engaged in carrying out their official duties outside 
        the United States, its territories or possessions. No 
        appropriated funds shall be expended for the purpose of 
        defraying expenses of Members of the Committee or its 
        employees in any country where local currencies are 
        available for this purpose, and the following 
        conditions shall apply with respect to their use of 
        such currencies;
                  (i) No Member or employee of the Committee 
                shall receive or expend local currencies for 
                subsistence in any country at a rate in excess 
                of the maximum per diem rate set forth in 
                applicable Federal law; and
                  (ii) Each Member or employee of the Committee 
                shall make an itemized report to the Chairman 
                within 60 days following the completion of 
                travel showing the dates each country was 
                visited, the amount of per diem furnished, the 
                cost of transportation furnished, and any funds 
                expended for any other official purpose, and 
                shall summarize in these categories the total 
                foreign currencies and appropriated funds 
                expended. All such individual reports shall be 
                filed by the Chairman with the Committee on 
                House Administration and shall be open to 
                public inspection.

                     Rule XIII.--Amendment of Rules

    These Rules may be amended by a majority vote of the 
Committee. A proposed change in these rules shall not be 
considered by the Committee as provided in clause 2 of House 
rule XI, unless written notice of the proposed change has been 
provided to each Committee Member 2 legislative days in advance 
of the date on which the matter is to be considered. Any such 
change in the Rules of the Committee shall be published in the 
Congressional Record within 30 calendar days after its 
approval.
                      Committee on Appropriations

  KAY GRANGER, Texas, Chairwoman

ROSA L. DeLAURO, Connecticut,        HAROLD ROGERS, Kentucky
  Ranking Member                     ROBERT B. ADERHOLT, Alabama
STENY H. HOYER, Maryland             MICHAEL K. SIMPSON, Idaho
MARCY KAPTUR, Ohio                   JOHN R. CARTER, Texas
SANFORD D. BISHOP, Jr., Georgia      KEN CALVERT, California
BARBARA LEE, California              TOM COLE, Oklahoma
BETTY McCOLLUM, Minnesota            MARIO DIAZ-BALART, Florida
C. A. DUTCH RUPPERSBERGER, Maryland  STEVE WOMACK, Arkansas
DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ, Florida    CHARLES J. ``CHUCK'' FLEISCHMANN, 
HENRY CUELLAR, Texas                 Tennessee
CHELLIE PINGREE, Maine               DAVID P. JOYCE, Ohio
MIKE QUIGLEY, Illinois               ANDY HARRIS, Maryland
DEREK KILMER, Washington             MARK E. AMODEI, Nevada
MATT CARTWRIGHT, Pennsylvania        DAVID G. VALADAO, California
GRACE MENG, New York                 DAN NEWHOUSE, Washington
MARK POCAN, Wisconsin                JOHN R. MOOLENAAR, Michigan
PETE AGUILAR, California             JOHN H. RUTHERFORD, Florida
LOIS FRANKEL, Florida                BEN CLINE, Virginia
BONNIE WATSON COLEMAN, New Jersey    GUY RESCHENTHALER, Pennsylvania
NORMA J. TORRES, California          MIKE GARCIA, California
ED CASE, Hawaii                      ASHLEY HINSON, Iowa
ADRIANO ESPAILLAT, New York          TONY GONZALES, Texas
JOSH HARDER, California              JULIA LETLOW, Louisiana
JENNIFER WEXTON, Virginia            MICHAEL CLOUD, Texas
DAVID J. TRONE, Maryland             MICHAEL GUEST, Mississippi
LAUREN UNDERWOOD, Illinois           RYAN K. ZINKE, Montana
SUSIE LEE, Nevada                    ANDREW S. CLYDE, Georgia
JOSEPH D. MORELLE, New York          JAKE LATURNER, Kansas
                                     JERRY L. CARL, Alabama
                                     STEPHANIE I. BICE, Oklahoma
                                     C. SCOTT FRANKLIN, Florida
                                     JAKE ELLZEY, Texas
                                     JUAN CISCOMANI, Arizona

    RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)

    RESOLVED, That the rules and practices of the Committee on 
Appropriations, House of Representatives, in the One Hundred 
Seventeenth Congress, except as otherwise provided hereinafter, 
shall be and are hereby adopted as the rules and practices of 
the Committee on Appropriations in the One Hundred Eighteenth 
Congress.
    The foregoing resolution adopts the following rules:

                      Sec. 1: Power To Sit and Act

    (a) For the purpose of carrying out any of its functions 
and duties under rules X and XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Committee and each of its subcommittees is 
authorized:
        (1) To sit and act at such times and places within the 
        United States whether the House is in session, has 
        recessed, or has adjourned, and to hold such hearings 
        as it deems necessary; and
        (2) To require, by subpoena or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of such witnesses and the 
        production of such books, reports, correspondence, 
        memorandums, papers, and documents as it deems 
        necessary.
    (b) The Chair, or any Member designated by the Chair, may 
administer oaths to any witness.
    (c) A subpoena may be authorized and issued by the 
Committee or its subcommittees under subsection (a)(2) in the 
conduct of any investigation or activity or series of 
investigations or activities, only when authorized by a 
majority of the Members of the Committee voting, a majority 
being present. The power to authorize and issue subpoenas under 
subsection (a)(2) may be delegated to the Chair pursuant to 
such rules and under such limitations as the Committee may 
prescribe. Authorized subpoenas shall be signed by the Chair or 
by any Member designated by the Committee.
    (d) Compliance with any subpoena issued by the Committee or 
its subcommittees may be enforced only as authorized or 
directed by the House.

                         Sec. 2: Subcommittees

    (a) The Majority Caucus of the Committee shall establish 
the number of subcommittees and shall determine the 
jurisdiction of each subcommittee.
    (b) Each subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold hearings, 
receive evidence, and report to the Committee all matters 
referred to it.
    (c) All legislation and other matters referred to the 
Committee shall be referred to the subcommittee of appropriate 
jurisdiction within 2 weeks unless, by majority vote of the 
majority Members of the full Committee, consideration is to be 
by the full Committee.
    (d) The Majority Caucus of the Committee shall determine an 
appropriate ratio of Majority to Minority Members for each 
subcommittee. The Chair is authorized to negotiate that ratio 
with the Minority; Provided, however, That party representation 
in each subcommittee, including ex-officio members, shall be no 
less favorable to the Majority than the ratio for the full 
Committee.
    (e) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the full 
Committee are each authorized to sit as a member of all 
subcommittees and to participate, including voting, in all of 
the work of the subcommittees.

                            Sec. 3: Staffing

    (a) Committee Staff--The Chair is authorized to appoint the 
staff of the Committee, and make adjustments in the job titles 
and compensation thereof subject to the maximum rates and 
conditions established in clause 9(c) of rule X of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives. In addition, she or he is 
authorized, in her or his discretion, to arrange for their 
specialized training. The Chair is also authorized to employ 
additional personnel as necessary.
    (b) Assistants to Members.--
        (1) Each chair and ranking minority member of a 
        subcommittee or the full Committee may select and 
        designate not more than two staff members who shall 
        serve at the pleasure of that Member.
        (2) Staff members designated under this subsection 
        shall be compensated at a rate, determined by the 
        Member, not to exceed 75 per centum of the maximum 
        established in clause 9(c) of rule X of the Rules of 
        the House of Representatives, and subject to other 
        terms and conditions established by the Chair.
        (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
        subsection, the Chair may prescribe such terms and 
        conditions she or he deems necessary to regulate the 
        number and compensation of Assistants to Members and 
        retain Assistants to Members previously designated by a 
        Member of the Committee prior to the adoption of the 
        Rules of the House establishing the Committee for the 
        112th Congress.
        (4) Members designating staff members under this 
        subsection must specifically certify by letter to the 
        Chair that the employees are needed and will be 
        utilized for Committee work.

                       Sec. 4: Committee Meetings

    (a) Regular Meeting Day--The regular meeting day of the 
Committee shall be the first Wednesday of each month while the 
House is in session if notice is given pursuant to paragraph 
(d)(3).
    (b) Additional and Special Meetings.--
        (1) The Chair may call and convene, as she or he 
        considers necessary, additional meetings of the 
        Committee for the consideration of any bill or 
        resolution pending before the Committee or for the 
        conduct of other Committee business. The Committee 
        shall meet for such purpose pursuant to that call of 
        the Chair.
        (2) If at least three Committee Members desire that a 
        special meeting of the Committee be called by the 
        Chair, those Members may file in the Committee Offices 
        a written request to the Chair for that special 
        meeting. Such request shall specify the measure or 
        matter to be considered. Upon the filing of the 
        request, the Committee clerk shall notify the Chair.
        (3) If within 3 calendar days after the filing of the 
        request, the Chair does not call the requested special 
        meeting to be held within 7 calendar days after the 
        filing of the request, a majority of the Committee 
        Members may file in the Committee offices their written 
        notice that a special meeting will be held, specifying 
        the date and hour of such meeting, and the measure or 
        matter to be considered. The Committee shall meet on 
        that date and hour.
        (4) Immediately upon the filing of the notice, the 
        Committee clerk shall notify all Committee Members that 
        such special meeting will be held and inform them of 
        its date and hour and the measure or matter to be 
        considered. Such notice shall also be made publicly 
        available in electronic form and shall be deemed to 
        satisfy paragraph (d)(3). Only the measure or matter 
        specified in that notice may be considered at the 
        special meeting.
    (c) Vice Chair To Preside in Absence of Chair--A member of 
the majority party on the Committee or subcommittee thereof 
designated by the Chair of the full Committee shall be vice 
chair of the Committee or subcommittee, as the case may be, and 
shall preside at any meeting during the temporary absence of 
the Chair. If the Chair and vice chair of the Committee or 
subcommittee are not present at any meeting of the Committee or 
subcommittee, the ranking member of the majority party who is 
present shall preside at that meeting.
    (d) Business Meetings.--
    (1) Each meeting for the transaction of business, including 
the markup of legislation, of the Committee and its 
subcommittees shall be open to the public except when the 
Committee or the subcommittee concerned, in open session and 
with a majority present, determines by roll call vote that all 
or part of the remainder of the meeting on that day shall be 
closed.
    (2) No person other than Committee Members and such 
congressional staff and departmental representatives as they 
may authorize shall be present at any business or markup 
session which has been closed.
    (3) The Chair shall announce the date, place, and subject 
matter of each committee meeting for the transaction of 
business, which may not commence earlier than the third 
calendar day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays 
except when the House is in session on such a day) on which 
members have notice thereof, unless the Chair, with the 
concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member, or the Committee by 
majority vote with a quorum present for the transaction of 
business, determines there is good cause to begin the meeting 
sooner, in which case the Chair shall make the announcement at 
the earliest possible date. An announcement shall be published 
promptly in the Daily Digest and made publicly available in 
electronic form.
    (4) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of a bill or resolution, or at the time 
an announcement is made pursuant to the preceding subparagraph 
within 24 hours before such meeting, the Chair shall cause the 
text of such bill or resolution to be made publicly available 
in electronic form.
    (e) Committee Records.--
        (1) The Committee shall keep a complete record of all 
        Committee action, including a record of the votes on 
        any question on which a roll call is taken. The result 
        of each roll call vote shall be publicly available in 
        electronic form within 48 hours of such record vote. 
        The information made so available shall include a 
        description of the amendment, motion, or other 
        proposition, and the name of each Member voting for and 
        each Member voting against, and the names of those 
        Members present but not voting.
        (2) Committee records (including hearings, data, 
        charts, and files) shall be kept separate and distinct 
        from the congressional office records of the Chair of 
        the Committee. Such records shall be the property of 
        the House, and all Members of the House shall have 
        access thereto.
        (3) The records of the Committee at the National 
        Archives and Records Administration shall be made 
        available in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of 
        the House, except that the Committee authorizes use of 
        any record to which clause 3 (b)(4) of rule VII of the 
        Rules of the House would otherwise apply after such 
        record has been in existence for 20 years. The Chair 
        shall notify the Ranking Minority Member of any 
        decision, pursuant to clause 3 (b)(3) or clause 4 (b) 
        of rule VII of the Rules of the House, to withhold a 
        record otherwise available, and the matter shall be 
        presented to the Committee for a determination upon the 
        written request of any Member of the Committee.
    (f) Availability of Amendments Adopted--Not later than 24 
hours after the adoption of an amendment to a bill or 
resolution, or 48 hours after the disposition or withdrawal of 
any other amendment, the Chair shall cause the text of each 
such amendment to be made publicly available in electronic 
form.

              Sec. 5: Committee and Subcommittee Hearings

    (a) Overall Budget Hearings--Overall budget hearings by the 
Committee, including the hearing required by section 242 (c) of 
the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970 and clause 4 (a)(1) 
of rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives, shall 
be conducted in open session except when the Committee in open 
session and with a majority present, determines by roll call 
vote that the testimony to be taken at that hearing on that day 
may be related to a matter of national security; except that 
the Committee may by the same procedure close one subsequent 
day of hearing. A transcript of all such hearings shall be 
printed and a copy furnished to each Member, Delegate, and the 
Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico.
    (b) Other Hearings.--
        (1) All other hearings conducted by the Committee or 
        its subcommittees shall be open to the public except 
        when the Committee or subcommittee in open session and 
        with a majority present determines by roll call vote 
        that all or part of the remainder of that hearing on 
        that day shall be closed to the public because 
        disclosure of testimony, evidence, or other matters to 
        be considered would endanger the national security or 
        would violate any law or rule of the House of 
        Representatives.
    Notwithstanding the requirements of the preceding sentence, 
a majority of those present at a hearing conducted by the 
Committee or any of its subcommittees, there being in 
attendance the number required under section 5(c) of these 
rules to be present for the purpose of taking testimony, (1) 
may vote to close the hearing for the sole purpose of 
discussing whether testimony or evidence to be received would 
endanger the national security or violate clause 2 (k)(5) of 
rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives or (2) may 
vote to close the hearing, as provided in clause 2 (k)(5) of 
such rule. No Member of the House of Representatives may be 
excluded from nonparticipatory attendance at any hearing of the 
Committee or its subcommittees unless the House of 
Representatives shall by majority vote authorize the Committee 
or any of its subcommittees, for purposes of a particular 
series of hearings on a particular article of legislation or on 
a particular subject of investigation, to close its hearings to 
Members by the same procedures designated in this subsection 
for closing hearings to the public; Provided, however, That the 
Committee or its subcommittees may by the same procedure vote 
to close 5 subsequent days of hearings.
    (2) Subcommittee chairs shall coordinate the development of 
schedules for meetings or hearings after consultation with the 
Chair and other subcommittee chairs with a view toward avoiding 
simultaneous scheduling of Committee and subcommittee meetings 
or hearings.
    (3) Each witness who is to appear before the Committee or 
any of its subcommittees as the case may be, insofar as is 
practicable, shall file in advance of such appearance, a 
written statement of the proposed testimony and shall limit the 
oral presentation at such appearance to a brief summary, except 
that this provision shall not apply to any witness appearing 
before the Committee in the overall budget hearings.
    (4) Each witness appearing in a nongovernmental capacity 
before the Committee, or any of its subcommittees as the case 
may be, shall, to the greatest extent practicable, submit a 
written statement including: a curriculum vitae; a disclosure 
of the amount and source (by agency and program) of any Federal 
grant (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or subcontract 
thereof), or contracts, grants, or payments originating from a 
foreign government, received during the past 36 months by the 
witness or by an entity represented by the witness and related 
to the subject matter of the hearing; and a disclosure of 
whether the witness is a fiduciary (including but not limited 
to a director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) of any 
organization or entity that has an interest in the subject 
matter of the hearing. Such statements, with appropriate 
redactions to protect the privacy of witnesses, shall be made 
publicly available in electronic form, 24 hours before the 
witness appears to the extent practicable, but not later than 1 
day after the witness appears.
    The disclosure referred to in this paragraph shall include 
the amount and source of each Federal grant (or subgrant 
thereof) or contract (or subcontract thereof) related to the 
subject matter of the hearing, and the amount and country of 
origin of any payment, grant, or contract related to the 
subject matter of the hearing originating with a foreign 
government.
    (c) Quorum for Taking Testimony--The number of Members of 
the Committee which shall constitute a quorum for taking 
testimony and receiving evidence in any hearing of the 
Committee shall be two.
    (d) Calling and Interrogation of Witnesses.--
        (1) The Minority Members of the Committee or its 
        subcommittees shall be entitled, upon request to the 
        Chair or subcommittee chair, by a majority of them 
        before completion of any hearing, to call witnesses 
        selected by the Minority to testify with respect to the 
        matter under consideration during at least 1 day of 
        hearings thereon.
        (2) The Committee and its subcommittees shall observe 
        the 5-minute rule during the interrogation of witnesses 
        until such time as each Member of the Committee or 
        subcommittee who so desires has had an opportunity to 
        question the witness.
    (e) Broadcasting and Photographing of Committee Meetings 
and Hearings--Whenever a hearing or meeting conducted by the 
full Committee or any of its subcommittees is open to the 
public, those proceedings shall be open to coverage by 
television, radio, and still photography, and shall be 
conducted in accordance with the requirements set forth in 
clause (4)(f) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. Neither the full Committee Chair or 
subcommittee chair shall limit the number of television or 
still cameras to fewer than two representatives from each 
medium (except for legitimate space or safety, in which case 
pool coverage shall be authorized). To the maximum practicable, 
the Committee shall provide audio and video coverage of each 
hearing or meeting for the transaction of business in a manner 
that allows the public to easily listen to and view the 
proceedings and shall maintain the recordings of such coverage 
in a manner that is easily accessible to the public.
    (f) Subcommittee Meetings--No subcommittee shall sit while 
the House is reading an appropriation measure for amendment 
under the 5-minute rule or while the Committee is in session.
    (g) Public Notice of Committee Hearings--The Chair of the 
Committee shall make public announcement of the date, place, 
and subject matter of any Committee or subcommittee hearing at 
least 1 week before the commencement of the hearing. If the 
Chair of the Committee or subcommittee, with the concurrence of 
the ranking minority member of the Committee or respective 
subcommittee, determines there is good cause to begin the 
hearing sooner, or if the Committee or subcommittee so 
determines by majority vote, a quorum being present for the 
transaction of business, the Chair or subcommittee chair shall 
make the announcement at the earliest possible date. Any 
announcement made under this subsection shall be promptly 
published in the Daily Digest and made publicly available in 
electronic form.

         Sec. 6: Procedures for Reporting Bills and Resolutions

    (a) Prompt Reporting Requirement:
        (1) It shall be the duty of the Chair to report, or 
        cause to be reported promptly to the House any bill or 
        resolution approved by the Committee and to take or 
        cause to be taken necessary steps to bring the matter 
        to a vote.
    (2) In any event, a report on a bill or resolution which 
the Committee has approved shall be filed within 7 calendar 
days (exclusive of days in which the House is not in session) 
after the day on which there has been filed with the Committee 
Clerk a written request, signed by a majority of Committee 
Members, for the reporting of such bill or resolution. Upon the 
filing of any such request, the Committee Clerk shall notify 
the Chair immediately of the filing of the request. This 
subsection does not apply to the reporting of a regular 
appropriation bill or to the reporting of a resolution of 
inquiry addressed to the head of an executive department.
    (b) Presence of Committee Majority--No measure or 
recommendation shall be reported from the Committee unless a 
majority of the Committee was actually present.
    (c) Roll Call Votes--With respect to each roll call vote on 
a motion to report any measure or matter of a public character, 
and on any amendment offered to the measure or matter, the 
total number of votes cast for and against, and the names of 
those Members voting for and against, shall be included in the 
Committee report on the measure or matter.
    (d) Compliance With Congressional Budget Act--A Committee 
report on a bill or resolution which has been approved by the 
Committee shall include the statement required by section 
308(a) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, separately set 
out and clearly identified, if the bill or resolution provides 
new budget authority.
    (e) Changes in Existing Law--Each Committee report on a 
general appropriation bill shall contain a concise statement 
describing fully the effect of any provision of the bill which 
directly or indirectly changes the application of existing law.
    (f) Rescissions and Transfers--Each bill or resolution 
reported by the Committee shall include separate headings for 
rescissions and transfers of unexpended balances with all 
proposed rescissions and transfers listed therein. The report 
of the Committee accompanying such a bill or resolution shall 
include a separate section with respect to such rescissions or 
transfers.
    (g) Listing of Unauthorized Appropriations--Each Committee 
report on a general appropriation bill shall contain a list of 
all appropriations contained in the bill for any expenditure 
not currently authorized by law for the period concerned 
(except for classified intelligence or national security 
programs, projects, or activities) along with a statement of 
the last year for which such expenditures were authorized, the 
level of expenditures authorized for that year, the actual 
level of expenditures for that year, and the level of 
appropriations in the bill for such expenditures.
    (h) Duplicative Programs--Each Committee report on a bill 
or joint resolution that establishes or reauthorizes a Federal 
program shall contain a statement indicating whether such 
program is known to be duplicative of another program, pursuant 
to clause 3(c)(5) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (i) Supplemental or Minority Views.--
        (1) If, at the time the Committee approves any measure 
        or matter, any Committee Member gives notice of 
        intention to file supplemental, minority, additional, 
        or dissenting views, all Members shall be entitled to 
        not less than 2 additional calendar days after the day 
        of such notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
        holidays) in which to file such written and signed 
        views (including in electronic form) with the Clerk of 
        the Committee. All such views so filed shall be 
        included in and shall be a part of the report filed by 
        the Committee with respect to that measure or matter.
        (2) The Committee report on that measure or matter 
        shall be printed in a single volume which--
                (i) shall include all supplemental, minority, 
                additional, or dissenting views which have been 
                submitted by the time of the filing of the 
                report, and
                (ii) shall have on its cover a recital that any 
                such supplemental, minority, additional, or 
                dissenting views are included as part of the 
                report.
        (3) This subsection does not preclude--
                (i) the immediate filing or printing of a 
                Committee report unless timely request for the 
                opportunity to file supplemental, minority, 
                additional, or dissenting views has been made 
                as provided by such subsection; or
                (ii) the filing by the Committee of a 
                supplemental report on a measure or matter 
                which may be required for correction of any 
                technical error in a previous report made by 
                the Committee on that measure or matter.
        (4) If, at the time a subcommittee approves any measure 
        or matter for recommendation to the full Committee, any 
        Member of that subcommittee who gives notice of 
        intention to offer supplemental, minority, additional, 
        or dissenting views shall be entitled, insofar as is 
        practicable and in accordance with the printing 
        requirements as determined by the subcommittee, to 
        include such views in the Committee Print with respect 
        to that measure or matter.
    (j) Availability of Reports--A copy of each bill, 
resolution, or report shall be made available to each Member of 
the Committee at least 3 calendar days (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, and legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such a day) in advance of the date on which the Committee is 
to consider each bill, resolution, or report; Provided, That 
this subsection may be waived by agreement between the Chair 
and the Ranking Minority Member of the full Committee.
    (k) Performance Goals and Objectives--Each Committee report 
shall contain a statement of general performance goals and 
objectives, including outcome-related goals and objectives, for 
which the measure authorizes funding.
    (l) Related Hearings--Each Committee report shall contain a 
list of related Committee and subcommittee hearings and a 
designation of at least one Committee or subcommittee hearing 
that was used to develop or consider the measure being 
reported; Provided, That this subsection shall not apply to a 
bill or joint resolution continuing appropriations for a fiscal 
year, or containing an emergency designation under section 
251(b)(2) or section 252(c) of the Balanced Budget and 
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
    (m) Motion to go to Conference--The Chair is directed to 
offer a motion under clause 1 of rule XXII of the Rules of the 
House whenever the Chair considers it appropriate.

                             Sec. 7: Voting

    (a) No vote by any Member of the Committee or any of its 
subcommittees with respect to any measure or matter may be cast 
by proxy.
    (b) The vote on any question before the Committee shall be 
taken by the yeas and nays on the demand of one-fifth of the 
Members present.
    (c) The Chair of the Committee or the chair of any of its 
subcommittees may--
        (1) postpone further proceedings when a record vote is 
        ordered on the question of approving a measure or 
        matter or on adopting an amendment;
        (2) resume proceedings on a postponed question at any 
        time after reasonable notice.
    When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.

                    Sec. 8: Studies and Examinations

    The following procedure shall be applicable with respect to 
the conduct of studies and examinations of the organization and 
operation of Executive Agencies under authority contained in 
section 202(b) of the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 
and in clause (3)(a) of rule X of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives:
    (a) The Chair is authorized to appoint such staff and, in 
her or his discretion, arrange for the procurement of temporary 
services of consultants, as from time to time may be required.
    (b) Studies and examinations will be initiated upon the 
written request of a subcommittee which shall be reasonably 
specific and definite in character, and shall be initiated only 
by a majority vote of the subcommittee, with the chair of the 
subcommittee and the ranking minority member thereof 
participating as part of such majority vote. When so initiated 
such request shall be filed with the Clerk of the Committee for 
submission to the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member and 
their approval shall be required to make the same effective. 
Notwithstanding any action taken on such request by the chair 
and ranking minority member of the subcommittee, a request may 
be approved by a majority of the Committee.
    (c) Any request approved as provided under subsection (b) 
shall be immediately turned over to the staff appointed for 
action.
    (d) Any information obtained by such staff shall be 
reported to the chair of the subcommittee requesting such study 
and examination and to the Chair and Ranking Minority Member, 
shall be made available to the members of the subcommittee 
concerned, and shall not be released for publication until the 
subcommittee so determines.
    (e) Any hearings or investigations which may be desired, 
aside from the regular hearings on appropriation items, when 
approved by the Committee, shall be conducted by the 
subcommittee having jurisdiction over the matter.

              Sec. 9: Temporary Investigative Task Forces

    (a) The Chair of the full Committee, in consultation with 
the Ranking Member of the full Committee, may establish and 
appoint members to serve on task forces of the Committee, to 
examine specific activities for a limited period of time in 
accordance with clause 5(b)(2)(C) of rule X of the Rules of the 
House.
    (b) The Chair of the full Committee shall issue a written 
directive, in consultation with the Ranking Member of the full 
Committee, delineating the specific activities to be reviewed 
by a task force constituted pursuant to the preceding 
paragraph.
    (c) A task force constituted under this section shall 
provide a written report of its findings and recommendations to 
the full Committee Chair and Ranking Member and members of the 
relevant subcommittees having jurisdiction over the matters 
reviewed. Such report shall be approved by a majority vote of 
the task force and shall include any supplemental, minority, 
additional, or dissenting views submitted by a Member of the 
task force or a member of a subcommittee having jurisdiction 
over the matter reviewed.
    (d) Any information obtained during the course of such 
investigation, and any report produced by, a task force 
pursuant to this section, shall not be released until the Chair 
of the full Committee has authorized such release.
    (e) The Chair is authorized to appoint such staff, and, in 
her or his discretion, arrange for the procurement of temporary 
services, as from time to time may be required.

                        Sec. 10: Official Travel

    (a) The chair of a subcommittee shall approve requests for 
travel by subcommittee members and staff for official business 
within the jurisdiction of that subcommittee. The ranking 
minority member of a subcommittee shall concur in such travel 
requests by minority members of that subcommittee and the 
Ranking Minority Member shall concur in such travel requests 
for Minority Members of the Committee. Requests in writing 
covering the purpose, itinerary, and dates of proposed travel 
shall be submitted for final approval to the Chair. Specific 
approval shall be required for each and every trip.
    (b) The Chair is authorized during the recess of the 
Congress to approve travel authorizations for Committee Members 
and staff, including travel outside the United States.
    (c) As soon as practicable, the Chair shall direct the head 
of each Government agency concerned to honor requests of 
subcommittees, individual Members, or staff for travel, the 
direct or indirect expenses of which are to be defrayed from an 
executive appropriation, only upon request from the Chair.
    (d) In accordance with clause 8 of rule X of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives and section 502(b) of the Mutual 
Security Act of 1954, as amended, local currencies owned by the 
United States shall be available to Committee Members and staff 
engaged in carrying out their official duties outside the 
United States, its territories, or possessions. No Committee 
Member or staff member shall receive or expend local currencies 
for subsistence in any country at a rate in excess of the 
maximum per diem rate set forth in applicable Federal law.
    (e) Travel Reports.--
    (1) Members or staff shall make a report to the Chair on 
their travel, covering the purpose, results, itinerary, 
expenses, and other pertinent comments.
    (2) With respect to travel outside the United States or its 
territories or possessions, the report shall include: (1) an 
itemized list showing the dates each country was visited, the 
amount of per diem furnished, the cost of transportation 
furnished, and any funds expended for any other official 
purpose; and (2) a summary in these categories of the total 
foreign currencies and/ or appropriated funds expended. All 
such individual reports on foreign travel shall be filed with 
the Chair no later than 60 days following completion of the 
travel for use in complying with reporting requirements in 
applicable Federal law, and shall be open for public 
inspection.
    (3) Each Member or employee performing such travel shall be 
solely responsible for supporting the amounts reported by the 
Member or employee.
    (4) No report or statement as to any trip shall be 
publicized making any recommendations on behalf of the 
Committee without the authorization of a majority of the 
Committee.
    (f) Members and staff of the Committee performing 
authorized travel on official business pertaining to the 
jurisdiction of the Committee shall be governed by applicable 
laws or regulations of the House and of the Committee on House 
Administration pertaining to such travel, and as promulgated 
from time to time by the Chair.

                      Sec. 11: Activities Reports

    (a) Not later than January 2 of each odd-numbered year, the 
Committee shall submit to the House a report on the activities 
of the Committee.
    (b) After adjournment sine die of a regular session of 
Congress, or after December 15, whichever occurs first, the 
Chair may file the report with the Clerk of the House at any 
time and without the approval of the Committee, provided that a 
copy of the report has been available to each Member of the 
Committee for at least 7 calendar days and the report includes 
any supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
submitted by a Member of the Committee.
                      Committee on Armed Services

  MIKE ROGERS, Alabama, Chairman

ADAM SMITH, Washington,              JOE WILSON, South Carolina
  Ranking Member                     MICHAEL R. TURNER, Ohio
JOE COURTNEY, Connecticut            DOUG LAMBORN, Colorado
JOHN GARAMENDI, California           ROBERT J. WITTMAN, Virginia
DONALD NORCROSS, New Jersey          AUSTIN SCOTT, Georgia
RUBEN GALLEGO, Arizona               SAM GRAVES, Maryland
SETH MOULTON, Massachusetts          ELISE M. STEFANIK, New York
SALUD O. CARBAJAL, California        SCOTT DeSJARLAIS, Tennessee
RO KHANNA, California                TRENT KELLY, Mississippi
WILLIAM R. KEATING, Massachusetts    MIKE GALLAGHER, Wisconsin
ANDY KIM, New Jersey                 MATT GAETZ, Florida
CHRISSY HOULAHAN, Pennsylvania       DON BACON, Nebraska
ELISSA SLOTKIN, Michigan             JIM BANKS, Indiana
MIKIE SHERRILL, New Jersey           JACK BERGMAN, Michigan
VERONICA ESCOBAR, Texas              MICHAEL WALTZ, Florida
JARED F. GOLDEN, Maine               LISA C. McCLAIN, Michigan
SARA JACOBS, California              RONNY JACKSON, Texas
MARILYN STRICKLAND, Washington       PAT FALLON, Texas
PATRICK RYAN, New York               CARLOS A. GIMENEZ, Florida
JEFF JACKSON, North Carolina         NANCY MACE, South Carolina
GABE VASQUEZ, New Mexico             BRAD FINSTAD, Minnesota
CHRISTOPHER R. DeLUZIO, Pennsylvania DALE W. STRONG, Alabama
JILL N. TOKUDA, Hawaii               MORGAN LUTTRELL, Texas
DONALD G. DAVIS, North Carolina      JENNIFER A. KIGGANS, Virginia
JENNIFER L. McCLELLAN, Virginia      NICK LaLOTA, New York
TERRI A. SEWELL, Alabama             JAMES C. MOYLAN, Guam
STEVEN HORSFORD, Nevada              MARK ALFORD, Missouri
JIMMY PANETTA, California            CORY MILLS, Florida
MARC A. VEASEY, Texas                RICHARD McCORMICK, Georgia

    RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 2, 2023)


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) The Rules of the House of Representatives are the rules 
of the Committee on Armed Services (hereinafter referred to in 
these rules as the ``Committee'') and its subcommittees so far 
as applicable.
    (b) Pursuant to clause 2(a)(2) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, the Committee's rules shall be 
publicly available in electronic form and published in the 
Congressional Record not later than 60 days after the chair of 
the committee is elected in each odd-numbered year.

                  Rule 2.--Full Committee Meeting Date

    (a) The Committee shall meet every Wednesday at 10:00 a.m., 
when the House of Representatives is in session, and at such 
other times as may be fixed by the Chair of the Committee 
(hereinafter referred to as the ``Chair''), or by written 
request of members of the Committee pursuant to clause 2(c) of 
rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (b) A Wednesday meeting of the Committee may be dispensed 
with by the Chair, but such action may be reversed by a written 
request of a majority of the members of the Committee.

                  Rule 3.--Subcommittee Meeting Dates

    Each subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold hearings, 
receive evidence, and report to the Committee on all matters 
referred to it. Insofar as possible, meetings of the Committee 
and its subcommittees shall not conflict. A subcommittee Chair 
shall set meeting dates after consultation with the Chair, 
other subcommittee chairs, and the ranking minority member of 
the subcommittee with a view toward avoiding, whenever 
possible, simultaneous scheduling of Committee and subcommittee 
meetings or hearings.

  Rule 4.--Jurisdiction and Membership of Committee and Subcommittees

    (a) Jurisdiction.--
    (1) The Committee retains jurisdiction of all subjects 
listed in clause 1(c) and clause 3(b) of rule X of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives and retains exclusive jurisdiction 
for: defense policy generally, ongoing military operations, the 
organization and reform of the Department of Defense and the 
Department of Energy, counter-drug programs, humanitarian 
assistance activities of the Department of Defense, acquisition 
and industrial base policy, technology transfer and export 
controls, joint interoperability, detainee affairs and policy, 
and force protection policy. While subcommittees are provided 
jurisdictional responsibilities in subparagraph (a)(2) and are 
required to conduct oversight in their respective 
jurisdictions, pursuant to clause 2(b)(2) of rule X of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives, the Committee retains 
the right to exercise oversight and legislative jurisdiction 
over all subjects within its purview under rule X of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.
          (2) The Committee shall be organized to consist of 
        seven standing subcommittees with the following 
        jurisdictions:
                  Subcommittee on Tactical Air and Land Forces: 
                Army programs and accounts related to aircraft, 
                ground equipment, missiles, ammunition, and 
                other procurement; Marine Corps programs and 
                accounts related to ground and amphibious 
                equipment, fighter aircraft, helicopters, air-
                launched weapons, and ammunition; Air Force 
                programs and accounts related to fighter, 
                training, reconnaissance and surveillance, and 
                electronic warfare aircraft, helicopters, air-
                launched weapons, ground equipment, and 
                ammunition; Navy programs and accounts related 
                to fighter, training, and electronic warfare 
                aircraft, helicopters, and air-launched 
                weapons; tactical air and missile defense 
                programs and accounts; chemical agent and 
                munition destruction programs and accounts; and 
                National Guard and Reserve equipment programs 
                and accounts.
                  Subcommittee on Military Personnel: 
                Department of Defense policy and programs and 
                accounts related to military personnel and 
                their families, Reserve Component integration 
                and employment, military health care, military 
                education, dependent schools, POW/MIA issues, 
                Morale, Welfare and Recreation, commissaries, 
                cemeteries under the jurisdiction of the 
                Department of Defense, the Uniform Code of 
                Military Justice, military retirement issues, 
                and the civilian and contract workforce.
                  Subcommittee on Readiness: Department of 
                Defense policy and programs and accounts 
                related to military readiness, training, 
                logistics and maintenance, military 
                construction, organic industrial base, 
                environment, military installations and real 
                property management, family housing, base 
                realignments and closures, and energy.
                  Subcommittee on Seapower and Projection 
                Forces: Navy and Marine Corps acquisition 
                programs and accounts related to shipbuilding 
                and conversion, reconnaissance and 
                surveillance, tanker, and airlift aircraft, 
                ship and submarine-launched weapons, 
                ammunition, and other procurements; Air Force 
                programs and accounts related to bomber, 
                tanker, and airlift aircraft; Army programs and 
                accounts related to waterborne vessels; and 
                Maritime policy and programs and accounts under 
                the jurisdiction of the Committee as delineated 
                in paragraphs 5 and 9 of clause 1(c) of rule X 
                of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
                  Subcommittee on Strategic Forces: Department 
                of Defense and Department of Energy policy 
                related to strategic deterrence, strategic 
                stability, nuclear weapons, strategic and 
                nuclear arms control, non-proliferation, 
                nuclear safety, missile defense, and space; 
                Department of Defense programs and accounts 
                related to nuclear weapons, strategic missiles, 
                nuclear command and control systems, Department 
                of Defense intelligence space, space systems 
                and services of the military departments, and 
                intermediate and long-range missile defense 
                systems; and Department of Energy national 
                security programs and accounts.
                  Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special 
                Operations: Department of Defense policy and 
                programs and accounts related to military 
                intelligence, national intelligence, countering 
                weapons of mass destruction, counter-
                proliferation, counter-terrorism, other 
                sensitive military operations, special 
                operations forces, information operations 
                policy and military information support 
                operations, and security cooperation.
                  Subcommittee on Cyber, Information 
                Technologies, and Innovation: Department of 
                Defense policy related to the acquisition of 
                computer software, the electromagnetic 
                spectrum, and electromagnetic warfare; and 
                Department of Defense policy and programs and 
                accounts related to artificial intelligence, 
                cyber security, cyber operations, cyber forces, 
                information technology, and science and 
                technology (including defense-wide programs and 
                accounts related to research, development, 
                testing, and evaluation, except for those 
                defense-wide programs and accounts related to 
                research, development, testing, and evaluation 
                of missile defense systems).
          (3) Definitions.--For the purposes of subparagraph 
        (a)(2):
                  (A) The phrase ``programs and accounts'' 
                means acquisition and modernization programs, 
                sustainment planning during program 
                development, and related funding lines for 
                procurement, advanced development, advanced 
                component development and prototypes, systems 
                development, sustainment planning, and 
                demonstration.
                  (B) The term ``policy'' means statutes, 
                regulations, directives, and other 
                institutional guidance.
                  (C) The phrase ``science and technology'' 
                means science and technology programs and 
                related funding lines for basic research, 
                applied research, and non-acquisition program 
                advanced development.
    (b) Membership of the Subcommittees
          (1) Subcommittee memberships shall be filled in 
        accordance with the rules of the majority party's 
        conference and the minority party's caucus, 
        respectively.
          (2) The Chair of the Committee and the Ranking 
        Minority Member thereof (hereinafter referred to as the 
        ``Ranking Minority Member'') may sit as ex officio 
        members of all subcommittees. Ex officio members shall 
        not vote in subcommittee hearings or meetings or be 
        taken into consideration for the purpose of determining 
        the ratio of the subcommittees or establishing a quorum 
        at subcommittee hearings or meetings.
          (3) A member of the Committee who is not a member of 
        a particular subcommittee may sit with the subcommittee 
        and participate during any of its hearings but shall 
        not have authority to vote, cannot be counted for the 
        purpose of achieving a quorum, and cannot raise a point 
        of order at the hearing.

               Rule 5.--Committee Panels and Task Forces

    (a) Committee Panels
          (1) The Chair may designate a panel of the Committee 
        consisting of members of the Committee to inquire into 
        and take testimony on a matter or matters that fall 
        within the jurisdiction of more than one subcommittee 
        and to report to the Committee.
          (2) No panel appointed by the Chair shall continue in 
        existence for more than six months after the 
        appointment. A panel so appointed may, upon the 
        expiration of six months, be reappointed by the Chair 
        for a period of time which is not to exceed six months.
          (3) Consistent with the party ratios established by 
        the majority party, all majority members of the panels 
        shall be appointed by the Chair, and all minority 
        members shall be appointed by the Ranking Minority 
        Member. The Chair shall choose one of the majority 
        members so appointed who does not currently chair 
        another subcommittee of the Committee to serve as Chair 
        of the panel. The Ranking Minority Member shall 
        similarly choose the ranking minority member of the 
        panel.
          (4) No panel shall have legislative jurisdiction.
    (b) Committee and Subcommittee Task Forces
          (1) The Chair may designate a task force to inquire 
        into and take testimony on a matter that falls within 
        the jurisdiction of the Committee or subcommittee, 
        respectively. The Chair and the Ranking Minority Member 
        shall each appoint an equal number of members to the 
        task force. The Chair shall choose one of the members 
        so appointed, who does not currently chair another 
        subcommittee of the Committee, to serve as Chair of the 
        task force. The Ranking Minority Member shall similarly 
        appoint the ranking minority member of the task force.
          (2) No task force appointed by the Chair shall 
        continue in existence for more than three months. A 
        task force may only be reappointed for an additional 
        three months with the written concurrence of the Chair 
        and the Ranking Minority Member.
          (3) No task force shall have legislative 
        jurisdiction.

          Rule 6.--Reference and Consideration of Legislation

    (a) The Chair shall refer legislation and other matters to 
the appropriate subcommittee or to the full Committee.
    (b) Legislation shall be taken up for a hearing or markup 
only when called by the Chair or the Chair of a subcommittee, 
as appropriate, or by a majority of the Committee or 
subcommittee, as appropriate.
    (c) The Chair, with approval of a majority vote of a quorum 
of the Committee, shall have authority to discharge a 
subcommittee from consideration of any measure or matter 
referred thereto and have such measure or matter considered by 
the Committee.
    (d) Reports and recommendations of a subcommittee may not 
be considered by the Committee until after the intervention of 
three calendar days from the time the report is approved by the 
subcommittee and available to the members of the Committee, 
except that this rule may be waived by a majority vote of a 
quorum of the Committee.
    (e) The Chair, in consultation with the Ranking Minority 
Member, shall establish criteria for recommending legislation 
and other matters to be considered by the House of 
Representatives, pursuant to clause 1 of rule XV of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives. Such criteria shall not 
conflict with the Rules of the House of Representatives and 
other applicable rules.

         Rule 7.--Public Announcement of Hearings and Meetings

    (a) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, the Chair, or the Chair of any 
subcommittee, panel, or task force, shall make a public 
announcement of the date, place, and subject matter of any 
hearing or meeting for the transaction of business before that 
body at least one week before the commencement of a hearing and 
at least three calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or 
legal holidays except when the House is in session on such a 
day) before the commencement of a meeting. However, if the 
Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member, or 
the Chair of any subcommittee, panel, or task force, with the 
concurrence of the respective ranking minority member, 
determines that there is good cause to begin the hearing or 
meeting sooner, or if the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or 
task force so determines by majority vote, a quorum being 
present for the transaction of business, such Chair shall make 
the announcement at the earliest possible date. Any 
announcement made under this rule shall be promptly published 
in the Daily Digest, and promptly made publicly available in 
electronic form.
    (b) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, or at the time of an 
announcement under paragraph (a) made within 24 hours before 
such meeting, the Chair, or the Chair of any subcommittee, 
panel, or task force shall cause the text of such measure or 
matter to be made publicly available in electronic form as 
provided in clause 2(g)(4) of rule XI of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives.

        Rule 8.--Broadcasting of Committee Hearings and Meetings

    (a) Pursuant to clause 2(e)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, the Committee shall, to the 
maximum extent practicable, provide audio and video coverage of 
each hearing or meeting for the transaction of business in a 
manner that allows the public to easily listen to and view the 
proceedings. The Committee shall maintain the recordings of 
such coverage in a manner that is easily accessible to the 
public.
    (b) Clause 4 of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives shall apply to the Committee.

           Rule 9.--Meetings and Hearings Open to the Public

    (a) Each hearing and meeting for the transaction of 
business, including the markup of legislation, conducted by the 
Committee, or any subcommittee, panel, or task force, to the 
extent that the respective body is authorized to conduct 
markups, shall be open to the public except when the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force in open session and with a 
majority being present, determines by record vote that all or 
part of the remainder of that hearing or meeting on that day 
shall be in executive session because disclosure of testimony, 
evidence, or other matters to be considered would endanger the 
national security, would compromise sensitive law enforcement 
information, or would violate any law or rule of the House of 
Representatives. Notwithstanding the requirements of the 
preceding sentence, a majority of those present, there being in 
attendance no fewer than two members of the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force may vote to close a hearing 
or meeting for the sole purpose of discussing whether testimony 
or evidence to be received would endanger the national 
security, would compromise sensitive law enforcement 
information, or would violate any law or rule of the House of 
Representatives. If the decision is to proceed in executive 
session, the vote must be by record vote and in open session, a 
majority of the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force 
being present.
    (b) Whenever it is asserted by a member of the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force that the evidence or 
testimony at a hearing may tend to defame, degrade, or 
incriminate any person, or it is asserted by a witness that the 
evidence or testimony that the witness would give at a hearing 
may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate the witness, 
notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (a) and the 
provisions of clause 2(g)(2)(A) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives and in accordance with the provisions 
of clause 2(g)(2)(B) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, such evidence or testimony shall be presented 
in executive session, if by a majority vote of those present, 
there being in attendance no fewer than two members of the 
Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force, the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force determines that such 
evidence may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any 
person. A majority of those present, there being in attendance 
no fewer than two members of the Committee, subcommittee, 
panel, or task force may also vote to close the hearing or 
meeting for the sole purpose of discussing whether evidence or 
testimony to be received would tend to defame, degrade, or 
incriminate any person. The Committee, subcommittee, panel, or 
task force shall proceed to receive such testimony in open 
session only if the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task 
force, a majority being present, determines that such evidence 
or testimony will not tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
any person.
    (c) Notwithstanding the foregoing, and with the approval of 
the Chair, each member of the Committee may designate by letter 
to the Chair, one member of that member's personal staff, and 
an alternate, which may include fellows, with Top Secret 
security clearance to attend hearings of the Committee, or that 
member's subcommittee(s), panel(s), or task force(s) (excluding 
briefings or meetings held under the provisions of committee 
rule 9(a)), which have been closed under the provisions of rule 
9(a) above for national security purposes for the taking of 
testimony. The attendance of such a staff member or fellow at 
such hearings is subject to the approval of the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force as dictated by national 
security requirements at that time. The attainment of any 
required security clearances is the responsibility of 
individual members of the Committee.
    (d) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(2) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, no Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner may be excluded from nonparticipatory attendance 
at any hearing of the Committee or a subcommittee, unless the 
House of Representatives shall by majority vote authorize the 
Committee or subcommittee, for purposes of a particular series 
of hearings on a particular article of legislation or on a 
particular subject of investigation, to close its hearings to 
Members, Delegates, and the Resident Commissioner by the same 
procedures designated in this rule for closing hearings to the 
public.
    (e) The Committee or the subcommittee may vote, by the same 
procedure, to meet in executive session for up to five 
additional consecutive days of hearings.

                            Rule 10.--Quorum

    (a) For purposes of taking testimony and receiving 
evidence, two members shall constitute a quorum.
    (b) One-third of the members of the Committee or 
subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for taking any action, 
with the following exceptions, in which case a majority of the 
Committee or subcommittee shall constitute a quorum:
          (1) Reporting a measure or recommendation;
          (2) Closing Committee or subcommittee meetings and 
        hearings to the public;
          (3) Authorizing the issuance of subpoenas;
          (4) Authorizing the use of executive session 
        material; and
          (5) Voting to proceed in open session after voting to 
        close to discuss whether evidence or testimony to be 
        received would tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
        any person.
    (c) No measure or recommendation shall be reported to the 
House of Representatives unless a majority of the Committee is 
actually present.

                     Rule 11.--The Five-Minute Rule

    (a) Subject to rule 15, the time any one member may address 
the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force on any 
measure or matter under consideration shall not exceed five 
minutes and then only when the member has been recognized by 
the Chair or subcommittee Chair, as appropriate, except that 
this time limit may be exceeded by unanimous consent. Any 
member, upon request, shall be recognized for not more than 
five minutes to address the Committee or subcommittee on behalf 
of an amendment which the member has offered to any pending 
bill or resolution. The five-minute limitation shall not apply 
to the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member or the Chair and 
the ranking minority member of a subcommittee, panel, or task 
force.
    (b)(1) Members who are present at a hearing of the 
Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force when a hearing is 
originally convened shall be recognized by the Chair or 
subcommittee, panel, or task force Chair, as appropriate, in 
order of seniority. Those members arriving subsequently shall 
be recognized in order of their arrival. Notwithstanding the 
foregoing, the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member or the 
Chair and the ranking minority member of a subcommittee, panel, 
or task force, as appropriate, will take precedence upon their 
arrival. In recognizing members to question witnesses in this 
fashion, the Chair shall take into consideration the ratio of 
the majority to minority members present and shall establish 
the order of recognition for questioning in such a manner as 
not to disadvantage the members of either party.
    (2) Pursuant to rule 4 and subject to rule 15, a member of 
the Committee who is not a member of a subcommittee, panel, or 
task force may be recognized by a subcommittee, panel, or task 
force Chair in order of their arrival and after all present 
subcommittee, panel, or task force members have been 
recognized.
    (3) The Chair of the Committee or the Chair of a 
subcommittee, panel, or task force, with the concurrence of the 
respective ranking minority member, may depart with the regular 
order for questioning which is specified in paragraphs (a) and 
(b) of this rule provided that such a decision is announced 
prior to the hearing or prior to the opening statements of the 
witnesses and that any such departure applies equally to the 
majority and the minority.
    (c) No person other than a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner of Congress and committee staff may be seated in 
or behind the dais area during Committee, subcommittee, panel, 
or task force hearings and meetings.

             Rule 12.--Power to Sit and Act; Subpoena Power

    (a) For the purpose of carrying out any of its functions 
and duties under rules X and XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Committee and any subcommittee is 
authorized (subject to subparagraph (b)(1) of this paragraph):
          (1) to sit and act at such times and places within 
        the United States, whether the House is in session, has 
        recessed, or has adjourned, and to hold hearings, and
          (2) to require by subpoena, or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of such witnesses, including 
        by deposition, and the production of such books, 
        records, correspondence, memorandums, papers and 
        documents, including, but not limited to, those in 
        electronic form, as it considers necessary.
    (b)(1) A subpoena may be authorized and issued by the 
Committee, or any subcommittee with the concurrence of the 
Chair and after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, 
under subparagraph (a)(2) in the conduct of any investigation, 
or series of investigations or activities, only when authorized 
by a majority of the members voting, a majority of the 
Committee or subcommittee being present. Authorized subpoenas 
shall be signed only by the Chair, or by any member designated 
by the Committee.
    (2) Pursuant to clause 2(m) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, compliance with any subpoena issued 
by the Committee or any subcommittee under subparagraph (a)(2) 
may be enforced only as authorized or directed by the House of 
Representatives.
    (c) For depositions ordered pursuant to subparagraph 
(a)(2), such depositions shall be conducted in a manner 
consistent with House Rules and regulations.

                      Rule 13.--Witness Statements

    (a) Any prepared statement to be presented by a witness to 
the Committee or a subcommittee, panel, or task force shall be 
submitted to the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force 
at least 48 hours in advance of presentation and shall be 
distributed to all members of the Committee, subcommittee, 
panel, or task force as soon as practicable but not less than 
24 hours in advance of presentation. A copy of any such 
prepared statement shall also be submitted to the Committee in 
electronic form. If a prepared statement contains national 
security information bearing a classification of Confidential 
or higher, the statement shall be made available in the 
Committee rooms to all members of the Committee, subcommittee, 
panel, or task force as soon as practicable but not less than 
24 hours in advance of presentation; however, no such statement 
shall be removed from the Committee offices. The requirement of 
this rule may be waived by a majority vote of the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force, a quorum being present. In 
cases where a witness does not submit a statement by the time 
required under this rule, the Chair, with the concurrence of 
the Ranking Minority Member, or the Chair of a subcommittee, 
panel, or task force, as appropriate, with the concurrence of 
the respective ranking minority member, may elect to exclude 
the witness from the hearing.
    (b) The Committee and each subcommittee, panel, or task 
force shall require each witness who is to appear before it to 
file with the Committee in advance of his or her appearance a 
written statement of the proposed testimony and to limit the 
oral presentation at such appearance to a brief summary of the 
submitted written statement.
    (c) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, written witness statements, with 
appropriate redactions to protect the privacy of the witness, 
shall be made publicly available in electronic form 24 hours 
before the witness appears to the extent practicable, but not 
later than one day after the witness appears.

               Rule 14.--Administering Oaths to Witnesses

    (a) The Chair, or any member designated by the Chair, may 
administer oaths to any witness.
    (b) Witnesses, when sworn, shall subscribe to the following 
oath:
          ``Do you solemnly swear (or affirm) that the 
        testimony you will give before this Committee (or 
        subcommittee, panel, or task force) in the matters now 
        under consideration will be the truth, the whole truth, 
        and nothing but the truth, so help you God?''

                   Rule 15.--Questioning of Witnesses

    (a) When a witness is before the Committee or a 
subcommittee, panel, or task force, members of the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force may put questions to the 
witness only when recognized by the Chair, subcommittee, panel, 
or task force Chair, as appropriate, for that purpose according 
to rule 11 of the Committee.
    (b) Members of the Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task 
force who so desire shall have not more than five minutes to 
question each witness or panel of witnesses, the responses of 
the witness or witnesses being included in the five-minute 
period, until such time as each member has had an opportunity 
to question each witness or panel of witnesses. Thereafter, 
additional rounds for questioning witnesses by members are 
within the discretion of the Chair or the subcommittee, panel, 
or task force Chair, as appropriate.
    (c) Questions put to witnesses before the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force shall be pertinent to the 
measure or matter that may be before the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force for consideration.

        Rule 16.--Publication of Committee Hearings and Markups

    The transcripts of those hearings conducted by the 
Committee, subcommittee, panel, or task force will be published 
officially in substantially verbatim form, with the material 
requested for the record inserted at that place requested, or 
at the end of the record, as appropriate. The transcripts of 
markups conducted by the Committee or any subcommittee may be 
published officially in verbatim form. Any requests to correct 
any errors, other than those in transcription, will be appended 
to the record, and the appropriate place where the change is 
requested will be footnoted. Any transcript published under 
this rule shall include the results of record votes conducted 
in the session covered by the transcript and shall also include 
materials that have been submitted for the record and are 
covered under rule 19. The handling and safekeeping of these 
materials shall fully satisfy the requirements of rule 20. No 
transcript of an executive session conducted under rule 9 shall 
be published under this rule.

                     Rule 17.--Voting and Rollcalls

    (a) Voting on a measure or matter may be by record vote 
(including a vote by electronic device under such regulations 
as the Chair may prescribe, in consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member), division vote, voice vote, or unanimous 
consent.
    (b) A record vote shall be ordered upon the request of one-
fifth of those members present.
    (c) No vote by any member of the Committee or a 
subcommittee with respect to any measure or matter shall be 
cast by proxy.
    (d) In the event of a vote or votes, when a member is in 
attendance at any other committee, subcommittee, or conference 
committee meeting during that time, the necessary absence of 
that member shall be so noted in the record vote record, upon 
timely notification to the Chair by that member.
    (e) The Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
Member, or the Chair of a subcommittee, as appropriate, with 
the concurrence of the respective ranking minority member or 
the most senior minority member who is present at the time, may 
elect to postpone requested record votes until such time or 
point at a markup as is mutually decided. When proceedings 
resume on a postponed question, notwithstanding any intervening 
order for the previous question, the underlying proposition 
shall remain subject to further debate or amendment to the same 
extent as when the question was postponed.

                      Rule 18.--Committee Reports

    (a) If, at the time of approval of any measure or matter by 
the Committee, any member of the Committee gives timely notice 
of intention to file supplemental, minority, additional or 
dissenting views, all members shall be entitled to not less 
than two calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
holidays except when the House is in session on such days) in 
which to file such written and signed views (including in 
electronic form) with the Staff Director of the Committee, or 
the Staff Director's designee. All such views so filed by one 
or more members of the Committee shall be included within, and 
shall be a part of, the report filed by the Committee with 
respect to that measure or matter.
    (b) With respect to each record vote on a motion to report 
any measure or matter, and on any amendment offered to the 
measure or matter, the total number of votes cast for and 
against, the names of those voting for and against, and a brief 
description of the question, shall be included in the Committee 
report on the measure or matter.
    (c) Not later than 24 hours after the adoption of any 
amendment or 48 hours after the disposition or withdrawal of 
any other amendment to a measure or matter considered by the 
Committee, the Chair shall cause the text of each such 
amendment to be made publicly available in electronic form as 
provided in clause 2(e)(6) of rule XI of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives.

           Rule 19.--Public Inspection of Committee Rollcalls

    The result of each record vote in any meeting of the 
Committee shall be made publicly available in electronic form 
within 48 hours of such record vote pursuant to clause 
2(e)(1)(B)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. Information so available shall include a 
description of the amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition and the name of each member voting for and each 
member voting against such amendment, motion, order, or 
proposition and the names of those members present but not 
voting.

    Rule 20.--Protection of National Security and Other Information

    (a) Except as provided in clause 2(g) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives, all national security 
information bearing a classification of Confidential or higher 
which has been received by the Committee or a subcommittee 
shall be deemed to have been received in executive session and 
shall be given appropriate safekeeping.
    (b) The Chair shall, with the approval of a majority of the 
Committee, establish such procedures as in his judgment may be 
necessary to prevent the unauthorized disclosure of any 
national security information that is received which is 
classified as Confidential or higher. Such procedures shall, 
however, ensure access to this information by any member of the 
Committee or any other Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner of the House of Representatives, staff of the 
Committee, or staff designated under rule 9(c) who have the 
appropriate security clearances and the need to know, who has 
requested the opportunity to review such material.
    (c) The Chair shall, in consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, establish such procedures as in his judgment 
may be necessary to prevent the unauthorized disclosure of any 
proprietary information that is received by the Committee, 
subcommittee, panel, or task force. Such procedures shall be 
consistent with the Rules of the House of Representatives and 
applicable law.

                      Rule 21.--Committee Staffing

    The staffing of the Committee, the standing subcommittees, 
and any panel or task force designated by the Chair shall be 
subject to the Rules of the House of Representatives.

                      Rule 22.--Committee Records

    The records of the Committee at the National Archives and 
Records Administration shall be made available for public use 
in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority 
Member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of rule VII, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on the written request of any member of the 
Committee.

                      Rule 23.--Hearing Procedures

    Clause 2(k) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives shall apply to the Committee.

                  Rule 24.--Committee Activity Reports

    Not later than January 2nd of each odd-numbered year the 
Committee shall submit to the House a report on its activities, 
pursuant to clause 1(d) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
                        Committee on the Budget

    JODEY C. ARRINGTON, Texas, 
             Chairman

BRENDAN F. BOYLE, Pennsylvania,      RALPH NORMAN, South Carolina
  Ranking Member                     TOM McCLINTOCK, California
BRIAN HIGGINS, New York              GLENN GROTHMAN, Wisconsin
JANICE D. SCHAKOWSKY, Illinois       LLOYD SMUCKER, Pennsylvania
EARL BLUMENAUER, Oregon              MICHAEL C. BURGESS, Texas
DANIEL T. KILDEE, Michigan           EARL L. ``BUDDY'' CARTER, Georgia
SCOTT H. PETERS, California          BEN CLINE, Virginia
BARBARA LEE, California              BOB GOOD, Virginia
LLOYD DOGGETT, Texas                 JACK BERGMAN, Michigan
JIMMY PANETTA, California            DREW FERGUSON IV, Georgia
JENNIFER WEXTON, Virginia            CHIP ROY, Texas
SHEILA JACKSON LEE, Texas            BLAKE D. MOORE, Utah
ILHAN OMAR, Minnesota                DAVID G. VALADAO, California
DAVID J. TRONE, Maryland             RON ESTES, Kansas
BECCA BALINT, Vermont                STEPHANIE I. BICE, Oklahoma
ROBERT C. ``BOBBY'' SCOTT, Virginia  LISA C. McCLAIN, Michigan
ADRIANO ESPAILLAT, New York          MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota
                                     RUDY YAKYM III, Indiana
                                     JOSH BRECHEEN, Oklahoma
                                     CHUCK EDWARDS, North Carolina

      RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE BUDGET FOR THE 118th CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 9, 2023)


                         GENERAL APPLICABILITY


                 Rule 1.--Applicability of House Rules

    (a) Except as otherwise specified herein, the Rules of the 
House of Representatives are the rules of the Committee so far 
as applicable, except that a motion to recess from day to day, 
or a motion to recess subject to the call of the Chair (within 
24 hours), or a motion to dispense with the first reading (in 
full) of a bill or resolution, if printed copies are available, 
is a non-debatable motion of privilege in the Committee. A 
proposed investigative or oversight report shall be considered 
as read if it has been available to the members of the 
Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, 
or legal holidays except when the House is in session on such 
day).
    (b) The Committee's rules shall be publicly available in 
electronic form and published in the Congressional Record not 
later than 60 days after the Chair of the Committee is elected 
in each odd numbered year.
    (c) The Chair, in consultation with the Ranking minority 
member, may establish such other procedures and take such 
actions as may be necessary to carry out these rules or 
facilitate the effective operation of the Committee.

                          Rule 2.--Vice Chair

    The Chair of the Committee shall designate a member of the 
majority party to serve as Vice Chair of the Committee in 
accordance with clause 2(d) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives. The Vice Chair shall preside at any 
meeting or hearing during the temporary absence of the Chair.

                                MEETINGS


                       Rule 3.--Regular Meetings

    (a) The regular meeting day of the Committee shall be the 
second Wednesday of each month at 11 a.m., while the House is 
in session, if notice is given pursuant to paragraph (c) and 
paragraph (g)(3) of clause 2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives.
    (b) Regular meetings shall be canceled when they conflict 
with meetings of either party's caucus or conference.
    (c) The Chair shall give written notice of the date, place, 
and subject matter of any Committee meeting, which may not 
commence earlier than the third calendar day (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such day) on which members have notice thereof, 
unless the Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking minority 
member, or the Committee by majority vote with a quorum present 
for the transaction of business, determines there is good cause 
to begin the meeting sooner, in which case the Chair shall make 
the announcement at the earliest possible date. An announcement 
shall be published promptly in the Daily Digest and made 
publicly available in electronic form.

                Rule 4.--Additional and Special Meetings

    (a) The Chair may call and convene additional meetings of 
the Committee as the Chair considers necessary or special 
meetings at the request of a majority of the members of the 
Committee in accordance with clause 2(c) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (b) In the absence of exceptional circumstances, the Chair 
shall provide public electronic notice of additional meetings 
to the office of each member at least 24 hours in advance while 
Congress is in session, and at least three days in advance when 
Congress is not in session.

                    Rule 5.--Open Business Meetings

    (a) Meetings and hearings of the Committee shall be called 
to order and presided over by the Chair or, in the Chair's 
absence, by the member designated by the Chair as the Vice 
Chair of the Committee, or by the Ranking majority member of 
the Committee present as Acting Chair.
    (b) Each meeting for the transaction of Committee business, 
including the markup of measures, shall be open to the public 
except when the Committee, in open session and with a quorum 
present, determines by roll call vote that all or part of the 
remainder of the meeting on that day shall be closed to the 
public in accordance with clause 2(g)(1) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (c) No person, other than members of the Committee and such 
congressional staff and departmental representatives as the 
Committee may authorize, shall be present at any business or 
markup session which has been closed to the public.
    (d) Not later than 24 hours after the adoption of any 
amendment, or 48 hours after the disposition or withdrawal of 
any other amendment, to a measure or matter considered by the 
Committee, the Chair of the Committee shall cause the text of 
each such amendment to be made publicly available in electronic 
form.

                            Rule 6.--Quorum

    A majority of the Committee shall constitute a quorum. No 
business shall be transacted and no measure or recommendation 
shall be reported unless a quorum is actually present.

                          Rule 7.--Recognition

    Any member, when recognized by the Chair, may address the 
Committee on any bill, motion, or other matter under 
consideration before the Committee. The time of such member 
shall be limited to five minutes until all members present have 
been afforded an opportunity to comment.

                   Rule 8.--Consideration of Business

    Measures or matters may be placed before the Committee, for 
its consideration, by the Chair or by a majority vote of the 
Committee members, a quorum being present.

                  Rule 9.--Availability of Legislation

    (a) The Committee shall consider no bill, joint resolution, 
or concurrent resolution unless copies of the measure have been 
made available to all Committee members at least 24 hours prior 
to the time at which such measure is to be considered. When 
considering concurrent resolutions on the budget, this 
requirement shall be satisfied by making available copies of 
the complete Chair's mark (or such material as will provide the 
basis for Committee consideration). The provisions of this rule 
may be suspended with the concurrence of the Chair and Ranking 
minority member.
    (b) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, the Chair shall cause 
the text of such legislation to be made publicly available in 
electronic form.

       Rule 10.--Procedure for Consideration of Budget Resolution

    (a) In the consideration of a concurrent resolution on the 
budget, the Committee shall first proceed, unless otherwise 
determined by the Committee, to consider budget aggregates, 
functional categories, and other appropriate matters on a 
tentative basis, with the document before the Committee open to 
amendment. Subsequent amendments may be offered to aggregates, 
functional categories, or other appropriate matters, which have 
already been amended in their entirety.
    (b) Following adoption of the aggregates, functional 
categories, and other matters, the text of a concurrent 
resolution on the budget incorporating such aggregates, 
functional categories, and other appropriate matters shall be 
considered for amendment and a final vote.

                       Rule 11.--Roll Call Votes

    (a) A roll call of the members may be had upon the request 
of at least one-fifth of those present. In the apparent absence 
of a quorum, a roll call may be had on the request of any 
member.
    (b) No vote may be conducted on any measure or motion 
pending before the Committee unless a quorum is present for 
such purpose.
    (c) In accordance with clause 2(e)(1)(B) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives, a record of the vote of 
each Committee member on each recorded vote shall be made 
publicly available in electronic form within 48 hours of such 
record vote, and, with respect to any roll call vote on any 
motion to amend or report, shall be included in the report of 
the Committee showing the total number of votes cast for and 
against and the names of those members voting for and against.

                         Rule 12.--Proxy Voting

    No vote by any member of the Committee on any measure or 
matter may be cast by proxy.

                                HEARINGS


                   Rule 13.--Announcement of Hearings

    The Chair shall make a public announcement of the date, 
place, and subject matter of any Committee hearing at least one 
week before the hearing, beginning with the day in which the 
announcement is made and ending the day preceding the scheduled 
hearing unless the Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking 
minority member, or the Committee by majority vote with a 
quorum present for the transaction of business, determines 
there is good cause to begin the hearing sooner, in which case 
the Chair shall make the announcement at the earliest possible 
date. Such announcement shall be published promptly in the 
Daily Digest and made publicly available in electronic form.

                        Rule 14.--Open Hearings

    (a) Each hearing conducted by the Committee or any of its 
task forces shall be open to the public except when the 
Committee or task force, in open session and with a quorum 
present, determines by roll call vote that all or part of the 
remainder of that hearing on that day shall be closed to the 
public because disclosure of testimony, evidence, or other 
matters to be considered would endanger the national security, 
or would compromise sensitive law enforcement information, or 
would tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person, or 
would violate any law or rule of the House of Representatives. 
The Committee or task forces may by the same procedure vote to 
close one subsequent day of hearing.
    (b) For the purposes of clause 2(g)(2) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives, the task forces of the 
Committee are considered to be subcommittees.

                Rule 15.--Member Day Hearing Requirement

    During the first session of the 118th Congress, the 
Committee shall hold a Member Day Hearing to hear testimony 
from members, delegates, and the resident commissioner--whether 
or not they are a member of the Committee--on budget priorities 
and process.

                            Rule 16.--Quorum

    For the purpose of hearing testimony, not less than two 
members of the Committee shall constitute a quorum.

                    Rule 17.--Questioning Witnesses

    (a) Questioning of witnesses will be conducted under the 
five-minute rule unless the Committee adopts a motion pursuant 
to clause 2(j) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (b) In questioning witnesses under the five-minute rule:
        (1)  First, the Chair and the Ranking minority member 
        shall be recognized;
        (2)  Next, the Committee members present at the time 
        the hearing is called to order shall be recognized in 
        order of seniority; and
        (3)  Finally, the Committee members not present at the 
        time the hearing is called to order may be recognized 
        in the order of their arrival at the hearing.
    (c) In recognizing Committee members to question witnesses, 
the Chair may take into consideration the ratio of majority 
members to minority members and the number of majority and 
minority members present and shall apportion the recognition 
for questioning in such a manner as not to disadvantage the 
members of the majority.
    (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of section (a), the 
Chair and Ranking minority member may designate an equal number 
of members from each party to question a witness for a period 
not longer than 30 minutes, or may designate staff from each 
party to question a witness for a period not longer than 30 
minutes.

                     Rule 18.--Subpoenas and Oaths

    (a) In accordance with clause 2(m) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives, subpoenas authorized by a 
majority of the Committee or by the Chair may be issued over 
the signature of the Chair and may be served by any person 
designated by the Chair or such member.
    (b) The Chair, or any member of the Committee designated by 
the Chair, may administer oaths to witnesses.

                    Rule 19.--Witnesses' Statements

    (a) So far as practicable, any prepared statement to be 
presented by a witness shall be submitted to the Committee at 
least 24 hours in advance of presentation and shall be 
distributed to all members of the Committee in advance of 
presentation.
    (b) To the greatest extent possible, each witness appearing 
in a nongovernmental capacity shall include with the written 
statement of proposed testimony a curriculum vitae and a 
disclosure of the amount and source (by agency and program) of 
any Federal grant (or sub-grant thereof) or contract (or 
subcontract thereof) received during the current fiscal year or 
either of the two preceding fiscal years.
    (c) Such statements, with appropriate redactions to protect 
the privacy of witnesses, shall be made publicly available in 
electronic form not later than one day after the witness 
appears.

                        PRINTS AND PUBLICATIONS


                       Rule 20.--Committee Prints

    All Committee prints and other materials prepared for 
public distribution shall be approved by the Committee prior to 
any distribution, unless such print or other material shows 
clearly on its face that it has not been approved by the 
Committee.

            Rule 21.--Committee Publications on the Internet

    To the maximum extent feasible, the Committee shall make 
its publications available in electronic form.

                                 STAFF


                       Rule 22.--Committee Staff

    (a) Subject to approval by the Committee and to the 
provisions of the following sections, the professional and 
clerical staff of the Committee shall be appointed, and may be 
removed, by the Chair.
    (b) Committee staff shall not be assigned any duties other 
than those pertaining to Committee business, and shall be 
selected in accordance with clause 9 of rule XXIII of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives and solely on the basis of 
fitness to perform the duties of their respective positions.
    (c) All Committee staff shall be entitled to equitable 
treatment, including comparable salaries, facilities, access to 
official Committee records, leave, and hours of work.
    (d) Notwithstanding sections (a), (b), and (c), staff shall 
be employed in compliance with the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Employment and Accountability Act, the 
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, and any other applicable 
Federal statutes.

                      Rule 23.--Staff Supervision

    (a) Staff shall be under the general supervision and 
direction of the Chair, who shall establish and assign their 
duties and responsibilities, delegate such authority as the 
Chair deems appropriate, fix and adjust staff salaries (in 
accordance with rule X, clause 9(c) of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives) and job titles, and, at the Chair's 
discretion, arrange for their specialized training.
    (b) Staff assigned to the minority shall be under the 
general supervision and direction of the minority members of 
the Committee, who may delegate such authority, as they deem 
appropriate.

                                RECORDS


       Rule 24.--Preparation and Maintenance of Committee Records

    (a) A substantially verbatim account of remarks actually 
made during the proceedings shall be made of all hearings and 
business meetings subject only to technical, grammatical, and 
typographical corrections.
    (b) The proceedings of the Committee shall be recorded in a 
journal, which shall, among other things, include a record of 
the votes on any question on which a record vote is taken.
    (c) Members of the Committee shall correct and return 
transcripts of hearings as soon as practicable after receipt 
thereof, except that any changes shall be limited to technical, 
grammatical, and typographical corrections.
    (d) Any witness may examine the transcript of their own 
testimony and make grammatical, technical, and typographical 
corrections.
    (e) The Chair may order the printing of a hearing record 
without the corrections of any member or witness if the Chair 
determines that such member or witness has been afforded a 
reasonable time for correction, and that further delay would 
seriously impede the Committee's responsibility for meeting its 
deadlines under the Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
    (f) Transcripts of hearings and meetings may be printed if 
the Chair decides it is appropriate, or if a majority of the 
members so request.

                 Rule 25.--Access to Committee Records

    (a) The Chair shall promulgate regulations to provide for 
public inspection of roll call votes and to provide access by 
members to Committee records (in accordance with clause 2(e) of 
rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives).
    (b) Access to classified testimony and information shall be 
limited to members of Congress and to House Budget Committee 
staff and staff of the Office of Official Reporters who have an 
appropriate security clearance.
    (c) Notice of the receipt of such information shall be sent 
to the Committee members. Such information shall be kept in the 
Committee safe and shall be available to members in the 
Committee office.
    (d) The records of the Committee at the National Archives 
and Records Administration shall be made available for public 
use in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The Chair shall notify the Ranking minority 
member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of the rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on the written request of any member of the 
Committee.

                               OVERSIGHT


                      Rule 26.--General Oversight

    (a) The Committee shall review and study, on a continuing 
basis, the application, administration, execution, and 
effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, the subject of 
which is within its jurisdiction.
    (b) The Committee is authorized at any time to conduct such 
investigations and studies as it may consider necessary or 
appropriate in the exercise of its responsibilities under 
clause 1(d) of rule X of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, and, subject to the adoption of expense 
resolutions as required by clause 6 of rule X of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, to incur expenses (including 
travel expenses) in connection therewith.
    (c) Not later than March 1 of the first session of a 
Congress, the Committee shall meet in open session, with a 
quorum present, to adopt its authorization and oversight plan 
for that Congress and submit such plan to the Committees on 
Oversight and Accountability and House Administration in 
accordance with the provisions of clause 2(d) of rule X of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives.

                                REPORTS


                  Rule 27.--Availability Before Filing

    (a) Any report accompanying any bill or resolution ordered 
reported to the House by the Committee shall be available to 
all Committee members at least 36 hours prior to filing with 
the House.
    (b) No material change shall be made in any report made 
available to members pursuant to section (a) without the 
concurrence of the Ranking minority member or by a majority 
vote of the Committee.
    (c) Notwithstanding any other rule of the Committee, either 
or both sections (a) and (b) may be waived by the Chair or by a 
majority vote by the Committee.

               Rule 28.--Report on the Budget Resolution

    The report of the Committee to accompany a concurrent 
resolution on the budget shall include any roll call vote on 
any motion to amend or report any measure.

Rule 29.--Parliamentarian's Status Report and Section 302 Status Report

    (a)(1) In order to carry out its duty under sections 311 
and 312 of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 to advise the 
House of Representatives as to the current level of spending 
and revenues as compared to the levels set forth in the latest 
agreed-upon concurrent resolution on the budget, the Committee 
shall advise the Speaker on at least a monthly basis when the 
House is in session as to its estimate of the current level of 
spending and revenue. Such estimates shall be prepared by the 
staff of the Committee, transmitted to the Speaker in the form 
of a Parliamentarian's Status Report, and printed in the 
Congressional Record.
    (2) The Committee authorizes the Chair, in consultation 
with the Ranking minority member, to transmit to the Speaker 
the Parliamentarian's Status Report described above.
    (b)(1) In order to carry out its duty under sections 302 
and 312 of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 to advise the 
House of Representatives as to the current level of spending 
within the jurisdiction of committees as compared to the 
appropriate allocations made pursuant to the Act in conformity 
with the latest agreed-upon concurrent resolution on the 
budget, the Committee shall, as necessary, advise the Speaker 
as to its estimate of the current level of spending within the 
jurisdiction of appropriate committees. Such estimates shall be 
prepared by the staff of the Committee and transmitted to the 
Speaker in the form of a Section 302 Status Report.
    (2) The Committee authorizes the Chair, in consultation 
with the Ranking minority member, to transmit to the Speaker 
the Section 302 Status Report described above.

                       Rule 30.--Activity Report

    (a) After an adjournment sine die of a regular session of a 
Congress or after December 15 of an even-numbered year, the 
Chair of the Committee may file at any time with the Clerk the 
Committee's activity report for that Congress pursuant to 
clause 1(d)(1) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives without the approval of the Committee, if a 
copy of the report has been available to each member of the 
Committee for at least seven calendar days and the report 
includes any supplemental, minority, or additional views 
submitted by a member of the Committee.
    (b) Such report shall include separate sections summarizing 
the legislative and oversight activities of the Committee; a 
summary of the actions taken and recommendations made; a 
summary of any additional oversight activities undertaken by 
the Committee, and any recommendations made or actions taken 
thereon; and a delineation of any hearings held.

                             MISCELLANEOUS


            Rule 31.--Broadcasting of Meetings and Hearings

    (a) It shall be the policy of the Committee to give all 
news media access to open hearings of the Committee, subject to 
the requirements and limitations set forth in clause 4 of rule 
XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (b) Whenever any Committee business meeting is open to the 
public, that meeting may be covered, in whole or in part, by 
television broadcast, radio broadcast, still photography, or by 
any of such methods of coverage, in accordance with clause 4 of 
rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives.

                      Rule 32.--Committee Website

    The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purpose of furthering the Committee's legislative and 
oversight responsibilities, including communicating information 
about the Committee's activities to Committee members, other 
members of the House, and the public. The Ranking minority 
member may maintain a similar website for the same purpose, 
including communicating information about the activities of the 
minority to Committee members, other members of the House, and 
the public.

                   Rule 33.--Appointment of Conferees

    (a) Majority party members recommended to the Speaker as 
conferees shall be recommended by the Chair subject to the 
approval of the majority party members of the Committee.
    (b) The Chair shall recommend such minority party members 
as conferees as shall be determined by the minority party; the 
recommended party representation shall be in approximately the 
same proportion as that in the Committee.

                           Rule 34.--Waivers

    When a reported bill or joint resolution, conference 
report, or anticipated floor amendment violates any provision 
of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the Chair may, if 
practical, consult with the Committee members on whether the 
Chair should recommend, in writing, that the Committee on Rules 
report a special rule that enforces the Act by not waiving the 
applicable points of order during the consideration of such 
measure.
                Committee on Education and the Workforce

  VIRGINIA FOXX, North Carolina, 
            Chairwoman

ROBERT C. ``BOBBY'' SCOTT, Virginia, JOE WILSON, South Carolina
  Ranking Member                     GLENN THOMPSON, Pennsylvania
RAUL M. GRIJALVA, Arizona            TIM WALBERG, Michigan
JOE COURTNEY, Connecticut            GLENN GROTHMAN, Wisconsin
GREGORIO KILILI CAMACHO SABLAN, Northern Mariana IslandsNew York
FREDERICA S. WILSON, Florida         RICK W. ALLEN, Georgia
SUZANNE BONAMICI, Oregon             JIM BANKS, Indiana
MARK TAKANO, California              JAMES COMER, Kentucky
ALMA S. ADAMS, North Carolina        LLOYD SMUCKER, Pennsylvania
MARK DeSAULNIER, California          BURGESS OWENS, Utah
DONALD NORCROSS, New Jersey          BOB GOOD, Virginia
PRAMILA JAYAPAL, Washington          LISA C. McCLAIN, Michigan
SUSAN WILD, Pennsylvania             MARY E. MILLER, Illinois
LUCY McBATH, Georgia                 MICHELLE STEEL, California
JAHANA HAYES, Connecticut            RON ESTES, Kansas
ILHAN OMAR, Minnesota                JULIA LETLOW, Louisiana
HALEY M. STEVENS, Michigan           KEVIN KILEY, California
TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ, New Mexico   AARON BEAN, Florida
KATHY E. MANNING, North Carolina     ERIC BURLISON, Missouri
FRANK J. MRVAN, Indiana              NATHANIEL MORAN, Texas
JAMAAL BOWMAN, New York              JOHN JAMES, Michigan
                                     LORI CHAVEZ-DeREMER, Oregon
                                     BRANDON WILLIAMS, New York
                                     ERIN HOUCHIN, Indiana

  RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION AND THE WORKFORCE FOR THE 118TH 
                                CONGRESS


                     (As adopted January 31, 2023)


           Rule 1.--Regular, Additional, and Special Meetings

    (a) Regular meetings of the Committee shall be held on the 
second Wednesday of each month at 10:00 a.m., while the House 
is in session. The Committee shall meet for the consideration 
of a bill or resolution pending before the Committee or the 
transaction of other committee business on regular meeting days 
fixed by the Committee if notice is given in accordance with 
clause 2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (b) The Chair may call and convene, as he or she considers 
necessary, additional meetings of the Committee for the 
consideration of any bill or resolution pending before the 
Committee or for the conduct of other Committee business.
    (c) If at least three members of the Committee desire that 
a special meeting of the Committee be called by the Chair, 
those members may file with the clerk of the Committee their 
written request to the Chair for that special meeting. 
Immediately upon the filing of the request, the staff director 
of the Committee shall notify the Chair of the filing of the 
request. If, within three calendar days after the filing of the 
request, the Chair does not call the requested special meeting 
to be held within seven calendar days after the filing of the 
request, a majority of the members of the Committee may file 
with the clerk of the Committee their written notice that a 
special meeting of the Committee will be held, specifying the 
date and hour thereof, and the measure or matter to be 
considered at that special meeting. Immediately upon the filing 
of the notice, the staff director of the Committee shall notify 
all members of the Committee that such meeting will be held and 
inform them of its date and hour and the measure or matter to 
be considered. Such notice shall also be made publicly 
available in electronic form and shall satisfy the notice 
requirements in clause 2(g)(3)(A)(ii) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives. The Committee shall meet on 
that date and hour and only the measure or matter specified in 
that notice may be considered at that special meeting.
    (d) Legislative meetings of the Committee and its 
subcommittees shall be open to the public, including radio, 
television, and still photography coverage, unless such 
meetings are closed pursuant to the requirements of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives. No business meeting of the 
Committee, other than regularly scheduled meetings, may be held 
without each member being given reasonable notice.
    (e) The Chair of the Committee or of a subcommittee, as 
appropriate, shall preside at meetings or hearings. In the 
absence of the Chair of the Committee or of a subcommittee, 
members shall preside as provided in clause 2(d) of rule XI of 
the Rules of the House of Representatives. No person other than 
a Member of Congress or Congressional staff may walk in, stand 
in, or be seated at the rostrum area during a meeting or 
hearing of the Committee or subcommittee unless authorized by 
the Chair.

                            Rule 2.--Decorum

    The Chair shall enforce decorum.

            Rule 3.--Standing Subcommittees and Jurisdiction

    (a) There shall be four standing subcommittees. In addition 
to conducting oversight in the area of their respective 
jurisdictions as required in clause 2 of rule X of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, each subcommittee shall have the 
following jurisdiction:
    Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education.--Education from early learning through the high 
school level, including but not limited to elementary and 
secondary education, special education, homeless education, and 
migrant education; overseas dependent schools; career and 
technical education; school safety and alcohol and drug abuse 
prevention; school lunch and child nutrition programs; 
educational research and improvement including the Institute of 
Education Sciences; environmental education; pre-service and 
in-service teacher professional development including Title II 
of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and Title II of 
the Higher Education Act; early care and education programs 
including the Head Start Act and the Child Care and Development 
Block Grant Act; adolescent development programs, including but 
not limited to those providing for the care and treatment of 
certain at-risk youth, including the Juvenile Justice and 
Delinquency Prevention Act and the Runaway and Homeless Youth 
Act; and all matters dealing with child abuse and domestic 
violence, including the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment 
Act and child adoption.
    Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce 
Development.--Education and workforce development beyond the 
high school level, including but not limited to higher 
education generally, postsecondary student assistance and 
employment services, and the Higher Education Act; Title IX of 
the Education Amendments of 1972; all domestic volunteer 
programs; all programs related to the arts and humanities, 
museum and library services, and arts and artifacts indemnity; 
postsecondary career and technical education, apprenticeship 
programs, and workforce development, including the Workforce 
Innovation and Opportunity Act, vocational rehabilitation, and 
workforce development programs from immigration funding; 
science and technology programs; adult basic education (family 
literacy); all welfare reform programs, including work 
incentive programs and welfare-to-work requirements; poverty 
programs, including the Community Services Block Grant Act and 
the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP); the 
Native American Programs Act; the Institute of Peace; and all 
matters dealing with programs and services for the elderly 
including nutrition programs and the Older Americans Act.
    Subcommittee on Workforce Protections.--Wages and hours of 
workers, including but not limited to the Davis-Bacon Act, the 
Walsh-Healey Act, the Service Contract Act, and the Fair Labor 
Standards Act; workers' compensation including the Federal 
Employees' Compensation Act, the Longshore and Harbor Workers' 
Compensation Act, and the Black Lung Benefits Act; the Migrant 
and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act; the Family and 
Medical Leave Act; the Worker Adjustment and Retraining 
Notification Act; the Employee Polygraph Protection Act of 
1988; trade and immigration issues as they affect employers and 
workers; workers' safety and health, including but not limited 
to occupational safety and health, mine safety and health, and 
migrant and agricultural worker safety and health; and all 
matters related to equal employment opportunity and civil 
rights in employment.
    Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions.--
All matters dealing with relationships between employers and 
employees, including but not limited to the National Labor 
Relations Act, the Labor-Management Relations Act, and the 
Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act; the Bureau of 
Labor Statistics; and employment-related health and retirement 
security, including pension, health, and other employee 
benefits and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act 
(ERISA).
    (b) The majority party members of the Committee may provide 
for such temporary, ad hoc subcommittees as determined to be 
appropriate.

                     Rule 4.--Ex Officio Membership

    The Chair of the Committee and the ranking minority party 
member (``Ranking Member'') shall be ex officio members, but 
not voting members, of each subcommittee to which such Chair or 
Ranking Member has not been assigned, and as ex officio members 
they shall not be counted for the purpose of constituting a 
quorum.

                    Rule 5.--Subcommittee Scheduling

    (a) A Subcommittee chair shall set meeting or hearing dates 
after consultation with the Chair and other subcommittee chairs 
with a view toward avoiding simultaneous scheduling of 
Committee and subcommittee meetings or hearings, wherever 
possible. No such meetings or hearings, however, shall be held 
outside of Washington, D.C., without the prior authorization of 
the Committee Chair. Where practicable, 14 days' notice will be 
given of such meeting or hearing.
    (b) Available dates for subcommittee meetings shall be 
assigned by the Chair to the subcommittees as nearly as 
practicable in rotation and in accordance with their workloads. 
As far as practicable, the Chair shall not schedule 
simultaneous subcommittee markups, a subcommittee markup during 
a full Committee markup, or any hearing during a markup.

                      Rule 6.--Subcommittee Rules

    The rules of the Committee shall be the rules of its 
subcommittees.

                 Rule 7.--Special Assignment of Members

    To facilitate the oversight and other legislative and 
investigative activities of the Committee, the Chair of the 
Committee may, at the request of a subcommittee chair, make a 
temporary assignment of any member of the Committee to such 
subcommittee for the purpose of constituting a quorum and of 
enabling such member to participate in any public hearing, 
investigation, or study by such subcommittee to be held outside 
of Washington, D.C. Any member of the Committee may attend 
public hearings of any subcommittee and any member of the 
Committee may question witnesses only when they have been 
recognized by the Chair for that purpose.

                       Rule 8.--Hearing Procedure

    (a) The Chair, in the case of hearings to be conducted by 
the Committee, and the appropriate subcommittee chair, in the 
case of hearings to be conducted by a subcommittee, shall make 
public announcement of the date, place, and subject matter of 
any hearing to be conducted on any measure or matter at least 
one week before the commencement of that hearing unless the 
Chair of the Committee, with the concurrence of the Ranking 
Member, determines that there is good cause to begin such 
hearing at an earlier date or the Committee so determines by 
majority vote in the presence of the number of members required 
under the rules of the Committee for the transaction of 
business. In the latter event, the Chair or the subcommittee 
chair, as the case may be, shall have such an announcement 
promptly published in the Daily Digest and made publicly 
available in electronic form. To the extent practicable, the 
Chair or the subcommittee chair shall make public announcement 
of the final list of witnesses scheduled to testify at least 48 
hours before the commencement of the hearing. The staff 
director of the Committee shall promptly notify the Daily 
Digest Clerk of the Congressional Record as soon as practicable 
after such public announcement is made.
    (b) Subcommittees are authorized to hold hearings, receive 
exhibits, hear witnesses, and report to the Committee for final 
action, together with such recommendations as may be agreed 
upon by the subcommittee. As practicable, such exhibits, 
including videos, shall be provided to the Chair the day before 
a hearing.
    (c) All opening statements at hearings conducted by the 
Committee or any subcommittee will be made part of the 
permanent written record. Opening statements by members may not 
be presented orally, unless the Chair of the Committee or any 
subcommittee determines that one statement from the Chair or a 
designee will be presented, in which case the Ranking Member or 
a designee may also make a statement. If a witness scheduled to 
testify at any hearing of the Committee or any subcommittee is 
a constituent of a member of the Committee or subcommittee, 
such member shall be entitled to briefly introduce such witness 
at the hearing.
    (d) To the extent practicable, witnesses who are to appear 
before the Committee or a subcommittee shall file with the 
staff director of the Committee, at least 48 hours in advance 
of their appearance, a written statement of their proposed 
testimony, together with a brief summary thereof, and shall 
limit their oral presentation to a summary thereof. The staff 
director of the Committee shall promptly furnish to the staff 
director of the minority a copy of such testimony submitted to 
the Committee pursuant to this rule. The Chair of the 
Committee, or a member designated by the Chair, may administer 
oaths to witnesses.
    (e) When any hearing is conducted by the Committee or any 
subcommittee upon any measure or matter, the minority party 
members on the Committee shall be entitled, upon request to the 
Chair by a majority of those minority party members before the 
completion of such hearing, to call witnesses selected by the 
minority to testify with respect to that measure or matter 
during at least one day of hearing thereon. The minority party 
may waive this right by calling at least one witness during a 
Committee hearing or subcommittee hearing.
    (f) In the conduct of hearings of subcommittees sitting 
jointly, the rules otherwise applicable to all subcommittees 
shall likewise apply to joint subcommittee hearings for 
purposes of such shared consideration.

               Rule 9.--Questioning of Hearing Witnesses

    (a) Subject to clauses (b), (c), and (d), a Committee 
member may question hearing witnesses only when the member has 
been recognized by the Chair for that purpose, and only for a 
five-minute period until all members present have had an 
opportunity to question a witness. The questioning of witnesses 
in both Committee and subcommittee hearings shall be initiated 
by the Chair, followed by the Ranking Member and all other 
members alternating between the majority and minority party. 
The Chair shall exercise discretion in determining the order in 
which members will be recognized. In recognizing members to 
question witnesses in this fashion, the Chair shall take into 
consideration the ratio of the majority to minority party 
members present and shall establish the order of recognition 
for questioning in such a manner as not to place the members of 
the majority party in a disadvantageous position.
    (b) The Chair may permit a specified number of members to 
question a witness for longer than five minutes. The time for 
extended questioning of a witness under this clause shall be 
equal for the majority party and the minority party and may not 
exceed one hour in the aggregate.
    (c) The Chair may permit Committee staff for the majority 
and the minority party members to question a witness for equal 
specified periods. The time for extended questioning of a 
witness under this clause shall be equal for the majority party 
and the minority party and may not exceed one hour in the 
aggregate.
    (d) In an investigative hearing or in an executive session, 
the Chair's authority to extend questioning under subsection 
(b) and (c) of this rule shall be equal for the majority and 
the minority party and may not exceed one hour in the aggregate 
and shall only be conducted by counsel for the majority and the 
minority party when authorized under subsection (c) of this 
rule.

                      Rule 10.--Subpoena Authority

    The power to authorize and issue subpoenas is delegated to 
the Chair of the full Committee, as provided for under clause 
2(m)(3)(A)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Member 
prior to issuing any subpoena under such authority. To the 
extent practicable, the Chair shall consult with the Ranking 
Member at least 24 hours in advance of a subpoena being issued 
under such authority, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and federal 
holidays. As soon as practicable after issuing any subpoena 
under such authority, the Chair shall notify in writing all 
members of the Committee of the issuance of the subpoena.

                     Rule 11.--Deposition Procedure

    (a) Consistent with House rules, in accordance with Section 
3(j) and (k) of H. Res. 5, the Chair, upon consultation with 
the Ranking Member, may order the taking of depositions 
pursuant to notice or subpoena as contemplated by this rule.
    (b) The Chair or majority staff shall consult with the 
Ranking Member or minority staff no less than three business 
days before any notice or subpoena for a deposition is issued. 
After such consultation, all members shall receive written 
notice that a notice or subpoena for a deposition will be 
issued.
    (c) A notice or subpoena issued under this rule shall 
specify the date, time, and place of the deposition and the 
method or methods by which the deposition will be recorded. 
Prior to testifying, a deponent shall be provided with a copy 
of the Committee's rules and the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (d)(1) A deposition shall be conducted by one or more 
members or Committee counsel(s) as designated by the Chair or 
Ranking Member.
    (2) A deposition shall be taken under oath or affirmation 
administered by a member or a person otherwise authorized to 
administer oaths and affirmations.
    (e) A deponent may be accompanied at a deposition by 
counsel to advise the deponent of the deponent's rights. Only 
members and Committee counsel, however, may examine the 
deponent. No one may be present at a deposition other than 
members, Committee staff designated by the Chair or Ranking 
Member, such individuals as may be required to administer the 
oath or affirmation and transcribe or record the proceedings, 
the deponent, and the deponent's counsel (including personal 
counsel and counsel for the entity employing the deponent if 
the scope of the deposition is expected to cover actions taken 
as part of the deponent's employment). Observers or counsel for 
other persons or entities may not attend.
    (f)(1) Unless the majority, minority, and deponent agree 
otherwise, questions in a deposition shall be propounded in 
rounds, alternating between the majority and minority. A single 
round shall not exceed 60 minutes per side, unless the members 
or counsel conducting the deposition agree to a different 
length of questioning. In each round, a member or Committee 
counsel(s) designated by the Chair shall ask questions first, 
and the member or Committee counsel(s) designated by the 
Ranking Member shall ask questions second.
    (2) Any objection made during a deposition must be stated 
concisely and in a nonargumentative and non-suggestive manner. 
Deponent may refuse to answer a question only to preserve a 
privilege. When the deponent has objected and refused to answer 
a question to preserve a privilege, the Chair may rule on any 
such objection after the deposition has adjourned. If the Chair 
overrules any such objection and thereby orders a deponent to 
answer any question to which a privilege objection was lodged, 
such ruling shall be filed with the clerk of the Committee and 
shall be provided to members and the deponent no less than 
three days before the ruling is enforced at a reconvened 
deposition. If a member of the Committee appeals in writing the 
ruling of the Chair, the appeal shall be preserved for 
Committee consideration. A deponent who refuses to answer a 
question after being directed to answer by the Chair in writing 
may be subject to sanction, except that no sanctions may be 
imposed if the ruling of the Chair is reversed on appeal. In 
all cases, when deposition testimony for which an objection has 
been made is offered for admission in evidence before the 
Committee, all properly lodged objections then made shall be 
timely and shall be considered by the Committee prior to 
admission in evidence before the Committee.
    (g) Deposition testimony shall be transcribed by 
stenographic means and may also be video recorded. The clerk of 
the Committee shall receive the transcript and any video 
recording and promptly forward such to minority staff at the 
same time the clerk distributes such to other majority staff.
    (h) The individual administering the oath shall certify on 
the transcript that the deponent was duly sworn. The 
transcriber shall certify that the transcript is a true, 
verbatim record of the testimony, and the transcript and any 
exhibits shall be filed, as shall any video recording, with the 
clerk of the Committee. In no case shall any video recording be 
considered the official transcript of a deposition or otherwise 
supersede the certified written transcript.
    (i) After receiving the transcript, majority staff shall 
make available the transcript for review by the deponent or 
deponent's counsel. No later than ten business days thereafter, 
the deponent may submit suggested changes to the Chair. 
Committee majority staff may direct the clerk of the Committee 
to note any typographical errors, including any requested by 
the deponent or minority staff, via an errata sheet appended to 
the transcript. Any proposed substantive changes, 
modifications, clarifications, or amendments to the deposition 
testimony must be submitted by the deponent as an affidavit 
that includes the deponent's reasons therefore. Any substantive 
changes, modifications, clarifications, or amendments shall be 
included as an appendix to the transcript, a copy of which 
shall be promptly forwarded to minority staff.
    (j) The Chair and Ranking Member shall consult regarding 
the release of deposition transcript or electronic recordings. 
If either objects in writing to a proposed release of a 
deposition transcript or electronic recording or a portion 
thereof, the matter shall be promptly referred to the Committee 
for resolution.

                           Rule 12.--Quorums

    One-third of the members of the Committee or subcommittee 
shall constitute a quorum for taking any action other than 
amending Committee rules, closing a meeting from the public, 
reporting a measure or recommendation, or in the case of the 
Committee or a subcommittee authorizing a subpoena. For the 
enumerated actions, a majority of the Committee or subcommittee 
shall constitute a quorum. Any two members shall constitute a 
quorum for the purpose of taking testimony and receiving 
evidence.

      Rule 13.--Referral of Bills, Resolutions, and Other Matters

    (a) The Chair shall consult with subcommittee chairs 
regarding referral to the appropriate subcommittees of such 
bills, resolutions, and other matters that have been referred 
to the Committee. Once copies of a bill, resolution, or other 
matter are available to the Committee, the Chair shall, within 
three weeks of such availability, provide notice of referral, 
if any, to the appropriate subcommittee.
    (b) Referral to a subcommittee shall not be made until 
three days have elapsed after written notification of such 
proposed referral to all subcommittee chairs, at which time 
such proposed referral shall be made unless one or more 
subcommittee chair shall have given written notice to the Chair 
of the full Committee and to the chair of each subcommittee 
that he or she intends to question such proposed referral at 
the next regularly scheduled meeting of the Committee, or at a 
special meeting of the Committee called for that purpose, at 
which time referral shall be made by the majority members of 
the Committee. All bills shall be referred under this rule to 
the subcommittee of proper jurisdiction without regard to 
whether the author is or is not a member of the subcommittee. 
Upon a majority vote of the Committee, a bill, resolution, or 
other matter referred to a subcommittee in accordance with this 
rule may be recalled at any time for the Committee's direct 
consideration or for reference to another subcommittee.
    (c) The Chair shall announce the date, place, and subject 
matter of a Committee meeting, which may not commence earlier 
than the third calendar day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or 
legal holidays except when the House is in session on such a 
day) on which members have notice thereof; but this requirement 
may be waived if the Chair of the Committee, with the 
concurrence of the Ranking Member, determines that there is 
good cause or the Committee so determines by majority vote in 
the presence of the number of members required under the rules 
of the Committee for the transaction of such business.
    (d) When a bill or resolution is being considered by the 
Committee or a subcommittee, members shall provide the clerk in 
a timely manner a sufficient number of written copies of any 
amendment offered, so as to enable each member present to 
receive a copy thereof prior to taking action. However, if 
directed by the Chair or majority staff, an electronic 
submission to the clerk in a timely manner, in the manner 
prescribed by the Chair or majority staff, shall satisfy the 
requirement to provide the clerk in a timely manner a 
sufficient number of written copies of any amendment offered. A 
point of order may be made against any amendment not reduced to 
writing. A copy of each such amendment shall be maintained in 
the public records of the Committee or subcommittee, as the 
case may be.
    (e) In determining the order in which amendments to a 
matter pending before the Committee or a subcommittee will be 
considered, the Chair may give priority to:
          (1) The Chair's mark, and
          (2) Amendments, otherwise in order, that have been 
        filed with the Committee at least 24 hours prior to the 
        Committee or subcommittee business meeting on said 
        measure or matter.
    (f) The Chair shall provide, in a timely manner, 
electronically or in paper form to the Ranking Member a copy of 
each report received by the Chair that is authorized by statute 
to be transmitted to Congress and addressed by rule II, section 
2(b) of the Rules of the House of Representative, unless such 
report has been specifically marked as already having been sent 
to the Ranking Member or Minority Committee staff.
    (g) The Chair or majority staff shall consult with the 
Ranking Member or minority staff before waiving Committee 
consideration of a bill referred to the Committee. The Chair 
shall provide to the Ranking Member a copy of any Committee 
letter exchanged with another committee waiving Committee 
consideration of a bill referred to the Committee within 24 
hours of issuing such a letter.

                            Rule 14.--Votes

    (a) With respect to each roll call vote on a motion to 
report any bill, resolution, or matter of a public character, 
and on any amendment offered thereto, the total number of votes 
cast for and against, and the names of those members voting for 
and against, shall be included in the Committee report on the 
measure or matter.
    (b) In accordance with clause 2(h) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives, the Chair of the Committee or 
a subcommittee is authorized to postpone further proceedings 
when a record vote is ordered on the question of approving a 
measure or matter or on adopting an amendment. Such Chair may 
resume proceedings on a postponed request at any time after 
reasonable notice. When proceedings resume on a postponed 
question, notwithstanding any intervening order for the 
previous question, an underlying proposition shall remain 
subject to further debate or amendment to the same extent as 
when the question was postponed.

                    Rule 15.--Records and Rollcalls

    (a) Written records shall be kept of the proceedings of the 
Committee and of each subcommittee, including a record of the 
votes on any question on which a roll call is demanded. The 
result of each such roll call vote shall be made available by 
the Committee or subcommittee for inspection by the public at 
reasonable times and shall be made available on the Committee's 
website within 48 hours of such record vote. Information so 
available for public inspection and on the Committee's website 
shall include a description of the amendment, motion, order, or 
other proposition; the name of each member voting for and each 
member voting against such amendment, motion, order, or 
proposition; and the names of those members present but not 
voting. The text of an amendment offered to a measure or matter 
considered in Committee shall be made publicly available in 
electronic form not later than 24 hours after its final 
disposition in Committee. A record vote may be demanded by one-
fifth of the members present or, in the apparent absence of a 
quorum, by any one member.
    (b) In accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives, any official permanent record of the 
Committee (including any record of a legislative, oversight, or 
other activity of the Committee or any subcommittee) shall be 
made available for public use if such record has been in 
existence for 30 years, except that--
          (1) any record that the Committee (or a subcommittee) 
        makes available for public use before such record is 
        delivered to the Archivist under clause 2 of rule VII 
        of the Rules of the House of Representatives shall be 
        made available immediately, including any record 
        described in subsection (a) of this rule;
          (2) any investigative record that contains personal 
        data relating to a specific living individual (the 
        disclosure of which would be an unwarranted invasion of 
        personal privacy), any administrative record with 
        respect to personnel, and any record with respect to a 
        hearing closed pursuant to clause 2(g)(2) of rule XI of 
        the Rules of the House of Representatives shall be 
        available if such record has been in existence for 50 
        years; or
          (3) except as otherwise provided by order of the 
        House of Representatives, any record of the Committee 
        for which a time, schedule, or condition for 
        availability is specified by order of the Committee 
        (entered during the Congress in which the record is 
        made or acquired by the Committee) shall be made 
        available in accordance with the order of the 
        Committee.
    (c) The official permanent records of the Committee include 
noncurrent records of the Committee (including subcommittees) 
delivered by the Clerk of the House of Representatives to the 
Archivist of the United States for preservation at the National 
Archives and Records Administration, which are the property of 
and remain subject to the rules and orders of the House of 
Representatives.
    (d)(1) Any order of the Committee with respect to any 
matter described in paragraph (2) of this subsection shall be 
adopted only if the notice requirements of Committee rule 12(c) 
have been met, a quorum consisting of a majority of the members 
of the Committee is present at the time of the vote, and a 
majority of those present and voting approve the adoption of 
the order, which shall be submitted to the Clerk of the House 
of Representatives, together with any accompanying report.
    (2) This subsection applies to any order of the Committee 
which--
          (A) provides for the non-availability of any record 
        subject to subsection (b) of this rule for a period 
        longer than the period otherwise applicable; or
          (B) is subsequent to, and constitutes a later order 
        under clause 4(b) of rule VII of the Rules of the House 
        of Representatives, regarding a determination of the 
        Clerk of the House of Representatives with respect to 
        authorizing the Archivist of the United States to make 
        available for public use the records delivered to the 
        Archivist under clause 2 of rule VII of the Rules of 
        the House of Representatives; or
          (C) specifies a time, schedule, or condition for 
        availability pursuant to subsection (b)(3) of this 
        rule.

                           Rule 16.--Reports

    (a) Reports of the Committee. All Committee reports on 
bills or resolutions shall comply with the provisions of clause 
2 of rule XI and clauses 2, 3, and 4 of rule XIII of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.
          (1) No such report shall be filed until copies of the 
        proposed report have been available to all members at 
        least 36 hours prior to such filing in the House of 
        Representatives. No material change shall be made in 
        the report distributed to members unless agreed to by 
        the Ranking Member; but any member or members of the 
        Committee may file, as part of the printed report, 
        individual, minority, or dissenting views, without 
        regard to the preceding provisions of this rule.
          (2) Such 36-hour period shall not conclude earlier 
        than the end of the period provided under clause 2(l) 
        of rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
        after the Committee approves a measure or matter if a 
        member, at the time of such approval, gives notice of 
        intention to file supplemental, minority, or additional 
        views for inclusion as part of the printed report.
          (3) To the extent practicable, any report prepared 
        pursuant to a Committee or subcommittee study or 
        investigation shall be available to members no later 
        than 48 hours prior to consideration of any such report 
        by the Committee or subcommittee, as the case may be.
    (b) Disclaimers.
          (1) A report on activities of the Committee required 
        under clause 1 of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives shall include the following disclaimer 
        in the document transmitting the report to the Clerk of 
        the House of Representatives: This report has not been 
        officially adopted by the Committee on Education and 
        the Workforce (or any subcommittee thereof) and 
        therefore may not necessarily reflect the views of its 
        members. Such disclaimer need not be included if the 
        report was circulated to all members of the Committee 
        at least seven days prior to its submission to the 
        House of Representatives and provision is made for the 
        filing by any member, as part of the printed report, of 
        individual, minority, or dissenting views.
          (2) All Committee or subcommittee reports printed 
        pursuant to legislative study or investigation and not 
        approved by a majority vote of the Committee or 
        subcommittee, as appropriate, shall contain the 
        following disclaimer on the cover of such report: This 
        report has not been officially adopted by the Committee 
        on Education and the Workforce (or pertinent 
        subcommittee thereof) and therefore may not necessarily 
        reflect the views of its members.
          The minority party members of the Committee or 
        subcommittee shall have three calendar days, excluding 
        weekends and holidays, to file, as part of the printed 
        report, supplemental, minority, or additional views.
    (c) Reports of Subcommittees. Whenever a subcommittee has 
ordered a bill, resolution, or other matter to be reported to 
the Committee, the chair of the subcommittee reporting the 
bill, resolution, or matter to the Committee, or any member 
authorized by the subcommittee to do so, may report such bill, 
resolution, or matter to the Committee. It shall be the duty of 
the chair of the subcommittee to report or cause to be reported 
promptly such bill, resolution, or matter, and to take or cause 
to be taken the necessary steps to bring such bill, resolution, 
or matter to a vote.
    (1) In any event, the report, described in the proviso in 
subsection (c)(2) of this rule, of any subcommittee on a 
measure which has been approved by the subcommittee shall be 
filed within seven calendar days (exclusive of days on which 
the House is not in session) after the day on which there has 
been filed with the staff director of the Committee a written 
request, signed by a majority of the members of the 
subcommittee, for the reporting of that measure. Upon the 
filing of any such request, the staff director of the Committee 
shall transmit immediately to the chair of the subcommittee a 
notice of the filing of that request.
    (2) Bills, resolutions, or other matters favorably reported 
by a subcommittee shall automatically be placed upon the agenda 
of the Committee as of the time they are reported. No bill or 
resolution or other matter reported by a subcommittee shall be 
considered by the full Committee unless it has been delivered 
or electronically sent to all members and notice of its prior 
transmission has been in the hands of all members at least 48 
hours prior to such consideration. When a bill is reported from 
a subcommittee, such measure shall be accompanied by a section-
by-section analysis; and, if the Chair of the Committee so 
requires (in response to a request from the Ranking Member of 
the Committee or for other reasons), a comparison showing 
proposed changes in existing law.

Rule 17.--Appointment of Conferees, Notice of Conference Meetings, and 
                           Conference Motion

    (a) Whenever in the legislative process it becomes 
necessary to appoint conferees, the Chair shall recommend to 
the Speaker as conferees the names of those members of the 
subcommittee which handled the legislation in the order of 
their seniority upon such subcommittee and such other Committee 
members as the Chair may designate with the approval of the 
majority party members. Recommendations of the Chair to the 
Speaker shall provide a ratio of majority party members to 
minority party members no less favorable to the majority party 
than the ratio of majority members to minority party members on 
the full Committee. In making assignments of minority party 
members as conferees, the Chair shall consult with the Ranking 
Member of the Committee.
    (b) After the appointment of conferees pursuant to clause 
11 of rule I of the Rules of the House of Representatives for 
matters within the jurisdiction of the Committee, the Chair 
shall notify all members appointed to the conference of 
meetings at least 48 hours before the commencement of the 
meeting. If such notice is not possible, then notice shall be 
given as soon as possible.
    (c) The Chair is directed to offer a motion under clause 1 
of rule XXII of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
whenever the Chair considers it appropriate.

          Rule 18.--Measures To Be Considered Under Suspension

    (a) A member of the Committee may not seek to suspend the 
Rules of the House of Representatives on any bill, resolution, 
or other matter which has been modified after such measure is 
ordered reported, unless notice of such action has been given 
to the Chair and Ranking Member of the full Committee.
    (b) The Chair of the Committee shall not request to have 
scheduled any bill or resolution for consideration under 
suspension of the Rules that expresses appreciation, commends, 
congratulates, celebrates, recognizes the accomplishments of, 
or celebrates the anniversary of, an entity, event, group, 
individual, institution, team, or government program; or 
acknowledges or recognizes a period of time for such purposes.

       Rule 19.--Broadcasting of Committee Hearings and Meetings

    (a) Television, Radio and Still Photography.--
          (1) Whenever a hearing or meeting conducted by the 
        Committee or any subcommittee is open to the public, 
        those proceedings shall be open to coverage by 
        television, radio, and still photography subject to the 
        requirements of clause 4 of rule XI of the Rules of the 
        House of Representatives and except when the hearing or 
        meeting is closed pursuant to the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives and of the Committee. The coverage of 
        any hearing or meeting of the Committee or any 
        subcommittee thereof by television, radio, or still 
        photography shall be under the direct supervision of 
        the Chair of the Committee, the subcommittee chair, or 
        other member of the Committee presiding at such hearing 
        or meeting and may be terminated by such member in 
        accordance with the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives.
          (2) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media shall be then currently accredited to 
        the Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (3) Personnel providing coverage by still photography 
        shall be then accredited to the Press Photographers' 
        Gallery.
    (b) Audio and Video Coverage of Committee Hearings and 
Meetings.--To the maximum extent practicable, the Committee 
shall provide audio and video coverage of each hearing or 
meeting for the transaction of business in a manner that allows 
the public to easily listen to and view the proceedings and 
shall maintain the recordings of such coverage in a manner that 
is easily accessible to the public, unless such hearing or 
meeting is closed pursuant to the Rules of the House of 
Representatives and of the Committee. Such coverage shall be 
fair and nonpartisan in accordance with clause 4(b) of rule XI 
of the Rules of the House of Representatives and other 
applicable rules of the House of Representatives and of the 
Committee. Personnel providing such coverage shall be employees 
of the House of Representatives or currently accredited to the 
Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.

                       Rule 20.--Committee Staff

    (a) The employees of the Committee shall be appointed by 
the Chair in consultation with subcommittee chairs and other 
majority party members of the Committee within the budget 
approved for such purposes by the Committee.
    (b) The staff appointed by the minority shall have their 
remuneration determined in such manner as the minority party 
members of the Committee shall determine within the budget 
approved for such purposes by the Committee.

          Rule 21.--Supervision and Duties of Committee Staff

    The staff of the Committee shall be under the general 
supervision and direction of the Chair, who shall establish and 
assign the duties and responsibilities of such staff members 
and delegate authority as he or she determines appropriate. The 
staff appointed by the minority shall be under the general 
supervision and direction of the minority party members of the 
Committee, who may delegate such authority as they determine 
appropriate. All Committee staff shall be assigned to Committee 
business and no other duties may be assigned to them.

                   Rule 22.--Authorization for Travel

    (a) Consistent with the primary expense resolution and such 
additional expense resolutions as may have been approved, the 
provisions of this rule shall govern travel of Committee 
members and staff. Travel to be paid from funds set aside for 
the full Committee for any member or any staff member shall be 
paid only upon the prior authorization of the Chair. Travel may 
be authorized by the Chair for any member and any staff member 
in connection with the attendance of hearings conducted by the 
Committee or any subcommittee thereof and meetings, 
conferences, and investigations that involve activities or 
subject matter under the general jurisdiction of the Committee. 
The Chair shall review travel requests to assure the validity 
to Committee business. Before such authorization is given, 
there shall be submitted to the Chair in writing the following:
          (1) The purpose of the travel;
          (2) The dates during which the travel is to be made 
        and the date or dates of the event for which the travel 
        is being made;
          (3) The location of the event for which the travel is 
        to be made; and
          (4) The names of members and staff seeking 
        authorization.
    (b)(1) In the case of travel outside the United States of 
members and staff of the Committee for the purpose of 
conducting hearings, investigations, studies, or attending 
meetings and conferences involving activities or subject matter 
under the legislative assignment of the Committee or pertinent 
subcommittees, prior authorization must be obtained from the 
Chair, or, in the case of a subcommittee, from the subcommittee 
chair and the Chair. Before such authorization is given, there 
shall be submitted to the Chair, in writing, a request for such 
authorization. Each request, which shall be filed in a manner 
that allows for a reasonable period of time for review before 
such travel is scheduled to begin, shall include the following:
          (A) The purpose of travel;
          (B) The dates during which the travel will occur;
          (C) The names of the countries to be visited and the 
        length of time to be spent in each;
          (D) an agenda of anticipated activities for each 
        country for which travel is authorized together with a 
        description of the purpose to be served and the areas 
        of Committee jurisdiction involved; and
          (E) The names of members and staff for whom 
        authorization is sought.
    (2) Requests for travel outside the United States may be 
initiated by the Chair or the chair of a subcommittee (except 
that individuals may submit a request to the Chair for the 
purpose of attending a conference or meeting) and shall be 
limited to members and permanent employees of the Committee.
    (3) The Chair shall not approve a request involving travel 
outside the United States while the House is in session (except 
in the case of attendance at meetings and conferences or where 
circumstances warrant an exception).
    (4) At the conclusion of any hearing, investigation, study, 
meeting, or conference for which travel outside the United 
States has been authorized pursuant to this rule, each 
subcommittee (or members and staff attending meetings or 
conferences) shall submit a written report to the Chair 
covering the activities of the subcommittee and containing the 
results of these activities and other pertinent observations or 
information gained as a result of such travel.
    (c) Members and staff of the Committee performing 
authorized travel on official business shall be governed by 
applicable laws, resolutions, or regulations of the House of 
Representatives and of the Committee on House Administration 
pertaining to such travel, including rules, procedures, and 
limitations prescribed by the Committee on House Administration 
with respect to domestic and foreign expense allowances.
    (d) Prior to the Chair's authorization for any travel, the 
Ranking Member shall be given a copy of the written request 
therefor.

                     Rule 23.--Budget and Expenses

    (a) The Chair, in consultation with the majority party 
members of the Committee, shall prepare a preliminary budget. 
Such budget shall include necessary amounts for staff 
personnel, for necessary travel, investigation, and other 
expenses of the Committee; and, after consultation with the 
minority party membership, the Chair shall include amounts 
budgeted to the minority party members for staff personnel to 
be under the direction and supervision of the minority party, 
travel expenses of minority party members and staff, and 
minority party office expenses. All travel expenses of minority 
party members and staff shall be paid for out of the amounts so 
set aside and budgeted. The Chair shall take whatever action is 
necessary to have the budget as finally approved by the 
Committee duly authorized by the House of Representatives. 
After such budget shall have been adopted, no change shall be 
made in such budget unless approved by the Committee. The Chair 
or the chair of any standing subcommittee may initiate 
necessary travel requests as provided in Committee rule 21 
within the limits of their portion of the consolidated budget 
as approved by the House, and the Chair may execute necessary 
vouchers therefor.
    (b) Subject to the Rules of the House of Representatives 
and procedures prescribed by the Committee on House 
Administration, and with the prior authorization of the Chair 
of the Committee in each case, there may be expended in any one 
session of Congress for necessary travel expenses of witnesses 
attending hearings in Washington, D.C.:
          (1) Out of funds budgeted and set aside for each 
        subcommittee, not to exceed $5,000 for expenses of 
        witnesses attending hearings of each such subcommittee;
          (2) Out of funds budgeted for the full Committee 
        majority, not to exceed $5,000 for expenses of 
        witnesses attending full Committee hearings; and
          (3) Out of funds set aside to the minority party 
        members:
                  (A) Not to exceed, for each of the 
                subcommittees, $5,000 for expenses of witnesses 
                attending subcommittee hearings, and
                  (B) Not to exceed $5,000 for expenses of 
                witnesses attending full Committee hearings.
    (c) A full and detailed monthly report accounting for all 
expenditures of Committee funds shall be maintained by the 
Committee, and it shall be available to each member of the 
Committee. Such report shall show the amount and purpose of 
each expenditure, and the budget to which such expenditure is 
attributed.

                  Rule 24.--Changes in Committee Rules

    The Committee shall not consider a proposed change in these 
rules unless the text of such change has been delivered or 
electronically sent to all members and notice of its prior 
transmission has been in the hands of all members at least 48 
hours prior to such consideration.
                    Committee on Energy and Commerce

     CATHY McMORRIS RODGERS, 
         Washington, Chair

FRANK PALLONE, Jr., New Jersey       MICHAEL C. BURGESS, Texas
ANNA G. ESHOO, California            ROBERT E. LATTA, Ohio
DIANA DeGETTE, Colorado              BRETT GUTHRIE, Kentucky
JANICE D. SCHAKOWSKY, Illinois       H. MORGAN GRIFFITH, Virginia
DORIS O. MATSUI, California          GUS M. BILIRAKIS, Florida
KATHY CASTOR, Florida                BILL JOHNSON, Ohio
JOHN P. SARBANES, Maryland           LARRY BUCSHON, Indiana
PAUL TONKO, New York                 RICHARD HUDSON, North Carolina
YVETTE D. CLARKE, New York           TIM WALBERG, Michigan
TONY CARDENAS, California            EARL L. ``BUDDY'' CARTER, Georgia
RAUL RUIZ, California                JEFF DUNCAN, South Carolina
SCOTT H. PETERS, California          GARY J. PALMER, Alabama
DEBBIE DINGELL, Michigan             NEAL P. DUNN, Florida
MARC A. VEASEY, Texas                JOHN R. CURTIS, Utah
ANN M. KUSTER, New Hampshire         DEBBIE LESKO, Arizona
ROBIN L. KELLY, Illinois             GREG PENCE, Indiana
NANETTE DIAZ BARRAGAN, California    DAN CRENSHAW, Texas
LISA BLUNT ROCHESTER, Delaware       JOHN JOYCE, Pennsylvania
DARREN SOTO, Florida                 KELLY ARMSTRONG, North Dakota
ANGIE CRAIG, Minnesota               RANDY K. WEBER, Sr., Texas
KIM SCHRIER, Washington              RICK W. ALLEN, Georgia
LORI TRAHAN, Massachusetts           TROY BALDERSON, Ohio
LIZZIE FLETCHER, Texas               RUSS FULCHER, Idaho
                                     AUGUST PFLUGER, Texas
                                     DIANA HARSHBARGER, Tennessee
                                     MARIANNETTE MILLER-MEEKS, Iowa
                                     KAT CAMMACK, Florida
                                     JAY OBERNOLTE, California

  RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND COMMERCE FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted January 31, 2023)


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) Rules of the Committee. The Rules of the House are the 
rules of the Committee on Energy and Commerce (the 
``Committee'') and its subcommittees so far as is applicable.
    (b) Rules of the Subcommittees. Each subcommittee of the 
Committee is part of the Committee and is subject to the 
authority and direction of the Committee and to its rules so 
far as is applicable. Written rules adopted by the Committee, 
not inconsistent with the Rules of the House, shall be binding 
on each subcommittee of the Committee.

                   Rule 2.--Business Meetings/Markups

    (a) Regular Meeting Days. The Committee shall meet on the 
fourth Tuesday of each month at 10 a.m., for the consideration 
of bills, resolutions, and other business, if the House is in 
session on that day. If the House is not in session on that day 
and the Committee has not met during such month, the Committee 
shall meet at the earliest practicable opportunity when the 
House is again in session. The chair of the Committee may, at 
his or her discretion, cancel, delay, or defer any meeting 
required under this section, after consultation with the 
ranking minority member.
    (b) Additional Meetings. The chair may call and convene, as 
he or she considers necessary, additional meetings of the 
Committee for the consideration of any bill or resolution 
pending before the Committee or for the conduct of other 
Committee business. The Committee shall meet for such purposes 
pursuant to that call of the chair.
    (c) Notice. The date, time, place, and subject matter of 
any meeting of the Committee (other than a hearing) shall be 
announced at least 36 hours (exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, 
and legal holidays except when the House is in session on such 
days) in advance of the commencement of such meeting. In no 
event shall such meeting commence earlier than the third 
calendar day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays 
except when the House is in session on such a day) on which 
members have notice thereof.
    (d) Agenda. The agenda for each Committee meeting, setting 
out all items of business to be considered, shall be provided 
to each member of the Committee at least 36 hours in advance of 
such meeting.
    (e) Availability of Texts. No bill, recommendation, or 
other matter shall be considered by the Committee unless the 
text of the matter, together with an explanation, has been 
available to members of the Committee for three days (or 24 
hours in the case of a substitute for introduced legislation). 
Such explanation shall include a summary of the major 
provisions of the legislation, an explanation of the 
relationship of the matter to present law, and a summary of the 
need for the legislation.
    (f) Waiver. The requirements of subsections (c), (d), and 
(e) may be waived by a majority of those present and voting (a 
majority being present) of the Committee or by the chair with 
the concurrence of the ranking member, as the case may be.

                           Rule 3.--Hearings

    (a) Notice. The date, time, place, and subject matter of 
any hearing of the Committee shall be announced at least one 
week in advance of the commencement of such hearing, unless a 
determination is made in accordance with clause 2(g)(3) of rule 
XI of the Rules of the House that there is good cause to begin 
the hearing sooner.
    (b) Memorandum. Each member of the Committee shall be 
provided, except in the case of unusual circumstances, with a 
memorandum at least 48 hours before each hearing explaining (1) 
the purpose of the hearing and (2) the names of any witnesses.
    (c) Witnesses.
          (1) Each witness who is to appear before the 
        Committee shall file with the clerk of the Committee, 
        at least two working days in advance of his or her 
        appearance, sufficient copies, as determined by the 
        chair of the Committee of a written statement of his or 
        her proposed testimony to provide to members and staff 
        of the Committee, the news media, and the general 
        public. Each witness shall, to the greatest extent 
        practicable, also provide a copy of such written 
        testimony in an electronic format prescribed by the 
        chair. Each witness shall limit his or her oral 
        presentation to a brief summary of the argument. The 
        chair of the Committee or the presiding member may 
        waive the requirements of this paragraph or any part 
        thereof.
          (2) To the greatest extent practicable, the written 
        testimony of each witness appearing in a 
        nongovernmental capacity shall include a curriculum 
        vitae and a disclosure of any Federal grants or 
        contracts or foreign government contracts and payments 
        related to the subject matter of the hearing received 
        during the current calendar year or either of the two 
        preceding calendar years by the witness or by an entity 
        represented by the witness. The disclosure shall 
        include (i) the amount and source of each Federal grant 
        (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or subcontract 
        thereof) related to the subject matter of the hearing; 
        and (ii) the amount and country of origin of any 
        payment or contract related to the subject matter of 
        the hearing originating with a foreign government.
    (d) Questioning.
          (1) The right to question the witnesses before the 
        Committee shall alternate between majority and minority 
        members. Each member shall be limited to 5 minutes for 
        the questioning of witnesses until such time as each 
        member who so desires has had an opportunity to 
        question witnesses. No member shall be recognized for a 
        second period of 5 minutes to question a witness until 
        each member of the Committee present has been 
        recognized once for that purpose. The chair shall 
        recognize in order of appearance members who were not 
        present when the meeting was called to order after all 
        members who were present when the meeting was called to 
        order have been recognized in the order of seniority on 
        the Committee or relevant subcommittee, as the case may 
        be.
          (2) The chair, with the concurrence of the ranking 
        minority member, or the Committee by motion, may permit 
        an equal number of majority and minority members to 
        question a witness for a specified, total period that 
        is equal for each side and not longer than 30 minutes 
        for each side. The chair, with the concurrence of the 
        ranking minority member, or the Committee by motion, 
        may also permit committee staff of the majority and 
        minority to question a witness for a specified, total 
        period that is equal for each side and not longer than 
        30 minutes for each side.
          (3) Each member may submit to the chair of the 
        Committee additional questions for the record, to be 
        answered by the witnesses who have appeared. Each 
        member shall provide a copy of the questions in an 
        electronic format to the clerk of the Committee no 
        later than 10 business days following a hearing. The 
        chair shall transmit all questions received from 
        members of the Committee to the appropriate witnesses 
        and include the transmittal letter and the responses 
        from the witnesses in the hearing record. After 
        consultation with the ranking minority member, the 
        chair is authorized to close the hearing record no 
        earlier than 120 days from the date the questions were 
        transmitted to the appropriate witnesses.

                 Rule 4.--Vice Chair; Presiding Member

    The chair shall designate a member of the majority party to 
serve as vice chair of the Committee, and shall designate a 
majority member of each subcommittee to serve as vice chair of 
each subcommittee. The vice chair of the Committee or 
subcommittee, as the case may be, shall preside at any meeting 
or hearing during the temporary absence of the chair. If the 
chair and vice chair of the Committee or subcommittee are not 
present at any meeting or hearing, the most senior ranking 
member of the majority party who is present shall preside at 
the meeting or hearing.

                       Rule 5.--Open Proceedings

    Except as provided by the Rules of the House, each meeting 
and hearing of the Committee for the transaction of business, 
including the markup of legislation, and each hearing, shall be 
open to the public, including to radio, television, and still 
photography coverage, consistent with the provisions of rule XI 
of the Rules of the House.

                            Rule 6.--Quorum

    Testimony may be taken and evidence received at any hearing 
at which there are present not fewer than two members of the 
Committee or subcommittee in question. A majority of the 
members of the Committee or subcommittee shall constitute a 
quorum for those actions for which the House Rules require a 
majority quorum. For the purposes of taking any other action, 
one-third of the members of the Committee shall constitute a 
quorum.

                  Rule 7.--Official Committee Records

    (a)(1) Documents reflecting the proceedings of the 
Committee shall be made publicly available in electronic form 
on the Committee's website and in the Committee office for 
inspection by the public, as provided in rule XI, clause 2(e) 
of the Rules of the House not more than 24 hours after each 
meeting has adjourned, including a record showing those present 
at each meeting; and a record of the vote on any question on 
which a record vote is demanded, including a description of the 
amendment, motion, order, or other proposition, the name of 
each member voting for and each member voting against such 
amendment, motion, order, or proposition, and the names of 
those members of the committee present but not voting.
    (2) Record Votes. A record vote may be demanded by one-
fifth of the members present or, in the apparent absence of a 
quorum, by any one member. No demand for a record vote shall be 
made or obtained except for the purpose of procuring a record 
vote or in the apparent absence of a quorum.
    (b) Postponement of Votes. In accordance with clause 
2(h)(4) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the chair of the 
Committee or a subcommittee, after consultation with the 
ranking minority member of the Committee or subcommittee, may 
(A) postpone further proceedings when a record vote is ordered 
on the question of approving a measure or matter or on adopting 
an amendment; and (B) resume proceedings on a postponed 
question at any time after reasonable notice. When proceedings 
resume on a postponed question, notwithstanding any intervening 
order for the previous question, an underlying proposition 
shall remain subject to further debate or amendment to the same 
extent as when the question was postponed.
    (c) Archived Records. The records of the Committee at the 
National Archives and Records Administration shall be made 
available for public use in accordance with rule VII of the 
Rules of the House. The chair shall notify the ranking minority 
member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3 (b)(3) or clause 4 
of the Rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and the 
matter shall be presented to the Committee for a determination 
on the written request of any member of the Committee. The 
chair shall consult with the ranking minority member on any 
communication from the Archivist of the United States or the 
Clerk of the House concerning the disposition of noncurrent 
records pursuant to clause 3(b) of the Rule.

                         Rule 8.--Subcommittees

    (a) Establishment. There shall be such standing 
subcommittees with such jurisdiction and size as determined by 
the majority party caucus of the Committee. The jurisdiction, 
number, and size of the subcommittees shall be determined by 
the majority party caucus prior to the start of the process for 
establishing subcommittee chairs and assignments.
    (b) Powers and Duties. Each subcommittee is authorized to 
meet, hold hearings, receive testimony, mark up legislation, 
and report to the Committee on all matters referred to it. 
Subcommittee chairs shall set hearing and meeting dates only 
with the approval of the chair of the Committee with a view 
toward assuring the availability of meeting rooms and avoiding 
simultaneous scheduling of Committee and subcommittee meetings 
or hearings whenever possible.
    (c) Ratio of Subcommittees. The majority caucus of the 
Committee shall determine an appropriate ratio of majority to 
minority party members for each subcommittee and the chair 
shall negotiate that ratio with the minority party, provided 
that the ratio of party members on each subcommittee shall be 
no less favorable to the majority than that of the full 
Committee, nor shall such ratio provide for a majority of less 
than two majority members.
    (d) Selection of Subcommittee Members. Prior to any 
organizational meeting held by the Committee, the majority and 
minority caucuses shall select their respective members of the 
standing subcommittees.
    (e) Ex Officio Members. The chair and ranking minority 
member of the Committee shall be ex officio members with voting 
privileges of each subcommittee of which they are not assigned 
as members and may be counted for purposes of establishing a 
quorum in such subcommittees.

                      Rule 9.--Opening Statements

    (a) Written Statements. All written opening statements at 
hearings and business meetings conducted by the Committee shall 
be made part of the permanent record.
    (b) Length.
          (1) At full committee hearings, the chair and ranking 
        minority member shall be limited to 5 minutes each for 
        an opening statement, and may designate another member 
        to give an opening statement of not more than 5 
        minutes. At subcommittee hearings, the subcommittee 
        chair and ranking minority member of the subcommittee 
        shall be limited to 5 minutes each for an opening 
        statement. In addition, the full committee chair and 
        ranking minority member shall each be allocated 5 
        minutes for an opening statement for themselves or 
        their designees at subcommittee hearings.
          (2) At any business meeting of the Committee, 
        statements shall be limited to 5 minutes each for the 
        chair and ranking minority member (or their respective 
        designee) of the Committee or subcommittee, as 
        applicable, and 3 minutes each for all other members. 
        The chair may further limit opening statements for 
        Members (including, at the discretion of the chair, the 
        chair and ranking minority member) to one minute.

          Rule 10.--Reference of Legislation and Other Matters

    All legislation and other matters referred to the Committee 
shall be referred to the subcommittee of appropriate 
jurisdiction within two weeks of the date of receipt by the 
Committee unless: (1) action is taken by the full Committee 
within those two weeks, or (2) by majority vote of the members 
of the Committee, consideration is to be by the full Committee. 
In the case of legislation or other matters within the 
jurisdiction of more than one subcommittee, the chair of the 
Committee may, in his or her discretion, refer the matter 
simultaneously to two or more subcommittees for concurrent 
consideration, or may designate a subcommittee of primary 
jurisdiction and also refer the matter to one or more 
additional subcommittees for consideration in sequence (subject 
to appropriate time limitations), either on its initial 
referral or after the matter has been reported by the 
subcommittee of primary jurisdiction. Such authority shall 
include the authority to refer such legislation or matter to an 
ad hoc subcommittee appointed by the chair, with the approval 
of the Committee, from the members of the subcommittees having 
legislative or oversight jurisdiction.

           Rule 11.--Managing Legislation on the House Floor

    The chair, in his or her discretion, shall designate which 
member shall manage legislation reported by the Committee to 
the House.

    Rule 12.--Committee Professional and Clerical Staff Appointments

    (a) Delegation of Staff. Whenever the chair of the 
Committee determines that any professional staff member 
appointed pursuant to the provisions of clause 9 of rule X of 
the House of Representatives, who is assigned to such chair and 
not to the ranking minority member, by reason of such 
professional staff member's expertise or qualifications will be 
of assistance to one or more subcommittees in carrying out 
their assigned responsibilities, he or she may delegate such 
staff member to such subcommittees for such purpose. A 
delegation of a member of the professional staff pursuant to 
this subsection shall be made after consultation with 
subcommittee chairs and with the approval of the subcommittee 
chair or chairs involved.
    (b) Minority Professional Staff. Professional staff members 
appointed pursuant to clause 9 of rule X of the House of 
Representatives, who are assigned to the ranking minority 
member of the Committee and not to the chair of the Committee, 
shall be assigned to such Committee business as the minority 
party members of the Committee consider advisable.
    (c) Additional Staff Appointments. In addition to the 
professional staff appointed pursuant to clause 9 of rule X of 
the House of Representatives, the chair of the Committee shall 
be entitled to make such appointments to the professional and 
clerical staff of the Committee as may be provided within the 
budget approved for such purposes by the Committee. Such 
appointee shall be assigned to such business of the full 
Committee as the chair of the Committee considers advisable.
    (d) Sufficient Staff. The chair shall ensure that 
sufficient staff is made available to each subcommittee to 
carry out its responsibilities under the rules of the 
Committee.
    (e) Fair Treatment of Minority Members in Appointment of 
Committee Staff. The chair shall ensure that the minority 
members of the Committee are treated fairly in appointment of 
Committee staff.
    (f) Contracts for Temporary or Intermittent Services. Any 
contract for the temporary services or intermittent service of 
individual consultants or organizations to make studies or 
advise the Committee or its subcommittees with respect to any 
matter within their jurisdiction shall be deemed to have been 
approved by a majority of the members of the Committee if 
approved by the chair and ranking minority member of the 
Committee. Such approval shall not be deemed to have been given 
if at least one-third of the members of the Committee request 
in writing that the Committee formally act on such a contract, 
if the request is made within 10 days after the latest date on 
which such chair or chairs, and such ranking minority member or 
members, approve such contract.

                 Rule 13.--Supervision, Duties of Staff

    (a) Supervision of Majority Staff. The professional and 
clerical staff of the Committee not assigned to the minority 
shall be under the supervision and direction of the chair who, 
in consultation with the chairs of the subcommittees, shall 
establish and assign the duties and responsibilities of such 
staff members and delegate such authority as they determine is 
appropriate.
    (b) Supervision of Minority Staff. The professional and 
clerical staff assigned to the minority shall be under the 
supervision and direction of the minority members of the 
Committee, who may delegate such authority as they determine 
appropriate.

                       Rule 14.--Committee Budget

    (a) Administration of Committee Budget. The chair of the 
Committee, in consultation with the ranking minority member, 
shall for the 118th Congress attempt to ensure that the 
Committee receives necessary amounts for professional and 
clerical staff, travel, investigations, equipment, and 
miscellaneous expenses of the Committee and the subcommittees, 
which shall be adequate to fully discharge the Committee's 
responsibilities for legislation and oversight.
    (b) Monthly Expenditures Report. Committee members shall be 
furnished a copy of each monthly report, prepared by the chair 
for the Committee on House Administration, which shows 
expenditures made during the reporting period and cumulative 
for the year by the Committee and subcommittees, anticipated 
expenditures for the projected Committee program, and detailed 
information on travel.

              Rule 15.--Broadcasting of Committee Hearings

    Any meeting or hearing that is open to the public may be 
covered in whole or in part by radio or television or still 
photography, subject to the requirements of clause 4 of rule XI 
of the Rules of the House. The coverage of any hearing or other 
proceeding of the Committee or any subcommittee thereof by 
television, radio, or still photography shall be under the 
direct supervision of the chair of the Committee, the 
subcommittee chair, or other member of the Committee presiding 
at such hearing or other proceeding and may be terminated by 
such member in accordance with the Rules of the House.

                        Rule 16.--Subpoena Power

    The power to authorize and issue subpoenas is delegated to 
the chair of the full Committee, as provided for under clause 
2(m)(3)(A)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The chair shall notify the ranking minority 
member prior to issuing any subpoena under such authority. To 
the extent practicable, the chair shall consult with the 
ranking minority member at least 72 hours in advance of a 
subpoena being issued under such authority. The chair shall 
report to the members of the Committee on the issuance of a 
subpoena as soon as practicable but in no event later than one 
week after issuance of such subpoena.

                 Rule 17.--Travel of Members and Staff

    (a) Approval of Travel. Consistent with the primary expense 
resolution and such additional expense resolutions as may have 
been approved, travel to be reimbursed from funds set aside for 
the Committee for any member or any staff member shall be paid 
only upon the prior authorization of the chair. Travel may be 
authorized by the chair for any member and any staff member in 
connection with the attendance of hearings conducted by the 
Committee or any subcommittee thereof and meetings, 
conferences, and investigations that involve activities or 
subject matter under the general jurisdiction of the Committee. 
Before such authorization is given, there shall be submitted to 
the chair in writing the following: (1) the purpose of the 
travel; (2) the dates during which the travel is to be made and 
the date or dates of the event for which the travel is being 
made; (3) the location of the event for which the travel is to 
be made; and (4) the names of members and staff seeking 
authorization.
    (b) Approval of Travel by Minority Members and Staff. In 
the case of travel by minority party members and minority party 
staff members for the purpose set out in (a), the prior 
approval, not only of the chair but also of the ranking 
minority member, shall be required. Such prior authorization 
shall be given by the chair only upon the representation by the 
ranking minority member in writing setting forth those items 
enumerated in (1), (2), (3), and (4) of paragraph (a).

                           Rule 18.--Website

    The chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purposes of furthering the Committee's legislative and 
oversight responsibilities, including communicating information 
about the Committee's activities to Committee members and other 
members of the House. The ranking minority member may maintain 
an official website for the purpose of carrying out official 
responsibilities, including communicating information about the 
activities of the minority members of the Committee to 
Committee members and other members of the House.

                         Rule 19.--Conferences

    The chair of the Committee is directed to offer a motion 
under clause 1 of rule XXII of the Rules of the House whenever 
the chair considers it appropriate.
                          Committee on Ethics

   MICHAEL GUEST, Mississippi, 
             Chairman

SUSAN WILD, Pennsylvania,            DAVID P. JOYCE, Ohio
  Ranking Member                     JOHN H. RUTHERFORD, Florida
VERONICA ESCOBAR, Texas              ANDREW R. GARBARINO, New York
MARK DeSAULNIER, California          MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota
DEBORAH K. ROSS, North Carolina
GLENN IVEY, Maryland

        RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON ETHICS FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 28, 2023)


                    PART I--GENERAL COMMITTEE RULES


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) So far as applicable, these rules and the Rules of the 
House of Representatives shall be the rules of the Committee 
and any subcommittee. The Committee adopts these rules under 
the authority of clause 2(a)(1) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, 118th Congress.
    (b) The rules of the Committee may be modified, amended, or 
repealed by a vote of a majority of the Committee.
    (c) When the interests of justice so require, the 
Committee, by a majority vote of its members, may adopt any 
special procedures, not inconsistent with these rules, deemed 
necessary to resolve a particular matter before it. Copies of 
such special procedures shall be furnished to all parties in 
the matter.
    (d) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member shall have access 
to such information that they request as necessary to conduct 
Committee business.

                          Rule 2.--Definitions

    (a) ``Committee'' means the Committee on Ethics.
    (b) ``Complaint'' means a written allegation of improper 
conduct against a Member, officer, or employee of the House of 
Representatives filed with the Committee with the intent to 
initiate an inquiry.
    (c) ``Inquiry'' means an investigation by an investigative 
subcommittee into allegations against a Member, officer, or 
employee of the House of Representatives.
    (d) ``Investigate,'' ``Investigating,'' and/or 
``Investigation'' mean review of the conduct of a Member, 
officer, or employee of the House of Representatives that is 
conducted or authorized by the Committee, an investigative 
subcommittee, or the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee
    (e) ``Board'' means the Board of the Office of 
Congressional Ethics.
    (f) ``Referral'' means a report sent to the Committee from 
the Board pursuant to House Rules and all applicable House 
Resolutions regarding the conduct of a House Member, officer, 
or employee, including any accompanying findings or other 
supporting documentation.
    (g) ``Investigative Subcommittee'' means a subcommittee 
designated pursuant to rule 19(a) to conduct an inquiry to 
determine if a Statement of Alleged Violation should be issued.
    (h) ``Statement of Alleged Violation'' means a formal 
charging document filed by an investigative subcommittee with 
the Committee containing specific allegations against a Member, 
officer, or employee of the House of Representatives of a 
violation of the Code of Official Conduct, or of a law, rule, 
regulation, or other standard of conduct applicable to the 
performance of official duties or the discharge of official 
responsibilities.
    (i) ``Adjudicatory Subcommittee'' means a subcommittee 
designated pursuant to rule 23(a) that holds an adjudicatory 
hearing and determines whether the counts in a Statement of 
Alleged Violation are proved by clear and convincing evidence.
    (j) ``Sanction Hearing'' means a Committee hearing to 
determine what sanction, if any, to adopt or to recommend to 
the House of Representatives.
    (k) ``Respondent'' means a Member, officer, or employee of 
the House of Representatives who is the subject of an 
investigation.
    (l) ``Office of Advice and Education'' refers to the Office 
established by section 803(i) of the Ethics Reform Act of 1989. 
The Office handles inquiries; prepares written opinions in 
response to specific requests; develops general guidance; and 
organizes seminars, workshops, and briefings for the benefit of 
the House of Representatives.
    (m) ``Member'' means a Representative in, or a Delegate to, 
or the Resident Commissioner to, the U.S. House of 
Representatives.

                 Rule 3.--Advisory Opinions and Waivers

    (a) The Office of Advice and Education shall handle 
inquiries; prepare written opinions providing specific advice, 
including reviews of requests for privately-sponsored travel 
pursuant to the Committee's Travel Guidelines and Regulations; 
develop general guidance; and organize seminars, workshops, and 
briefings for the benefit of the House of Representatives.
    (b) Any Member, officer, or employee of the House of 
Representatives may request a written opinion with respect to 
the propriety of any current or proposed conduct of such 
Member, officer, or employee.
    (c) The Office of Advice and Education may provide 
information and guidance regarding laws, rules, regulations, 
and other standards of conduct applicable to Members, officers, 
and employees in the performance of their duties or the 
discharge of their responsibilities.
    (d) In general, the Committee shall provide a written 
opinion to an individual only in response to a written request, 
and the written opinion shall address the conduct only of the 
inquiring individual, or of persons for whom the inquiring 
individual is responsible as employing authority.
    (e) A written request for an opinion shall be addressed to 
the Chair of the Committee and shall include a complete and 
accurate statement of the relevant facts. A request shall be 
signed by the requester or the requester's authorized 
representative or employing authority. A representative shall 
disclose to the Committee the identity of the principal on 
whose behalf advice is being sought.
    (f) Requests for privately-sponsored travel shall be 
treated like any other request for a written opinion for 
purposes of paragraphs (g) through (l).
          (1) The Committee's Travel Guidelines and Regulations 
        shall govern the request submission and Committee 
        approval process for privately-sponsored travel 
        consistent with House Rules.
          (2) A request for privately-sponsored travel of a 
        Member, officer, or employee shall include a completed 
        and signed Traveler Form that attaches the Private 
        Sponsor Certification Form and includes all information 
        required by the Committee's Travel Guidelines and 
        Regulations. A private sponsor offering officially-
        connected travel to a Member, officer, or employee must 
        complete and sign a Private Sponsor Certification Form, 
        and provide a copy of that form to the invitee(s).
          (3) Any individual who knowingly and willfully 
        falsifies, or who knowingly and willfully fails to 
        file, any form required by the Committee's Travel 
        Guidelines and Regulations may be subject to civil 
        penalties and criminal sanctions pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
        Sec. 1001.
    (g) The Office of Advice and Education shall prepare for 
the Committee a response to each written request for an opinion 
from a Member, officer, or employee. Each response shall 
discuss all applicable laws, rules, regulations, or other 
standards.
    (h) Where a request is unclear or incomplete, the Office of 
Advice and Education may seek additional information from the 
requester.
    (i) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are authorized to 
take action on behalf of the Committee on any proposed written 
opinion that they determine does not require consideration by 
the Committee. If the Chair or Ranking Minority Member requests 
a written opinion, or seeks a waiver, extension, or approval 
pursuant to rules 3(m), 4(c), 4(e), or 4(h), the next ranking 
member of the requester's party is authorized to act in lieu of 
the requester.
    (j) The Committee shall keep confidential any request for 
advice from a Member, officer, or employee, as well as any 
response thereto. Upon request of any Member, officer, or 
employee who has submitted a written request for an opinion or 
submitted a request for privately-sponsored travel, the 
Committee may release to the requesting individual a copy of 
their own written request for advice or submitted travel forms, 
any subsequent written communications between such individual 
and Committee staff regarding the request, and any Committee 
advisory opinion or travel letter issued to that individual in 
response. The Committee shall not release any internal 
Committee staff work product, communications, or notes in 
response to such a request, except as authorized by the 
Committee.
    (k) The Committee may take no adverse action in regard to 
any conduct that has been undertaken in reliance on a written 
opinion if the conduct conforms to the specific facts addressed 
in the opinion.
    (l) Information provided to the Committee by a Member, 
officer, or employee seeking advice regarding prospective 
conduct may not be used as the basis for initiating an 
investigation under clause 3(a)(2) or clause 3(b) of rule XI of 
the Rules of the House of Representatives, if such Member, 
officer, or employee acts in good faith in accordance with the 
written advice of the Committee.
    (m) A written request for a waiver of clause 5 of House 
rule XXV (the House gift rule), or for any other waiver or 
approval, shall be treated in all respects like any other 
request for a written opinion.
    (n) A written request for a waiver of clause 5 of House 
rule XXV (the House gift rule) shall specify the nature of the 
waiver being sought and the specific circumstances justifying 
the waiver.
    (o) An employee seeking a waiver of time limits applicable 
to travel paid for by a private source shall include with the 
request evidence that the employing authority is aware of the 
request. In any other instance where proposed employee conduct 
may reflect on the performance of official duties, the 
Committee may require that the requester submit evidence that 
the employing authority knows of the conduct.

                     Rule 4.--Financial Disclosure

    (a) In matters relating to Title I of the Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978, the Committee shall coordinate with the 
Clerk of the House of Representatives, Legislative Resource 
Center, to assure that appropriate individuals are notified of 
their obligation to file reports required to be filed under 
Title I of the Ethics in Government Act and that such 
individuals are provided in a timely fashion with filing 
instructions and forms developed by the Committee.
    (b) The Committee shall coordinate with the Legislative 
Resource Center to assure that information that the Ethics in 
Government Act requires to be placed on the public record is 
made public.
    (c) Any reports required to be filed under Title I of the 
Ethics in Government Act filed by Members of the Board of the 
Office of Congressional Ethics that are forwarded to the 
Committee by the Clerk shall not be subject to paragraphs (d) 
through (q) of this Rule. The Office of Congressional Ethics 
retains jurisdiction over review of the timeliness and 
completeness of filings by Members of the Board as the Board's 
supervising ethics office.
    (d) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are authorized to 
grant on behalf of the Committee requests for reasonable 
extensions of time for the filing of Financial Disclosure 
Statements. Any such request must be received by the Committee 
no later than the date on which the Statement in question is 
due. A request received after such date may be granted by the 
Committee only in extraordinary circumstances. Such extensions 
for one individual in a calendar year shall not exceed a total 
of 90 days per Statement, including any amendment required by 
the Committee in accordance with clause (m). No extension shall 
be granted authorizing a nonincumbent candidate to file a 
statement later than 30 days prior to a primary or general 
election in which the candidate is participating.
    (e) An individual who takes legally sufficient action to 
withdraw as a candidate before the date on which that 
individual's Financial Disclosure Statement is due under the 
Ethics in Government Act shall not be required to file a 
Statement. An individual shall not be excused from filing a 
Financial Disclosure Statement when withdrawal as a candidate 
occurs after the date on which such Statement was due.
    (f) Any individual who files a report required to be filed 
under Title I of the Ethics in Government Act more than 30 days 
after the later of--
          (1) the date such report is required to be filed, or
          (2) if a filing extension is granted to such 
        individual, the last day of the filing extension 
        period, is required by such Act to pay a late filing 
        fee of $200. The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are 
        authorized to approve requests that the fee be waived 
        based on extraordinary circumstances.
    (g) Any late report that is submitted without a required 
filing fee shall be deemed procedurally deficient and not 
properly filed.
    (h) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are authorized to 
approve requests for waivers of the aggregation and reporting 
of gifts as provided by section 102(a)(2)(C) of the Ethics in 
Government Act. If such a request is approved, both the 
incoming request and the Committee response shall be forwarded 
to the Legislative Resource Center for placement on the public 
record.
    (i) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are authorized to 
approve blind trusts as qualifying under section 102(f)(3) of 
the Ethics in Government Act. The correspondence relating to 
formal approval of a blind trust, the trust document, the list 
of assets transferred to the trust, and any other documents 
required by law to be made public, shall be forwarded to the 
Legislative Resource Center for such purpose.
    (j) The Committee shall designate staff who shall review 
reports required to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in 
Government Act and, based upon information contained therein, 
indicate in a form and manner prescribed by the Committee 
whether the Statement appears substantially accurate and 
complete and the filer appears to be in compliance with 
applicable laws and rules.
    (k) Each report required to be filed under Title I of the 
Ethics in Government Act shall be reviewed within 60 days after 
the date of filing.
    (l) If the reviewing staff believes that additional 
information is required because (1) the report required to be 
filed under Title I of the Ethics in Government Act appears not 
substantially accurate or complete, or (2) the filer may not be 
in compliance with applicable laws or rules, then the reporting 
individual shall be notified in writing of the additional 
information believed to be required, or of the law or rule with 
which the reporting individual does not appear to be in 
compliance. Such notice shall also state the time within which 
a response is to be submitted. Any such notice shall remain 
confidential.
    (m) Within the time specified, including any extension 
granted in accordance with clause (d), a reporting individual 
who concurs with the Committee's notification that the report 
required to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in Government 
Act is not complete, or that other action is required, shall 
submit the necessary information or take appropriate action. 
Any amendment may be in the form of a revised report required 
to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in Government Act or an 
explanatory letter addressed to the Clerk of the House of 
Representatives.
    (n) Any amendment shall be placed on the public record in 
the same manner as other reports required to be filed under 
Title I of the Ethics in Government Act. The individual 
designated by the Committee to review the original report 
required to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in Government 
Act shall review any amendment thereto.
    (o) Within the time specified, including any extension 
granted in accordance with clause (d), a reporting individual 
who does not agree with the Committee that the report required 
to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in Government Act is 
deficient or that other action is required, shall be provided 
an opportunity to respond orally or in writing. If the 
explanation is accepted, a copy of the response, if written, or 
a note summarizing an oral response, shall be retained in 
Committee files with the original report.
    (p) The Committee shall be the final arbiter of whether any 
report required to be filed under Title I of the Ethics in 
Government Act requires clarification or amendment.
    (q) If the Committee determines, by vote of a majority of 
its members, that there is reason to believe that an individual 
has willfully failed to file a report required to be filed 
under Title I of the Ethics in Government Act or has willfully 
falsified or willfully failed to file information required to 
be reported, then the Committee shall refer the name of the 
individual, together with the evidence supporting its finding, 
to the Attorney General pursuant to section 104(b) of the 
Ethics in Government Act. Such referral shall not preclude the 
Committee from initiating such other action as may be 
authorized by other provisions of law or the Rules of the House 
of Representatives.

                           Rule 5.--Meetings

    (a) The regular meeting day of the Committee shall be the 
second Tuesday of each month, except when the House of 
Representatives is not meeting on that day. When the Committee 
Chair determines that there is sufficient reason, meetings may 
be called on additional days. A regularly scheduled meeting 
need not be held when the Chair determines there is no business 
to be considered.
    (b) The Chair shall establish the agenda for meetings of 
the Committee, and the Ranking Minority Member may place 
additional items on the agenda.
    (c) All meetings of the Committee or any subcommittee shall 
occur in executive session unless the Committee or 
subcommittee, by an affirmative vote of a majority of its 
members, opens the meeting to the public.
    (d) Any hearing held by an adjudicatory subcommittee, or 
any sanction hearing held by the Committee, shall be open to 
the public unless the Committee or subcommittee, by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of its members, closes the 
hearing to the public.
    (e) A subcommittee shall meet at the discretion of its 
Chair.
    (f) Insofar as practicable, notice for any Committee or 
subcommittee meeting shall be provided at least seven days in 
advance of the meeting. The Chair of the Committee or 
subcommittee may waive such time period for good cause.

                        Rule 6.--Committee Staff

    (a) The staff is to be assembled and retained as a 
professional, nonpartisan staff.
    (b) Each member of the staff shall be professional and 
demonstrably qualified for the position for which the 
individual is hired.
    (c) The staff as a whole and each individual member of the 
staff shall perform all official duties in a nonpartisan 
manner.
    (d) No member of the staff shall engage in any partisan 
political activity directly affecting any congressional or 
presidential election.
    (e) No member of the staff or outside counsel may accept 
public speaking engagements or write for publication on any 
subject that is in any way related to the employment or duties 
with the Committee of such individual without specific prior 
approval from the Chair and Ranking Minority Member.
    (f) All staff members shall be appointed by an affirmative 
vote of a majority of the members of the Committee. Such vote 
shall occur at the first meeting of the membership of the 
Committee during each Congress and as necessary during the 
Congress.
    (g) Subject to the approval of the Committee on House 
Administration, the Committee may retain counsel not employed 
by the House of Representatives whenever the Committee 
determines, by an affirmative vote of a majority of the members 
of the Committee, that the retention of outside counsel is 
necessary and appropriate.
    (h) If the Committee determines that it is necessary to 
retain staff members for the purpose of a particular 
investigation or other proceeding, then such staff shall be 
retained only for the duration of that particular investigation 
or proceeding.
    (i) Outside counsel may be dismissed prior to the end of a 
contract between the Committee and such counsel only by a 
majority vote of the members of the Committee.
    (j) In addition to any other staff provided for by law, 
rule, or other authority, with respect to the Committee, the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member each may appoint one 
individual as a shared staff member from the respective 
personal staff of the Chair or Ranking Minority Member to 
perform service for the Committee. Such shared staff may assist 
the Chair or Ranking Minority Member on any subcommittee on 
which the Chair or Ranking Minority Member serves. Only 
paragraphs (c) and (e) of this rule and rule 7(b) shall apply 
to shared staff.

                        Rule 7.--Confidentiality

    (a) Before any Member or employee of the Committee, 
including members of an investigative subcommittee selected 
under clause 5(a)(4) of rule X of the House of Representatives 
and shared staff designated pursuant to Committee rule 6(j), 
may have access to information that is confidential under the 
rules of the Committee, the following oath (or affirmation) 
shall be executed in writing:
    ``I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will not disclose, 
to any person or entity outside the Committee on Ethics, any 
information received in the course of my service with the 
Committee, except as authorized by the Committee or in 
accordance with its rules.'' Copies of the executed oath shall 
be provided to the Clerk of the House as part of the records of 
the House. Breaches of confidentiality shall be investigated by 
the Committee and appropriate action shall be taken.
    (b) No member of the staff or outside counsel may make 
public, unless approved by an affirmative vote of a majority of 
the members of the Committee, any information, document, or 
other material that is confidential, derived from executive 
session, or classified and that is obtained during the course 
of employment with the Committee.
    (c) Committee members and staff shall not disclose any 
evidence or information relating to any investigation or 
proceeding of the Committee or a subcommittee to any person or 
organization outside the Committee, unless authorized by the 
Committee.
    (d) This rule shall not prohibit the Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member from disclosing to the Board of the Office of 
Congressional Ethics the existence of a Committee 
investigation, the name of the Member, officer, or employee of 
the House who is the subject of that investigation, and a brief 
statement of the scope of that investigation in a written 
request for referral pursuant to rule 17A(k). Such disclosures 
will only be made subject to written confirmation from the 
Board that the information provided by the Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member will be kept confidential by the Board.
    (e) A Statement of Alleged Violation and any written 
response thereto shall be made public at the first meeting or 
hearing on the matter that is open to the public after the 
respondent has been given full opportunity to respond pursuant 
to rule 22. Any other materials in the possession of the 
Committee regarding such statement may be made public as 
authorized by the Committee to the extent consistent with the 
Rules of the House of Representatives. If no public hearing is 
held on the matter, the Statement of Alleged Violation and any 
written response thereto shall be included in the Committee's 
final report on the matter to the House of Representatives.
    (f) Unless otherwise determined by a vote of the Committee, 
only the Chair or Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, 
after consultation with each other, may make public statements 
regarding matters before the Committee or any subcommittee.
    (g) The Committee may establish procedures necessary to 
prevent the unauthorized disclosure of any testimony or other 
information received by the Committee or its staff.

          Rule 8.--Subcommittees--General Policy and Structure

    (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules, the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the Committee may consult 
with an investigative subcommittee either on their own 
initiative or on the initiative of the subcommittee, shall have 
access to evidence and information before a subcommittee with 
whom they so consult, and shall not thereby be precluded from 
serving as full, voting members of any adjudicatory 
subcommittee. Except for the Chair and Ranking Minority Member 
of the Committee pursuant to this paragraph, evidence in the 
possession of an investigative subcommittee shall not be 
disclosed to other Committee members except by a vote of the 
subcommittee.
    (b) The Committee may establish other noninvestigative and 
nonadjudicatory subcommittees and may assign to them such 
functions as it may deem appropriate. The membership of each 
subcommittee shall provide equal representation for the 
majority and minority parties.
    (c) The Chair may refer any bill, resolution, or other 
matter before the Committee to an appropriate subcommittee for 
consideration. Any such bill, resolution, or other matter may 
be discharged from the subcommittee to which it was referred by 
a majority vote of the Committee.
    (d) Any member of the Committee may sit with any 
noninvestigative or nonadjudicatory subcommittee, but only 
regular members of such subcommittee may vote on any matter 
before that subcommittee.

              Rule 9.--Quorums and Member Disqualification

    (a) The quorum for the Committee or an investigative 
subcommittee to take testimony and to receive evidence shall be 
two members, unless otherwise authorized by the House of 
Representatives.
    (b) The quorum for an adjudicatory subcommittee to take 
testimony, receive evidence, or conduct business shall consist 
of a majority plus one of the members of the adjudicatory 
subcommittee.
    (c) Except as stated in clauses (a) and (b) of this rule, a 
quorum for the purpose of conducting business consists of a 
majority of the members of the Committee or subcommittee.
    (d) A member of the Committee shall be ineligible to 
participate in any Committee or subcommittee proceeding in 
which such Member is a respondent.
    (e) A member of the Committee may seek disqualification 
from participating in any investigation of the conduct of a 
Member, officer, or employee of the House of Representatives 
upon the submission in writing and under oath of an affidavit 
of disqualification stating that the member cannot render an 
impartial and unbiased decision. If the Committee approves and 
accepts such affidavit of disqualification, the Chair shall so 
notify the Speaker and ask the Speaker to designate a Member of 
the House of Representatives from the same political party as 
the disqualified member of the Committee to act as a member of 
the Committee in any Committee proceeding relating to such 
investigation.

                      Rule 10.--Vote Requirements

    (a) The following actions shall be taken only upon an 
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the Committee 
or subcommittee, as appropriate:
          (1) Issuing a subpoena.
          (2) Adopting a full Committee motion to create an 
        investigative subcommittee.
          (3) Adopting or amending of a Statement of Alleged 
        Violation.
          (4) Finding that a count in a Statement of Alleged 
        Violation has been proved by clear and convincing 
        evidence.
          (5) Sending a letter of reproval.
          (6) Adopting a recommendation to the House of 
        Representatives that a sanction be imposed.
          (7) Adopting a report relating to the conduct of a 
        Member, officer, or employee.
          (8) Issuing an advisory opinion of general 
        applicability establishing new policy.
    (b) Except as stated in clause (a), action may be taken by 
the Committee or any subcommittee thereof by a simple majority, 
a quorum being present.
    (c) No motion made to take any of the actions enumerated in 
clause (a) of this rule may be entertained by the Chair unless 
a quorum of the Committee is present when such motion is made.

                      Rule 11.--Committee Records

    (a) All communications and all pleadings pursuant to these 
rules shall be filed with the Committee at the Committee's 
office or such other place as designated by the Committee.
    (b) All records of the Committee which have been delivered 
to the Archivist of the United States shall be made available 
to the public in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives.

     Rule 12.--Broadcasts of Committee and Subcommittee Proceedings

    (a) Television or radio coverage of a Committee or 
subcommittee hearing or meeting shall be without commercial 
sponsorship.
    (b) Not more than four television cameras, operating from 
fixed positions, shall be permitted in a hearing or meeting 
room. The Committee may allocate the positions of permitted 
television cameras among the television media in consultation 
with the Executive Committee of the Radio and Television 
Correspondents' Galleries.
    (c) Television cameras shall be placed so as not to 
obstruct in any way the space between any witness giving 
evidence or testimony and any member of the Committee, or the 
visibility of that witness and that member to each other.
    (d) Television cameras shall not be placed in positions 
that unnecessarily obstruct the coverage of the hearing or 
meeting by the other media.

                    PART II--INVESTIGATIVE AUTHORITY


                       Rule 13.--House Resolution

    Whenever the House of Representatives, by resolution, 
authorizes or directs the Committee to undertake an inquiry or 
investigation, the provisions of the resolution, in conjunction 
with these Rules, shall govern. To the extent the provisions of 
the resolution differ from these rules, the resolution shall 
control.

      Rule 14.--Committee Authority To Investigate--General Policy

    (a) Pursuant to clause 3(b) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, the Committee may exercise its 
investigative authority when:
          (1) information offered as a complaint, in writing 
        and under oath, by a Member of the House of 
        Representatives is transmitted directly to the 
        Committee;
          (2) information offered as a complaint, in writing 
        and under oath, by an individual not a Member of the 
        House is transmitted to the Committee, provided that a 
        Member of the House certifies in writing that such 
        Member believes the information is submitted in good 
        faith and warrants the review and consideration of the 
        Committee;
          (3) the Committee, on its own initiative, undertakes 
        an investigation;
          (4) a Member, officer, or employee is indicted or 
        otherwise formally charged with criminal conduct or is 
        convicted of a felony in a Federal, State, or local 
        court;
          (5) the House of Representatives, by resolution, 
        authorizes or directs the Committee to undertake an 
        inquiry or investigation; or
          (6) a referral from the Board is transmitted to the 
        Committee.
    (b) The Committee also has investigatory authority over:
          (1) certain unauthorized disclosures of intelligence-
        related information, pursuant to House rule X, clauses 
        11(g)(4) and (g)(5);
          (2) reports received from the Office of the Inspector 
        General pursuant to House rule II, clause 6(c)(5);
          (3) determinations regarding appeals from fines 
        imposed by the Sergeant-at-Arms for the use of 
        electronic devices in contravention of applicable House 
        rules or policies, pursuant to House rule II, clause 
        3(g); and
          (4) information received from the Office of 
        Congressional Workplace Rights, pursuant to the 
        Congressional Accountability Act of 1995.

                          Rule 15.--Complaints

    (a) A complaint submitted to the Committee shall be in 
writing, dated, and properly verified (a document will be 
considered properly verified where a notary executes it with 
the language, ``Signed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me on 
(date) by (the name of the person)'') setting forth in simple, 
concise, and direct statements--
          (1) the name and legal address of the party filing 
        the complaint (hereinafter referred to as the 
        ``complainant'');
          (2) the name and position or title of the 
        respondent(s);
          (3) the nature of the alleged violation of the Code 
        of Official Conduct or of other law, rule, regulation, 
        or other standard of conduct applicable to the 
        performance of duties or discharge of responsibilities; 
        and
          (4) the facts alleged to give rise to the violation. 
        The complaint shall not contain innuendo, speculative 
        assertions, or conclusory statements.
    (b) Any documents in the possession of the complainant that 
relate to the allegations may be submitted with the complaint.
    (c) Information offered as a complaint by a Member of the 
House of Representatives may be transmitted directly to the 
Committee.
    (d) Information offered as a complaint by an individual not 
a Member of the House may be transmitted to the Committee, 
provided that a Member of the House certifies in writing that 
such Member believes the information is submitted in good faith 
and warrants the review and consideration of the Committee.
    (e) A complaint must be accompanied by a certification, 
which may be unsworn, that the complainant has provided an 
exact copy of the filed complaint and all attachments to the 
respondent(s).
    (f) The Committee may defer action on a complaint against a 
Member, officer, or employee of the House of Representatives 
when the complaint alleges conduct that the Committee has 
reason to believe is being reviewed by appropriate law 
enforcement or regulatory authorities, or when the Committee 
determines that it is appropriate for the conduct alleged in 
the complaint to be reviewed initially by law enforcement or 
regulatory authorities.
    (g) A complaint may not be amended without leave of the 
Committee. Otherwise, any new allegations of improper conduct 
must be submitted in a new complaint that independently meets 
the procedural requirements of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee's rules.
    (h) The Committee shall not accept, and shall return to the 
complainant, any complaint submitted within the 60 days before 
a Federal, State, or local election in which the subject of the 
complaint is a candidate.
    (i) The Committee shall not consider a complaint, nor shall 
any investigation be undertaken by the Committee, of any 
alleged violation which occurred before the third previous 
Congress unless the Committee determines that the alleged 
violation is directly related to an alleged violation which 
occurred in a more recent Congress.

    Rule 16.--Duties of Committee Chair and Ranking Minority Member

    (a) Whenever information offered as a complaint is 
submitted to the Committee, the Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member shall have 14 calendar days or 5 legislative days, 
whichever occurs first, to determine whether the information 
meets the requirements of the Committee's rules for what 
constitutes a complaint.
    (b) Whenever the Chair and Ranking Minority Member jointly 
determine that information submitted to the Committee meets the 
requirements of the Committee's rules for what constitutes a 
complaint, they shall have 45 calendar days or 5 legislative 
days, whichever is later, after the date that the Chair and 
Ranking Minority Member determine that information filed meets 
the requirements of the Committee's rules for what constitutes 
a complaint, unless the Committee by an affirmative vote of a 
majority of its members votes otherwise, to--
          (1) recommend to the Committee that it dispose of the 
        complaint, or any portion thereof, in any manner that 
        does not require action by the House, which may include 
        dismissal of the complaint or resolution of the 
        complaint by a letter to the Member, officer, or 
        employee of the House against whom the complaint is 
        made;
          (2) establish an investigative subcommittee; or
          (3) request that the Committee extend the applicable 
        45-calendar day period when they determine more time is 
        necessary in order to make a recommendation under 
        paragraph (1) or (2) of rule 16(b).
    (c) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member may jointly 
gather additional information concerning alleged conduct which 
is the basis of a complaint or of information offered as a 
complaint until they have established an investigative 
subcommittee or the Chair or Ranking Minority Member has placed 
on the agenda the issue of whether to establish an 
investigative subcommittee.
    (d) If the Chair and Ranking Minority Member jointly 
determine that information submitted to the Committee meets the 
requirements of the Committee rules for what constitutes a 
complaint, and the complaint is not disposed of within 45 
calendar days or 5 legislative days, whichever is later, and no 
additional 45-day extension is made, then they shall establish 
an investigative subcommittee and forward the complaint, or any 
portion thereof, to that subcommittee for its consideration. If 
at any time during the time period either the Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member places on the agenda the issue of whether to 
establish an investigative subcommittee, then an investigative 
subcommittee may be established only by an affirmative vote of 
a majority of the members of the Committee.
    (e) Whenever the Chair and Ranking Minority Member jointly 
determine that information submitted to the Committee does not 
meet the requirements for what constitutes a complaint set 
forth in the Committee rules, they may (1) return the 
information to the complainant with a statement that it fails 
to meet the requirements for what constitutes a complaint set 
forth in the Committee's rules; or (2) recommend to the 
Committee that it authorize the establishment of an 
investigative subcommittee.

                   Rule 17.--Processing of Complaints

    (a) If a complaint is in compliance with House and 
Committee rules, a copy of the complaint and the Committee 
rules shall be forwarded to the respondent(s) within 5 days 
with notice that the complaint conforms to the applicable 
rules.
    (b) A respondent may, within 30 days of the Committee's 
notification in clause (a), provide to the Committee any 
information relevant to a complaint filed with the Committee. 
The respondent may submit a written statement in response to 
the complaint. Such a statement shall be signed by the 
respondent. If the statement is prepared by counsel for the 
respondent, the respondent shall sign a representation that the 
respondent has reviewed the response and agrees with the 
factual assertions contained therein.
    (c) The Committee staff may request information from a 
respondent or obtain additional information relevant to the 
case from other sources prior to the establishment of an 
investigative subcommittee only when so directed by the Chair 
and Ranking Minority Member.
    (d) The respondent(s) shall be notified in writing 
regarding the Chair and Ranking Minority Member's determination 
under rule 16(e) or the Committee's decision either to dismiss 
the complaint or to create an investigative subcommittee.

  Rule 17A.--Referrals From the Board of the Office of Congressional 
                                 Ethics

    (a) The Committee has exclusive jurisdiction over the 
interpretation, administration, and enforcement of the Code of 
Official Conduct pursuant to clause 1(g) of House rule X. 
Receipt of referrals from the Board under this rule does not 
limit the Committee's discretion to address referrals in any 
way through the appropriate procedures authorized by Committee 
rules. The Committee shall review the report and findings 
transmitted by the Board without prejudice or presumptions as 
to the merit of the allegations.
    (b)(1) Whenever the Committee receives either (A) a 
referral containing a written report and any findings and 
supporting documentation from the Board; or (B) a referral from 
the Board pursuant to a request under rule 17A(k), the Chair 
shall have 45 calendar days or 5 legislative days after the 
date the referral is received, whichever is later, to make 
public the report and findings of the Board unless the Chair 
and Ranking Minority Member jointly decide, or the Committee 
votes, to withhold such information for not more than one 
additional 45-day period.
    (2) At least one calendar day before the Committee makes 
public any report and findings of the Board, the Chair shall 
notify in writing the Board and the Member, officer, or 
employee who is the subject of the referral of the impending 
public release of these documents. At the same time, the Chair 
shall transmit a copy of any public statement on the 
Committee's disposition of the matter and any accompanying 
Committee report to the individual who is the subject of the 
referral.
    (3) All public statements and reports and findings of the 
Board that are required to be made public under this rule shall 
be posted on the Committee's website.
    (c) If the OCE report and findings are withheld for an 
additional 45-day period pursuant to paragraph (b)(1), the 
Chair shall--
          (1) make a public statement on the day of such 
        decision or vote that the matter referred from the 
        Board has been extended; and
          (2) make public the written report and findings 
        pursuant to paragraph (b) upon the termination of such 
        additional period.
    (d) If the Board transmits a report with a recommendation 
to dismiss or noting a matter as unresolved due to a tie vote, 
and the matter is extended for an additional period as provided 
in paragraph (b), the Committee is not required to make a 
public statement that the matter has been extended pursuant to 
paragraph (b)(1).
    (e) If the Committee votes to dismiss a matter referred 
from the Board, the Committee is not required to make public 
the written report and findings of the Board pursuant to 
paragraph (c) unless the Committee's vote is inconsistent with 
the recommendation of the Board. A vote by the Committee to 
dismiss a matter is not considered inconsistent with a report 
from the Board that the matter is unresolved by the Board due 
to a tie vote.
    (f) Except as provided by paragraph (g):
          (1) If the Committee establishes an investigative 
        subcommittee respecting any matter referred by the 
        Board, then the report and findings of the Board shall 
        not be made public until the conclusion of the 
        investigative subcommittee process. The Committee shall 
        issue a public statement noting the establishment of an 
        investigative subcommittee, which shall include the 
        name of the Member, officer, or employee who is the 
        subject of the inquiry, and shall set forth the alleged 
        violation.
          (2) If any such investigative subcommittee does not 
        conclude its review within one year after the Board's 
        referral, then the Committee shall make public the 
        report of the Board no later than one year after the 
        referral. If the investigative subcommittee does not 
        conclude its review before the end of the Congress in 
        which the report of the Board is made public, the 
        Committee shall make public any findings of the Board 
        on the last day of that Congress.
    (g) If the vote of the Committee is a tie or the Committee 
fails to act by the close of any applicable period(s) under 
this rule, the report and the findings of the Board shall be 
made public by the Committee, along with a public statement by 
the Chair explaining the status of the matter.
    (h)(1) If the Committee agrees to a request from an 
appropriate law enforcement or regulatory authority to defer 
taking action on a matter referred by the Board under paragraph 
(b)--
          (A) The Committee is not required to make public the 
        written report and findings of the Board pursuant to 
        paragraph (c), except that if the recommendation of the 
        Board is that the matter requires further review, the 
        Committee shall make public the written report of the 
        Board but not the findings; and
          (B) The Committee shall make a public statement that 
        it is deferring taking action on the matter at the 
        request of such law enforcement or regulatory authority 
        within one day (excluding weekends and public holidays) 
        of the day that the Committee agrees to the request.
    (2) If the Committee has not acted on the matter within one 
year of the date the public statement described in paragraph 
(h)(1)(B) is released, the Committee shall make a public 
statement that it continues to defer taking action on the 
matter. The Committee shall make a new statement upon the 
expiration of each succeeding one-year period during which the 
Committee has not acted on the matter.
    (i) The Committee shall not accept, and shall return to the 
Board, any referral from the Board within 60 days before a 
Federal, State, or local election in which the subject of the 
referral is a candidate.
    (j) The Committee may postpone any reporting requirement 
under this rule that falls within that 60-day period until 
after the date of the election in which the subject of the 
referral is a candidate. For purposes of calculating any 
applicable period under this Rule, any days within the 60-day 
period before such an election and the date of the election 
shall not be counted.
    (k)(1) At any time after the Committee receives written 
notification from the Board of the Office of Congressional 
Ethics that the Board is undertaking a review of alleged 
conduct of any Member, officer, or employee of the House at a 
time when the Committee is investigating, or has completed an 
investigation of the same matter, the Committee may so notify 
the Board in writing and request that the Board cease its 
review and refer the matter to the Committee for its 
consideration immediately. The Committee shall also notify the 
Board in writing if the Committee has not reached a final 
resolution of the matter or has not referred the matter to the 
appropriate Federal or State authorities by the end of any 
applicable time period specified in rule 17A (including any 
permissible extension).
    (2) The Committee may not request a second referral of the 
matter from the Board if the Committee has notified the Board 
that it is unable to resolve the matter previously requested 
pursuant to this section. The Board may subsequently send a 
referral regarding a matter previously requested and returned 
by the Committee after the conclusion of the Board's review 
process.

         Rule 18.--Committee-Initiated Inquiry or Investigation

    (a) Notwithstanding the absence of a filed complaint, the 
Committee may consider any information in its possession 
indicating that a Member, officer, or employee may have 
committed a violation of the Code of Official Conduct or any 
law, rule, regulation, or other standard of conduct applicable 
to the conduct of such Member, officer, or employee in the 
performance of the duties or the discharge of the 
responsibilities of such individual. The Chair and Ranking 
Minority Member may jointly gather additional information 
concerning such an alleged violation by a Member, officer, or 
employee unless and until an investigative subcommittee has 
been established. The Chair and Ranking Minority Member may 
also jointly take appropriate action consistent with Committee 
rules to resolve the matter.
    (b) If the Committee votes to establish an investigative 
subcommittee, the Committee shall proceed in accordance with 
rule 19.
    (c) Any written request by a Member, officer, or employee 
of the House of Representatives that the Committee conduct an 
investigation into such person's own conduct shall be 
considered in accordance with subsection (a) of this rule.
    (d) An investigation shall not be undertaken regarding any 
alleged violation that occurred before the third previous 
Congress unless a majority of the Committee determines that the 
alleged violation is directly related to an alleged violation 
that occurred in a more recent Congress.
    (e)(1) An inquiry shall be undertaken by an investigative 
subcommittee with regard to any felony conviction of a Member, 
officer, or employee of the House of Representatives in a 
Federal, State, or local court who has been sentenced. 
Notwithstanding this provision, the Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member have the discretion to gather information pursuant to 
subsection (a) of this rule, and the Committee has the 
discretion to initiate an inquiry upon an affirmative vote of a 
majority of the members of the Committee, at any time prior to 
conviction or sentencing.
    (2) Not later than 30 days after a Member of the House is 
indicted or otherwise formally charged with criminal conduct in 
any Federal, State, or local court, the Committee shall either 
initiate an inquiry upon a majority vote of the members of the 
Committee or submit a report to the House describing its 
reasons for not initiating an inquiry and describing the 
actions, if any, that the Committee has taken in response to 
the allegations.
    (3) In addition to any other evidence which the Committee 
or investigative subcommittee may consider, the Committee or 
investigative subcommittee may take into evidence any 
information related to the subject of an investigation 
contained in trial transcripts and all exhibits admitted into 
evidence at trial.

                  Rule 19.--Investigative Subcommittee

    (a)(1) Upon the establishment of an investigative 
subcommittee, the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee shall designate four members (with equal 
representation from the majority and minority parties) to serve 
as an investigative subcommittee to undertake an inquiry. 
Members of the Committee and Members of the House selected 
pursuant to clause 5(a)(4)(A) of rule X of the House of 
Representatives are eligible for appointment to an 
investigative subcommittee, as determined by the Chair and 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee. At the time of 
appointment, the Chair shall designate one member of the 
subcommittee to serve as the Chair and the Ranking Minority 
Member shall designate one member of the subcommittee to serve 
as the ranking minority member of the investigative 
subcommittee. The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee may serve as members of an investigative 
subcommittee, but may not serve as non-voting, ex-officio 
members.
    (2) A respondent shall be notified of the membership of the 
investigative subcommittee and shall have 10 days after such 
notice is transmitted to object to the participation of any 
subcommittee member. Such objection shall be in writing and 
must be on the grounds that the subcommittee member cannot 
render an impartial and unbiased decision. The members of the 
Committee shall engage in a collegial discussion regarding such 
objection. The subcommittee member against whom the objection 
is made shall be the sole judge of any disqualification and may 
choose to seek disqualification from participating in the 
inquiry pursuant to rule 9(e).
    (b) In an inquiry undertaken by an investigative 
subcommittee--
          (1) All proceedings, including the taking of 
        testimony, shall be conducted in executive session and 
        all evidence or testimony produced pursuant to subpoena 
        or otherwise shall be deemed to have been taken or 
        produced in executive session.
          (2) The investigative subcommittee, through any of 
        its members or the staff, shall ask the respondent(s) 
        and all witnesses whether they intend to be represented 
        by counsel. If so, the respondent or witnesses or their 
        legal representatives shall provide written designation 
        of counsel. A respondent or witness who is represented 
        by counsel shall not be questioned in the absence of 
        counsel unless an explicit waiver is obtained.
          (3) The subcommittee shall provide the respondent(s) 
        an opportunity to present, orally or in writing, a 
        statement, which must be under oath or affirmation, 
        regarding the allegations and any other relevant 
        questions arising out of the inquiry.
          (4) The staff may interview witnesses, examine 
        documents and other evidence, and request that 
        submitted statements be under oath or affirmation and 
        that documents be certified as to their authenticity 
        and accuracy.
          (5) The subcommittee, by a majority vote of its 
        members, may require, by subpoena or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of witnesses and the 
        production of such books, records, correspondence, 
        memoranda, papers, documents, and other items as it 
        deems necessary to the conduct of the inquiry. Unless 
        the Committee otherwise provides, the subpoena power 
        shall rest in the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of 
        the Committee and a subpoena shall be issued upon the 
        request of the investigative subcommittee.
          (6) Required testimony shall be given under oath or 
        affirmation. The form of the oath or affirmation shall 
        be: ``Do you solemnly swear (or affirm) that the 
        testimony you will give before this subcommittee in the 
        matter now under consideration will be the truth, the 
        whole truth, and nothing but the truth (so help you 
        God)?'' The oath or affirmation shall be administered 
        by the Chair or any individual designated by the Chair 
        to administer oaths.
    (c) During the inquiry, the procedure respecting the 
admissibility of evidence and rulings shall be as follows:
          (1) Any relevant evidence shall be admissible unless 
        the evidence is privileged under the precedents of the 
        House of Representatives.
          (2) The Chair of the subcommittee or other presiding 
        member at any investigative subcommittee proceeding 
        shall rule upon any question of admissibility or 
        relevance of evidence, motion, procedure, or any other 
        matter, and may direct any witness to answer any 
        question under penalty of contempt. A witness, witness 
        counsel, or a member of the subcommittee may appeal any 
        rulings to the members present at that proceeding. A 
        majority vote of the members present at such proceeding 
        on such appeal shall govern the question of 
        admissibility, and no appeal shall lie to the 
        Committee.
          (3) Whenever a person is determined by a majority 
        vote to be in contempt of the subcommittee, the matter 
        may be referred to the Committee to determine whether 
        to refer the matter to the House of Representatives for 
        consideration.
          (4) Committee counsel may, subject to subcommittee 
        approval, enter into stipulations with a respondent 
        and/or the respondent's counsel as to facts that are 
        not in dispute.
    (d) Upon an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
subcommittee members, and an affirmative vote of a majority of 
the full Committee, an investigative subcommittee may expand 
the scope of its inquiry.
    (e) Upon completion of the inquiry, the staff shall draft 
for the investigative subcommittee a report that shall contain 
a comprehensive summary of the information received regarding 
the alleged violations.
    (f) Upon completion of the inquiry, an investigative 
subcommittee, by a majority vote of its members, may adopt a 
Statement of Alleged Violation if it determines that there is 
substantial reason to believe that a violation of the Code of 
Official Conduct, or of a law, rule, regulation, or other 
standard of conduct applicable to the performance of official 
duties or the discharge of official responsibilities by a 
Member, officer, or employee of the House of Representatives 
has occurred. If more than one violation is alleged, such 
Statement shall be divided into separate counts. Each count 
shall relate to a separate violation, shall contain a plain and 
concise statement of the alleged facts of such violation, and 
shall include a reference to the provision of the Code of 
Official Conduct or law, rule, regulation, or other applicable 
standard of conduct governing the performance of duties or 
discharge of responsibilities alleged to have been violated. A 
copy of such Statement shall be transmitted to the respondent 
and the respondent's counsel.
    (g) If the investigative subcommittee does not adopt a 
Statement of Alleged Violation, it shall transmit to the 
Committee a report containing a summary of the information 
received in the inquiry, its conclusions and reasons therefore, 
and any appropriate recommendation.
    (h) An investigative subcommittee may transmit a single 
report regarding multiple respondents, but shall adopt a 
separate Statement of Alleged Violation for each respondent 
where applicable.

        Rule 20.--Amendments to Statements of Alleged Violation

    (a) An investigative subcommittee may, upon an affirmative 
vote of a majority of its members, amend its Statement of 
Alleged Violation any time before the Statement of Alleged 
Violation is transmitted to the Committee;
    (b) If an investigative subcommittee amends its Statement 
of Alleged Violation, the respondent shall be notified in 
writing and shall have 30 calendar days from the date of that 
notification to file an answer to the amended Statement of 
Alleged Violation.

               Rule 21.--Committee Reporting Requirements

    (a) Whenever an investigative subcommittee does not adopt a 
Statement of Alleged Violation and transmits a report to that 
effect to the Committee, the Committee may by an affirmative 
vote of a majority of its members transmit such report to the 
House of Representatives;
    (b) Whenever an investigative subcommittee adopts a 
Statement of Alleged Violation but recommends that no further 
action be taken, it shall transmit a report to the Committee 
regarding the Statement of Alleged Violation; and
    (c) Whenever an investigative subcommittee adopts a 
Statement of Alleged Violation, the respondent admits to the 
violations set forth in such Statement, the respondent waives 
the right to an adjudicatory hearing, and the respondent's 
waiver is approved by the Committee--
          (1) the subcommittee shall prepare a report for 
        transmittal to the Committee, a final draft of which 
        shall be provided to the respondent not less than 15 
        calendar days before the subcommittee votes on whether 
        to adopt the report;
          (2) the respondent may submit views in writing 
        regarding the final draft to the subcommittee within 7 
        calendar days of receipt of that draft;
          (3) the subcommittee shall transmit a report to the 
        Committee regarding the Statement of Alleged Violation 
        together with any views submitted by the respondent 
        pursuant to subparagraph (2), and the Committee shall 
        make the report, together with the respondent's views, 
        available to the public before the commencement of any 
        sanction hearing; and
          (4) the Committee shall by an affirmative vote of a 
        majority of its members issue a report and transmit 
        such report to the House of Representatives, together 
        with the respondent's views previously submitted 
        pursuant to subparagraph (2) and any additional views 
        respondent may submit for attachment to the final 
        report; and
    (d) Members of the Committee shall have not less than 72 
hours to review any report transmitted to the Committee by an 
investigative subcommittee before both the commencement of a 
sanction hearing and the Committee vote on whether to adopt the 
report.

                     Rule 22.--Respondent's Answer

    (a)(1) Within 30 days from the date of transmittal of a 
Statement of Alleged Violation, the respondent shall file with 
the investigative subcommittee an answer, in writing and under 
oath, signed by respondent and respondent's counsel. Failure to 
file an answer within the time prescribed shall be considered 
by the Committee as a denial of each count.
    (2) The answer shall contain an admission to or denial of 
each count set forth in the Statement of Alleged Violation and 
may include negative, affirmative, or alternative defenses and 
any supporting evidence or other relevant information.
    (b) The respondent may file a Motion for a Bill of 
Particulars within 10 days of the date of transmittal of the 
Statement of Alleged Violation. If a Motion for a Bill of 
Particulars is filed, the respondent shall not be required to 
file an answer until 20 days after the subcommittee has replied 
to such motion.
    (c)(1) The respondent may file a Motion to Dismiss within 
10 days of the date of transmittal of the Statement of Alleged 
Violation or, if a Motion for a Bill of Particulars has been 
filed, within 10 days of the date of the subcommittee's reply 
to the Motion for a Bill of Particulars. If a Motion to Dismiss 
is filed, the respondent shall not be required to file an 
answer until 20 days after the subcommittee has replied to the 
Motion to Dismiss, unless the respondent previously filed a 
Motion for a Bill of Particulars, in which case the respondent 
shall not be required to file an answer until 10 days after the 
subcommittee has replied to the Motion to Dismiss. The 
investigative subcommittee shall rule upon any motion to 
dismiss filed during the period between the establishment of 
the subcommittee and the subcommittee's transmittal of a report 
or Statement of Alleged Violation to the Committee or to the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member at the conclusion of an 
inquiry, and no appeal of the subcommittee's ruling shall lie 
to the Committee.
    (2) A Motion to Dismiss may be made on the grounds that the 
Statement of Alleged Violation fails to state facts that 
constitute a violation of the Code of Official Conduct or other 
applicable law, rule, regulation, or standard of conduct, or on 
the grounds that the Committee lacks jurisdiction to consider 
the allegations contained in the Statement.
    (d) Any motion filed with the subcommittee pursuant to this 
rule shall be accompanied by a Memorandum of Points and 
Authorities.
    (e)(1) The Chair of the investigative subcommittee, for 
good cause shown, may permit the respondent to file an answer 
or motion after the day prescribed above.
    (2) If the ability of the respondent to present an adequate 
defense is not adversely affected and special circumstances so 
require, the Chair of the investigative subcommittee may direct 
the respondent to file an answer or motion prior to the day 
prescribed above.
    (f) If the day on which any answer, motion, reply, or other 
pleading must be filed falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or public 
holiday, such filing shall be made on the first business day 
thereafter.
    (g) As soon as practicable after an answer has been filed 
or the time for such filing has expired, the Statement of 
Alleged Violation and any answer, motion, reply, or other 
pleading connected therewith shall be transmitted by the Chair 
of the investigative subcommittee to the Chair and Ranking 
Minority Member of the Committee.

                    Rule 23.--Adjudicatory Hearings

    (a) If a Statement of Alleged Violation is transmitted to 
the Chair and Ranking Minority Member pursuant to rule 22, and 
no waiver pursuant to rule 26(b) has occurred, the Chair shall 
designate the members of the Committee who did not serve on the 
investigative subcommittee to serve on an adjudicatory 
subcommittee. The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee shall be the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
adjudicatory subcommittee unless they served on the 
investigative subcommittee. The respondent shall be notified of 
the designation of the adjudicatory subcommittee and shall have 
10 days after such notice is transmitted to object to the 
participation of any subcommittee member. Such objection shall 
be in writing and shall be on the grounds that the member 
cannot render an impartial and unbiased decision. The members 
of the Committee shall engage in a collegial discussion 
regarding such objection. The member against whom the objection 
is made shall be the sole judge of any disqualification and may 
choose to seek disqualification from serving on the 
subcommittee pursuant to rule 9(e).
    (b) A majority of the adjudicatory subcommittee membership 
plus one must be present at all times for the conduct of any 
business pursuant to this rule.
    (c) The adjudicatory subcommittee shall hold a hearing to 
determine whether any counts in the Statement of Alleged 
Violation have been proved by clear and convincing evidence and 
shall make findings of fact, except where such violations have 
been admitted by respondent.
    (d) The subcommittee may require, by subpoena or otherwise, 
the attendance and testimony of such witnesses and production 
of such books, records, correspondence, memoranda, papers, 
documents, and other items as it deems necessary. A subpoena 
for documents may specify terms of return other than at a 
meeting or hearing of the subcommittee. Depositions, 
interrogatories, and sworn statements taken under any 
investigative subcommittee direction may be accepted into the 
hearing record.
    (e) The procedures set forth in clause 2(g)(1)-(4), (6)-(7) 
and (k) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
shall apply to adjudicatory hearings. All such hearings shall 
be open to the public unless the adjudicatory subcommittee, 
pursuant to such clause, determines that the hearings or any 
part thereof should be closed.
    (f)(1) The adjudicatory subcommittee shall, in writing, 
notify the respondent that the respondent and respondent's 
counsel have the right to inspect, review, copy, or photograph 
books, papers, documents, photographs, or other tangible 
objects that committee counsel intends to use as evidence 
against the respondent in an adjudicatory hearing. The 
respondent shall be given access to such evidence, and shall be 
provided the names of witnesses committee counsel intends to 
call, and a summary of their expected testimony, no less than 
15 calendar days prior to any such hearing. Except in 
extraordinary circumstances, no evidence may be introduced or 
witness called in an adjudicatory hearing unless the respondent 
has been afforded a prior opportunity to review such evidence 
or has been provided the name of the witness.
    (2) After a witness has testified on direct examination at 
an adjudicatory hearing, the Committee, at the request of the 
respondent, shall make available to the respondent any 
statement of the witness in the possession of the Committee 
which relates to the subject matter as to which the witness has 
testified.
    (3) Any other testimony, statement, or documentary evidence 
in the possession of the Committee which is material to the 
respondent's defense shall, upon request, be made available to 
the respondent.
    (g) No less than 5 days prior to the hearing, the 
respondent or counsel shall provide the adjudicatory 
subcommittee with the names of witnesses expected to be called, 
summaries of their expected testimony, and copies of any 
documents or other evidence proposed to be introduced.
    (h) The respondent or counsel may apply to the subcommittee 
for the issuance of subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses 
or the production of evidence. The application shall be granted 
upon a showing by the respondent that the proposed testimony or 
evidence is relevant and not otherwise available to respondent. 
The application may be denied if not made at a reasonable time 
or if the testimony or evidence would be merely cumulative.
    (i) No later than two weeks or 5 legislative days after the 
Chair of the Committee designates members to serve on an 
adjudicatory subcommittee, whichever is later, the Chair of the 
adjudicatory subcommittee shall establish a schedule and 
procedure for the hearing and for prehearing matters. The 
procedures may be changed either by the Chair of the 
adjudicatory subcommittee or a by a majority vote of the 
members of the subcommittee. If the Chair makes prehearing 
rulings upon any question of admissibility or relevance of 
evidence, motion, procedure, or any other matter, the Chair 
shall make available those rulings to all subcommittee members 
at the time of the ruling.
    (j) The procedures regarding the admissibility of evidence 
and rulings shall be as follows:
          (1) Any relevant evidence shall be admissible unless 
        the evidence is privileged under the precedents of the 
        House of Representatives.
          (2) The Chair of the subcommittee or other presiding 
        member at an adjudicatory subcommittee hearing shall 
        rule upon any question of admissibility or relevance of 
        evidence, motion, procedure, or any other matter, and 
        may direct any witness to answer any question under 
        penalty of contempt. A witness, witness counsel, or a 
        member of the subcommittee may appeal any ruling to the 
        members present at that proceeding. A majority vote of 
        the members present at such proceeding on such an 
        appeal shall govern the question of admissibility and 
        no appeal shall lie to the Committee.
          (3) Whenever a witness is deemed by a Chair or other 
        presiding member to be in contempt of the subcommittee, 
        the matter may be referred to the Committee to 
        determine whether to refer the matter to the House of 
        Representatives for consideration.
          (4) Committee counsel may, subject to subcommittee 
        approval, enter into stipulations with the respondent 
        and/or the respondent's counsel as to facts that are 
        not in dispute.
    (k) Unless otherwise provided, the order of an adjudicatory 
hearing shall be as follows:
          (1) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
        subcommittee shall open the hearing with equal time and 
        during which time, the Chair shall state the 
        adjudicatory subcommittee's authority to conduct the 
        hearing and the purpose of the hearing.
          (2) The Chair shall then recognize Committee counsel 
        and the respondent's counsel, in turn, for the purpose 
        of giving opening statements.
          (3) Testimony from witnesses and other relevant 
        evidence shall be received in the following order 
        whenever possible:
                  (i) witnesses (deposition transcripts and 
                affidavits obtained during the inquiry may be 
                used in lieu of live witnesses) and other 
                evidence offered by Committee counsel,
                  (ii) witnesses and other evidence offered by 
                the respondent,
                  (iii) rebuttal witnesses, as permitted by the 
                Chair.
          (4) Witnesses at a hearing shall be examined first by 
        counsel calling such witness. The opposing counsel may 
        then cross-examine the witness. Redirect examination 
        and recross examination by counsel may be permitted at 
        the Chair's discretion. Subcommittee members may then 
        question witnesses. Unless otherwise directed by the 
        Chair, questions by Subcommittee members shall be 
        conducted under the five-minute rule.
          (5) The Chair shall then recognize Committee counsel 
        and respondent's counsel, in turn, for the purpose of 
        giving closing arguments. Committee counsel may reserve 
        time for rebuttal argument, as permitted by the Chair.
    (l) A subpoena to a witness to appear at a hearing shall be 
served sufficiently in advance of that witness' scheduled 
appearance to allow the witness a reasonable period of time, as 
determined by the Chair of the adjudicatory subcommittee, to 
prepare for the hearing and to employ counsel.
    (m) Each witness appearing before the subcommittee shall be 
furnished a printed or electronic copy of the Committee rules, 
the relevant provisions of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives applicable to the rights of witnesses, and a 
copy of the Statement of Alleged Violation.
    (n) Testimony of all witnesses shall be taken under oath or 
affirmation. The form of the oath or affirmation shall be: ``Do 
you solemnly swear (or affirm) that the testimony you will give 
before this subcommittee in the matter now under consideration 
will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth 
(so help you God)?'' The oath or affirmation shall be 
administered by the Chair or Committee member designated by the 
Chair to administer oaths.
    (o) At an adjudicatory hearing, the burden of proof rests 
on Committee counsel to establish the facts alleged in the 
Statement of Alleged Violation by clear and convincing 
evidence. However, Committee counsel need not present any 
evidence regarding any count that is admitted by the respondent 
or any fact stipulated. Committee counsel or respondent's 
counsel may move the adjudicatory subcommittee to make a 
finding that there is no material fact at issue. If the 
adjudicatory subcommittee finds that there is no material fact 
at issue, the burden of proof will be deemed satisfied.
    (p) As soon as practicable after all testimony and evidence 
have been presented, the subcommittee shall consider each count 
contained in the Statement of Alleged Violation and shall 
determine by a majority vote of its members whether each count 
has been proved. If a majority of the subcommittee does not 
vote that a count has been proved, a motion to reconsider that 
vote may be made only by a member who voted that the count was 
not proved. A count that is not proved shall be considered as 
dismissed by the subcommittee.
    (q) The findings of the adjudicatory subcommittee shall be 
reported to the Committee.

  Rule 24.--Sanction Hearing and Consideration of Sanctions or Other 
                            Recommendations

    (a) If no count in a Statement of Alleged Violation is 
proved, the Committee shall prepare a report to the House of 
Representatives, based upon the report of the adjudicatory 
subcommittee.
    (b) If an adjudicatory subcommittee completes an 
adjudicatory hearing pursuant to rule 23 and reports that any 
count of the Statement of Alleged Violation has been proved, a 
hearing before the Committee shall be held to receive oral and/
or written submissions by counsel for the Committee and counsel 
for the respondent as to the sanction the Committee should 
recommend to the House of Representatives with respect to such 
violations. Testimony by witnesses shall not be heard except by 
written request and vote of a majority of the Committee.
    (c) Upon completion of any proceeding held pursuant to 
clause (b), the Committee shall consider and vote on a motion 
to recommend to the House of Representatives that the House 
take disciplinary action. If a majority of the Committee does 
not vote in favor of the recommendation that the House of 
Representatives take action, a motion to reconsider that vote 
may be made only by a member who voted against the 
recommendation. The Committee may also, by majority vote, adopt 
a motion to issue a Letter of Reproval or take other 
appropriate Committee action.
    (d) If the Committee determines a Letter of Reproval 
constitutes sufficient action, the Committee shall include any 
such letter as a part of its report to the House of 
Representatives.
    (e) With respect to any proved counts against a Member of 
the House of Representatives, the Committee may recommend to 
the House one or more of the following sanctions:
          (1) Expulsion from the House of Representatives.
          (2) Censure.
          (3) Reprimand.
          (4) Fine.
          (5) Denial or limitation of any right, power, 
        privilege, or immunity of the Member if under the 
        Constitution the House of Representatives may impose 
        such denial or limitation.
          (6) Any other sanction determined by the Committee to 
        be appropriate.
    (f) With respect to any proved counts against an officer or 
employee of the House of Representatives, the Committee may 
recommend to the House one or more of the following sanctions:
          (1) Dismissal from employment.
          (2) Reprimand.
          (3) Fine.
          (4) Any other sanction determined by the Committee to 
        be appropriate.
    (g) With respect to the sanctions that the Committee may 
recommend, reprimand is appropriate for serious violations, 
censure is appropriate for more serious violations, and 
expulsion of a Member or dismissal of an officer or employee is 
appropriate for the most serious violations. A recommendation 
of a fine is appropriate in a case in which it is likely that 
the violation was committed to secure a personal financial 
benefit; and a recommendation of a denial or limitation of a 
right, power, privilege, or immunity of a Member is appropriate 
when the violation bears upon the exercise or holding of such 
right, power, privilege, or immunity. This clause sets forth 
general guidelines and does not limit the authority of the 
Committee to recommend other sanctions.
    (h) The Committee report shall contain an appropriate 
statement of the evidence supporting the Committee's findings 
and a statement of the Committee's reasons for the recommended 
sanction.

     Rule 25.--Disclosure of Exculpatory Information to Respondent

    If the Committee, or any investigative or adjudicatory 
subcommittee at any time receives any exculpatory information 
respecting a Complaint or Statement of Alleged Violation 
concerning a respondent, it shall make such information known 
and available to the respondent as soon as practicable, but in 
no event later than the transmittal of evidence supporting a 
proposed Statement of Alleged Violation pursuant to rule 26(c). 
If an investigative subcommittee does not adopt a Statement of 
Alleged Violation, it shall identify any exculpatory 
information in its possession at the conclusion of its inquiry 
and shall include such information, if any, in the 
subcommittee's final report to the Committee regarding its 
inquiry. For purposes of this rule, exculpatory evidence shall 
be any evidence or information that is substantially favorable 
to the respondent with respect to the allegations or charges 
before an investigative or adjudicatory subcommittee.

             Rule 26.--Rights of Respondents and Witnesses

    (a) A respondent shall be informed of the right to be 
represented by counsel, to be provided at the respondent's own 
expense.
    (b) A respondent may seek to waive any procedural rights or 
steps in the disciplinary process. A request for waiver must be 
in writing, signed by the respondent, and must detail what 
procedural steps the respondent seeks to waive. Any such 
request shall be subject to the acceptance of the Committee or 
subcommittee, as appropriate.
    (c) Not less than 10 calendar days before a scheduled vote 
by an investigative subcommittee on a Statement of Alleged 
Violation, the subcommittee shall provide the respondent with a 
copy of the Statement of Alleged Violation it intends to adopt 
together with all evidence it intends to use to prove those 
charges which it intends to adopt, including documentary 
evidence, witness testimony, memoranda of witness interviews, 
and physical evidence, unless the subcommittee by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of its members decides to 
withhold certain evidence in order to protect a witness, but if 
such evidence is withheld, the subcommittee shall inform the 
respondent that evidence is being withheld and of the count to 
which such evidence relates.
    (d) Neither the respondent nor respondent's counsel shall, 
directly or indirectly, contact the subcommittee or any member 
thereof during the period of time set forth in paragraph (c) 
except for the sole purpose of settlement discussions where 
counsels for the respondent and the subcommittee are present.
    (e) If, at any time after the issuance of a Statement of 
Alleged Violation, the Committee or any subcommittee thereof 
determines that it intends to use evidence not provided to a 
respondent under paragraph (c) to prove the charges contained 
in the Statement of Alleged Violation (or any amendment 
thereof), such evidence shall be made immediately available to 
the respondent, and it may be used in any further proceeding 
under the Committee's rules.
    (f) Evidence provided pursuant to paragraph (c) or (e) 
shall be made available to the respondent and respondent's 
counsel only after each agrees, in writing, that no document, 
information, or other materials obtained pursuant to that 
paragraph shall be made public until--
          (1) such time as a Statement of Alleged Violation is 
        made public by the Committee if the respondent has 
        waived the adjudicatory hearing; or
          (2) the commencement of an adjudicatory hearing if 
        the respondent has not waived an adjudicatory hearing; 
        but the failure of respondent and respondent's counsel 
        to so agree in writing, and therefore not receive the 
        evidence, shall not preclude the issuance of a 
        Statement of Alleged Violation at the end of the period 
        referenced to in (c).
    (g) If the Committee issues a report with respect to a 
claim referred to the Committee by the Office of Congressional 
Workplace Rights pursuant to Section 416(e) of the 
Congressional Accountability Act of 1995, the Committee shall 
ensure that the report does not directly disclose the identity 
or position of the individual who filed the claim.
    (h) A respondent shall receive written notice whenever--
          (1) the Chair and Ranking Minority Member determine 
        that information the Committee has received constitutes 
        a complaint;
          (2) a complaint or allegation is transmitted to an 
        investigative subcommittee;
          (3) that subcommittee votes to authorize its first 
        subpoena or to take testimony under oath, whichever 
        occurs first;
          (4) the Committee votes to expand the scope of the 
        inquiry of an investigative subcommittee; and
          (5) the Committee or an investigative subcommittee 
        determines to take into evidence the trial transcript 
        or exhibits admitted into evidence at a criminal trial 
        pursuant to rule 18(e)(3).
    (i) Whenever an investigative subcommittee adopts a 
Statement of Alleged Violation and a respondent enters into an 
agreement with that subcommittee to settle an investigation, in 
whole or in part, on which the Statement is based, that 
agreement, unless the respondent requests otherwise, shall be 
in writing and signed by the respondent and the respondent's 
counsel, the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
subcommittee, and outside counsel, if any.
    (j) Statements or information derived solely from a 
respondent or respondent's counsel during any settlement 
discussions between the Committee or a subcommittee thereof and 
the respondent shall not be included in any report of the 
subcommittee or the Committee or otherwise publicly disclosed 
without the consent of the respondent.
    (k) Whenever a motion to establish an investigative 
subcommittee does not prevail, the Committee shall promptly 
send a letter to the respondent(s) informing the respondent(s) 
of such vote.
    (l) Witnesses shall be afforded a reasonable period of 
time, as determined by the Committee or subcommittee, to 
prepare for an appearance before an investigative subcommittee 
or for an adjudicatory hearing and to obtain counsel.
    (m) Prior to their testimony, witnesses shall be furnished 
a printed or electronic copy of the Committee's Rules and the 
provisions of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
applicable to the rights of witnesses.
    (n) Witnesses may be accompanied by their own counsel for 
the purpose of advising them concerning their constitutional 
rights. The Chair may punish breaches of order and decorum, and 
of professional responsibility on the part of counsel, by 
censure and exclusion from the hearings; and the Committee may 
cite the offender to the House of Representatives for contempt.
    (o) Each witness subpoenaed to provide testimony or other 
evidence shall be provided the same per diem rate as 
established, authorized, and regulated by the Committee on 
House Administration for Members, officers, and employees of 
the House, and, as the Chair considers appropriate, actual 
expenses of travel to or from the place of examination. No 
compensation shall be authorized for attorney's fees or for a 
witness' lost earnings. Such per diem may not be paid if a 
witness had been summoned at the place of examination.
    (p) With the approval of the Committee, a witness, upon 
request, may be provided with a transcript of the witness' own 
deposition or other testimony taken in executive session, or, 
with the approval of the Chair and Ranking Minority Member, may 
be permitted to examine such transcript in the office of the 
Committee. Any such request shall be in writing and shall 
include a statement that the witness, and counsel, agree to 
maintain the confidentiality of all executive session 
proceedings covered by such transcript.

                      Rule 27.--Frivolous Filings

    If a complaint or information offered as a complaint is 
deemed frivolous by an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
members of the Committee, the Committee may take such action as 
it, by an affirmative vote of a majority deems appropriate in 
the circumstances.

          Rule 28.--Referrals to Federal or State Authorities

    Referrals made under clause 3(a)(3) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives may be made by an affirmative 
vote of two-thirds of the members of the Committee.
                    Committee on Financial Services

    PATRICK T. McHENRY, North 
        Carolina, Chairman

MAXINE WATERS, California,           FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma
  Ranking Member                     PETE SESSIONS, Texas
NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York         BILL POSEY, Florida
BRAD SHERMAN, California             BLAINE LUETKEMEYER, Missouri
GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York           BILL HUIZENGA, Michigan
DAVID SCOTT, Georgia                 ANN WAGNER, Missouri
STEPHEN F. LYNCH, Massachusetts      ANDY BARR, Kentucky
AL GREEN, Texas                      ROGER WILLIAMS, Texas
EMANUEL CLEAVER, Missouri            J. FRENCH HILL, Arkansas
JAMES A. HIMES, Connecticut          TOM EMMER, Minnesota
BILL FOSTER, Illinois                BARRY LOUDERMILK, Georgia
JOYCE BEATTY, Ohio                   ALEXANDER X. MOONEY, West Virginia
JUAN VARGAS, California              WARREN DAVIDSON, Ohio
JOSH GOTTHEIMER, New Jersey          JOHN W. ROSE, Tennessee
VICENTE GONZALEZ, Texas              BRYAN STEIL, Wisconsin
SEAN CASTEN, Illinois                WILLIAM R. TIMMONS IV, South 
AYANNA PRESSLEY, Massachusetts       Carolina
STEVEN HORSFORD, Nevada              RALPH NORMAN, South Carolina
RASHIDA TLAIB, Michigan              DANIEL MEUSER, Pennsylvania
RITCHIE TORRES, New York             YOUNG KIM, California
SYLVIA R. GARCIA, Texas              BYRON DONALDS, Florida
NIKEMA WILLIAMS, Georgia             ANDREW R. GARBARINO, New York
WILEY NICKEL, North Carolina         SCOTT FITZGERALD, Wisconsin
BRITTANY PETTERSEN, Colorado         MIKE FLOOD, Nebraska
                                     MICHAEL LAWLER, New York
                                     MONICA DE LA CRUZ, Texas
                                     ANDREW OGLES, Tennessee
                                     ERIN HOUCHIN, Indiana
                                     ZACHARY NUNN, Iowa

  RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 1, 2023)


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) The rules of the House are the rules of the Committee 
on Financial Services (hereinafter in these rules referred to 
as the ``Committee'') and its subcommittees so far as 
applicable, except that a motion to recess from day to day, and 
a motion to dispense with the first reading (in full) of a bill 
or resolution, if printed copies are available, are privileged 
motions in the Committee and shall be considered without 
debate. A proposed investigative or oversight report shall be 
considered as read if it has been available to the members of 
the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such day).
    (b) Each subcommittee is a part of the Committee and is 
subject to the authority and direction of the Committee and to 
its rules so far as applicable.
    (c) The provisions of clause 2 of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House are incorporated by reference as the rules of the 
Committee to the extent applicable.

                           Rule 2.--Meetings


Calling of Meetings

    (a)(1) The Committee shall regularly meet on the first 
Tuesday of each month when the House is in session.
    (2) A regular meeting of the Committee may be dispensed 
with if, in the judgment of the Chair of the Committee, there 
is no need for the meeting.
    (3) Additional regular meetings and hearings of the 
Committee may be called by the Chair, in accordance with clause 
2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of the House.
    (4) Special meetings shall be called and convened by the 
Chair as provided in clause 2(c)(2) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House.

Notice for Meetings

    (b)(1) The Chair shall notify each member of the Committee 
of the agenda of each regular meeting of the Committee at least 
three calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
holidays except when the House is in session on any such day) 
before the time of the meeting.
    (2) The Chair shall provide to each member of the 
Committee, at least three calendar days (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, and legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on any such day) before the time of each regular meeting for 
each measure or matter on the agenda a copy of--
          (A) the measure or materials relating to the matter 
        in question; and
          (B) an explanation of the measure or matter to be 
        considered, which, in the case of an explanation of a 
        bill, resolution, or similar measure, shall include a 
        summary of the major provisions of the legislation, an 
        explanation of the relationship of the measure to 
        present law, and a summary of the need for the 
        legislation.
    (3) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, the Chair shall cause 
the text of such legislation to be made publicly available in 
electronic form.
    (4) The provisions of this subsection may be waived by a 
two-thirds vote of the Committee or by the Chair with the 
concurrence of the ranking minority member.

                Rule 3.--Meeting and Hearing Procedures


In General

    (a)(1) Meetings and hearings of the Committee shall be 
called to order and presided over by the Chair or, in the 
Chair's absence, by a member designated by the Chair to carry 
out such duties.
    (2) Meetings and hearings of the committee shall be open to 
the public unless closed in accordance with clause 2(g) of rule 
XI of the Rules of the House.
    (3) Any meeting or hearing of the Committee that is open to 
the public shall be open to coverage by television broadcast, 
radio broadcast, and still photography in accordance with the 
provisions of clause 4 of rule XI of the Rules of the House 
(which are incorporated by reference as part of these rules). 
Operation and use of any Committee operated broadcast system 
shall be fair and nonpartisan and in accordance with clause 
4(b) of rule XI and all other applicable rules of the Committee 
and the House.
    (4) To the extent feasible, members and witnesses may use 
the Committee equipment for the purpose of presenting static 
exhibits electronically during a meeting or hearing, provided 
the information is transmitted to the appropriate Committee 
staff in an appropriate electronic format at least one business 
day before the meeting or hearing so as to ensure display 
capacity and quality. The content of all materials must relate 
to the pending business of the Committee and conform to the 
rules of the House. The confidentiality of the material will be 
maintained by the technical staff until its official 
presentation to the Committee members. For the purposes of 
maintaining the official records of the Committee, printed 
copies of exhibits presented, to the extent practicable, must 
accompany the presentations.
    (5) No person, other than a Member of Congress, Committee 
staff, or an employee of a Member when that Member has an 
amendment under consideration, may stand in or be seated at the 
rostrum area of the Committee rooms unless the Chair determines 
otherwise.

Quorum

    (b)(1) For the purpose of taking testimony and receiving 
evidence, two members of the Committee shall constitute a 
quorum.
    (2) A majority of the members of the Committee shall 
constitute a quorum for the purposes of reporting any measure 
or matter, of authorizing a subpoena (other than a subpoena 
authorized and issued by the Chair pursuant to subsection 
(e)(1)), of closing a meeting or hearing pursuant to clause 
2(g) of rule XI of the Rules of the House (except as provided 
in clause 2(g)(2)(A) and (B)) or of releasing executive session 
material pursuant to clause 2(k)(7) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House.
    (3) For the purpose of taking any action other than those 
specified in paragraph (2) onethird of the members of the 
Committee shall constitute a quorum.

Voting

    (c)(1) No vote may be conducted on any measure or matter 
pending before the Committee unless the requisite number of 
members of the Committee is actually present for such purpose.
    (2) A record vote of the Committee shall be provided on any 
question before the Committee upon the request of one-fifth of 
the members present.
    (3) No vote by any member of the Committee on any measure 
or matter may be cast by proxy.
    (4) In addition to any other requirement of these rules or 
the Rules of the House, including clause 2(e)(1)(B) of rule XI, 
the Chair shall make the record of the votes on any question on 
which a record vote is demanded publicly available in 
electronic form on the Committee's Web site not later than 24 
hours after such vote is taken. Such record shall include in 
electronic form the text of the amendment, motion, order, or 
other proposition, the name of each member voting for and each 
member voting against such amendment, motion, order, or 
proposition, and the names of those members of the Committee 
present but not voting. With respect to any record vote on any 
motion to report or record vote on any amendment, a record of 
such votes shall be included in the report of the Committee 
showing the total number of votes cast for and against and the 
names of those members of the committee present but not voting.
    (5) Postponed Record Votes.--(A) Subject to subparagraph 
(B), the Chair may postpone further proceedings when a record 
vote is ordered on the question of approving any measure or 
matter or adopting an amendment. The Chair may resume 
proceedings on a postponed request at any time, but no later 
than the next meeting day.
          (B) In exercising postponement authority under 
        subparagraph (A), the Chair shall take all reasonable 
        steps necessary to notify members on the resumption of 
        proceedings on any postponed record vote.
          (C) When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
        notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
        question, an underlying proposition shall remain 
        subject to further debate or amendment to the same 
        extent as when the question was postponed.
          (D) The Chair's authority to postpone recorded votes 
        will not be used to prejudice a member with regard to 
        the offering of another amendment. In the application 
        of this rule, the Chair will consult regularly with the 
        ranking minority member regarding the scheduling of the 
        resumption of postponed votes.
    (6) It shall not be in order to consider a bill or an 
amendment thereto if the stated provisions of such measure--
          (A) are known to have the net effect of increasing 
        mandatory spending for the period of either
                  (i) the current year, the budget year, and 
                the four fiscal years following that budget 
                year; or
                  (ii) the current year, the budget year, and 
                the nine fiscal years following that budget 
                year, or
          (B) authorize an increase in authorizations, 
        appropriations, or direct spending in any given year, 
        unless fully offset by at least an equal reduction in 
        current spending; or
          (C) authorize discretionary appropriations using 
        terms such as ``such sums as may be necessary'' or 
        similar language that fails to specify the actual 
        amount of funding being authorized by the bill or 
        amendment; or
          (D) authorize appropriations without including a 
        sunset provision.

Hearing Procedures

    (d)(1)(A) The Chair shall notice the date, place, and 
subject matter of any Committee hearing at least one week 
before the commencement of the hearing, unless the Chair, with 
the concurrence of the ranking minority member, or the 
Committee by majority vote with a quorum present for the 
transaction of business, determines there is good cause to 
begin the hearing sooner, in which case the Chair shall make 
the announcement at the earliest possible date.
    (B) Not less than three calendar days before the 
commencement of a hearing (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal holidays except when the House is in session on any such 
day) announced under this paragraph, the Chair shall provide to 
the members of the Committee a concise summary of the subject 
of the hearing, or, in the case of a hearing on a measure or 
matter, a copy of the measure or materials relating to the 
matter in question and a concise explanation of the measure or 
matter to be considered. At the same time the Chair provides 
the information required by the preceding sentence, the Chair 
shall also provide to the members of the Committee a list of 
the witnesses expected to appear before the Committee at that 
hearing. The witness list may not be modified within 24 hours 
of a hearing, unless the Chair, with the concurrence of the 
ranking minority member, determines there is good cause for 
such modification.
    (2) To the greatest extent practicable--
          (A) each witness who is to appear before the 
        Committee shall file with the Committee 48 hours in 
        advance of the appearance sufficient copies (including 
        a copy in electronic form), as determined by the Chair, 
        of a written statement of proposed testimony and shall 
        limit the oral presentation to the Committee to a brief 
        summary thereof; and
          (B) each witness appearing in a non-governmental 
        capacity shall include with the written statement of 
        proposed testimony a curriculum vitae, a disclosure of 
        the amount and source (by agency and program) of any 
        Federal grant (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or 
        subcontract thereof) received during the current fiscal 
        year or either of the two preceding fiscal years, and a 
        disclosure of whether the witness is a fiduciary 
        (including, but not limited to, a director, officer, 
        advisor, or resident agent) of any organization or 
        entity, that has an interest in the subject matter of 
        the hearing. Such disclosure statements, with 
        appropriate redactions to protect the privacy of the 
        witness, shall be made publicly available in electronic 
        form not later than one day after the witness appears.
    (3) The requirements of paragraph (2)(A) may be modified or 
waived by the Chair when the Chair determines it to be in the 
best interest of the Committee.
    (4)(A) Subject to subparagraph (B), the five-minute rule 
shall be observed in the questioning of witnesses before the 
Committee or any of its subcommittees until each present member 
thereof has had an opportunity to question the witnesses. The 
Chair shall, so far as practicable, recognize alternately based 
on seniority of the majority and minority members present at 
the time the hearing was called to order and others based on 
their arrival at the hearing. The Chair shall, so far as 
practicable, defer to the ranking member with respect to the 
order of recognition for minority Members. No member shall be 
recognized for a second period of five minutes to question 
witnesses until each present member of the Committee or such 
subcommittee has been recognized once for that purpose.
    (B) The Chair may permit a specified number of members to 
question one or more witnesses for a specified period of time 
not to exceed 60 minutes in the aggregate, equally divided 
between and controlled by the Chair and the ranking minority 
member.
    (5) Whenever any hearing is conducted by the Committee on 
any measure or matter, the minority party members of the 
Committee shall be entitled, upon the request of a majority of 
them before the completion of the hearing, to call witnesses 
with respect to that measure or matter during at least one day 
of hearing thereon. The Chair, with the concurrence of the 
ranking minority member, will determine the date, time, and 
place of such hearing.
    (6) At any hearing of the Committee, opening statements by 
members of the Committee shall be limited to 10 minutes in the 
aggregate. The Chair shall control five minutes and recognize 
members in the Chair's sole discretion. The ranking minority 
member shall control five minutes; the Chair shall recognize 
members for such time according to the direction of the ranking 
minority member as communicated to the Chair.
    (7) Notwithstanding any member's oral delivery of an 
opening statement, written opening statements by any member of 
the Committee submitted to the Chair within 5 legislative days 
after the adjournment of a hearing shall be made a part of the 
official hearing record thereof.

Subpoenas and Oaths

    (e)(1) The power to authorize and issue subpoenas is 
delegated to the Chair. Unless there are exigent circumstances, 
the Chair will provide written notice to the ranking minority 
member at least 48 hours in advance of the authorization and 
issuance of a subpoena, and such notice shall include a full 
copy of the proposed subpoena, including any proposed document 
schedule.
    (2) Authorized subpoenas shall be signed by the Chair or by 
any member designated by the Committee and may be served by any 
person designated by the Chair or such member. The Chair or any 
person designated by the Chair to serve a subpoena will copy 
the ranking minority member or designated minority staff when a 
subpoena is issued and served electronically.
    (3) The Chair, or any member of the Committee designated by 
the Chair, may administer oaths to witnesses before the 
Committee.

Depositions

    (f) The Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority as 
passed by the Committee on Rules pursuant to H. Res. 5 titled--
Adopting the Rules of the House of Representatives for the One 
Hundred Eighteenth Congress, and for other purposes--are 
incorporated by reference and shall be considered the rules of 
the Committee.

         Rule 4.--Procedures for Reporting Measures or Matters

    (a) No measure or matter shall be reported from the 
Committee unless a majority of the Committee is actually 
present.
    (b) The Chair of the Committee shall report or cause to be 
reported promptly to the House any measure approved by the 
Committee and take necessary steps to bring a matter to a vote.
    (c) The report of the Committee on a measure which has been 
approved by the Committee shall be filed within seven calendar 
days (exclusive of days on which the House is not in session) 
after the day on which there has been filed with the clerk of 
the Committee a written request, signed by a majority of the 
members of the Committee, for the reporting of that measure 
pursuant to the provisions of clause 2(b)(2) of rule XIII of 
the Rules of the House.
    (d) All reports printed by the Committee pursuant to a 
legislative study or investigation and not approved by a 
majority vote of the Committee shall contain the following 
disclaimer on the cover of such report: ``This report has not 
been officially adopted by the Committee on Financial Services 
and may not necessarily reflect the views of its Members.''
    (e) The Chair is directed to offer a motion under clause 1 
of rule XXII of the Rules of the House whenever the Chair 
considers it appropriate.

Supplemental, Minority, Additional, or Views

    (f) If at the time of approval of a measure or matter by 
the Committee, a member of the Committee gives notice of 
intention to file supplemental, minority, or additional or 
dissenting views for inclusion in the report to the House 
thereon, Members shall not have less than two additional 
calendar days after the day notice has been given (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such a day) to file such written and signed views 
with the clerk of the Committee.

                         Rule 5.--Subcommittees


Establishment and Responsibilities of Subcommittees

    (a)(1) There shall be six subcommittees of the Committee as 
follows:
          (A) Subcommittee on Capital Markets.--The 
        jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Capital Markets 
        includes--
                  (i) securities, including retirement savings 
                plans and products, exchanges, and finance;
                  (ii) capital markets activities, including 
                securitization, business capital formation, 
                securities lending, and repurchase agreements;
                  (iii) investment companies, investment 
                advisers, and advisers to private funds;
                  (iv) activities involving accounting and 
                auditing;
                  (v) activities involving futures, forwards, 
                options, and other types of derivative 
                instruments;
                  (vi) the Securities and Exchange Commission;
                  (vii) the Financial Accounting Standards 
                Board;
                  (viii) the Municipal Securities Rulemaking 
                Board;
                  (ix) the Public Company Accounting Oversight 
                Board;
                  (x) the Securities Investor Protection 
                Corporation;
                  (xi) self-regulatory organizations registered 
                with the Securities and Exchange Commission; 
                and
                  (xii) initiatives to protect investor 
                interest and to promote investor confidence in 
                market integrity.
          (B) Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and 
        Monetary Policy.--The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee 
        on Financial Institutions and Monetary Policy 
        includes--
                  (i) all agencies, including the Office of the 
                Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal 
                Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Board of 
                Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the 
                Federal Reserve System, and the National Credit 
                Union Administration, which directly or 
                indirectly exercise supervisory or regulatory 
                authority in connection with, or provide 
                deposit insurance for, financial institutions, 
                and the establishment of interest rate ceilings 
                on deposits;
                  (ii) matters related to the Consumer 
                Financial Protection Bureau;
                  (iii) the chartering, branching, merger, 
                acquisition, consolidation, or conversion of 
                financial institutions;
                  (iv) consumer credit, including the provision 
                of consumer credit by insurance companies, and 
                further including those matters in the Consumer 
                Credit Protection Act dealing with truth in 
                lending, extortionate credit transactions, 
                restrictions on garnishments, fair credit 
                reporting and the use of credit information by 
                credit bureaus and credit providers, equal 
                credit opportunity, debt collection practices, 
                and electronic funds transfers;
                  (v) creditor remedies and debtor defenses, 
                Federal aspects of the Uniform Consumer Credit 
                Code, credit and debit cards, and the 
                preemption of State usury laws;
                  (vi) consumer access to financial services, 
                including the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and 
                the Community Reinvestment Act;
                  (vii) the terms and rules of disclosure of 
                financial services, including the 
                advertisement, promotion and pricing of 
                financial services, and availability of 
                government check cashing services;
                  (viii) deposit insurance;
                  (ix) consumer access to savings accounts and 
                checking accounts in financial institutions, 
                including lifeline banking and other consumer 
                accounts;
                  (x) financial stability and systemic risk, 
                including matters relating to the Financial 
                Stability Oversight Council and the Office of 
                Financial Research;
                  (xi) financial aid to all sectors and 
                elements within the economy;
                  (xii) economic growth and stabilization; and
                  (xiii) domestic monetary policy, and agencies 
                which directly or indirectly affect domestic 
                monetary policy, including the effect of such 
                policy and other financial actions on interest 
                rates, the allocation of credit, and the 
                structure and functioning of domestic financial 
                institutions.
          (C) Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance.--The 
        jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Housing and 
        Insurance includes--
                  (i) insurance generally, including but not 
                limited to, terrorism risk insurance, private 
                mortgage insurance, government sponsored 
                insurance programs, including those offering 
                protection against crime, fire, flood (and 
                related land use controls), earthquake and 
                other natural hazards, and the Federal 
                Insurance Office;
                  (ii) housing (except programs administered by 
                the Department of Veterans Affairs), including 
                mortgage and loan insurance pursuant to the 
                National Housing Act; rural housing; housing 
                and homeless assistance programs; all 
                activities of the Government National Mortgage 
                Association; secondary market organizations for 
                home mortgages, including the Federal National 
                Mortgage Association, the Federal Home Loan 
                Mortgage Corporation, and the Federal 
                Agricultural Mortgage Corporation; the Federal 
                Housing Finance Agency; the Federal Home Loan 
                Banks; housing construction and design and 
                safety standards; housing-related energy 
                conservation; housing research and 
                demonstration programs; financial and technical 
                assistance for nonprofit housing sponsors; 
                housing counseling and technical assistance; 
                regulation of the housing industry (including 
                landlord/tenant relations); and real estate 
                lending including regulation of settlement 
                procedures;
                  (iii) community development and community and 
                neighborhood planning, training and research; 
                national urban growth policies; urban/rural 
                research and technologies; and regulation of 
                interstate land sales; and
                  (iv) the qualifications for and designation 
                of Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities 
                (other than matters relating to tax benefits).
          (D) Subcommittee on National Security, Illicit 
        Finance, and International Financial Institutions.--The 
        jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on National Security, 
        Illicit Finance, and International Financial 
        Institutions includes--
                  (i) financial support networks of national 
                security threats, including matters related to 
                terrorist financing, money laundering, drug 
                sale proceeds, and alternative remittance 
                systems;
                  (ii) methods to detect and inhibit terrorism 
                and illicit finance, including matters related 
                to anti-money laundering and combating the 
                financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) standards, 
                asset forfeiture, and financial sanctions, as 
                well as programs related to such matters 
                administered by agencies or subunits thereof, 
                including activities of the Office of Terrorism 
                and Financial Intelligence and the Financial 
                Crimes Enforcement Network;
                  (iii) inter-governmental initiatives to 
                detect and inhibit terrorism and illicit 
                finance, including the Financial Action Task 
                Force;
                  (iv) multilateral development lending 
                institutions, including activities of the 
                National Advisory Council on International 
                Monetary and Financial Policies as related 
                thereto, and monetary and financial 
                developments as they relate to the activities 
                and objectives of such institutions;
                  (v) international trade, including but not 
                limited to the activities of the Export-Import 
                Bank;
                  (vi) the International Monetary Fund, its 
                permanent and temporary agencies, and all 
                matters related thereto;
                  (vii) international investment policies, both 
                as they relate to United States investments for 
                trade purposes by citizens of the United States 
                and investments made by all foreign entities in 
                the United States;
                  (ix) defense production matters as contained 
                in the Defense Production Act of 1950, as 
                amended; and
                  (xiii) coins, coinage, currency, and medals, 
                including commemorative coins and medals, proof 
                and mint sets and other special coins, the 
                Coinage Act of 1965, gold and silver, including 
                the coinage thereof (but not the par value of 
                gold), gold medals, counterfeiting, currency 
                denominations and design, the distribution of 
                coins, and the operations of the Bureau of the 
                Mint and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
          (E) Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial 
        Technology and Inclusion.--The jurisdiction of the 
        Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology 
        and Inclusion includes--
                  (i) digital assets, including but not limited 
                to cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and central 
                bank digital currencies (CBDCs);
                  (ii) development of new or alternative forms 
                of currency;
                  (ii) activities of digital asset issuers, 
                trading and lending platforms, custody 
                providers, and other intermediaries;
                  (iii) all matters and activities related to 
                innovative financial products, including 
                consumer transactions using mobile devices, and 
                services offered by non-bank firms, including 
                matters related to regulatory technology, 
                (RegTech);
                  (iv) agencies, including the Department of 
                Treasury, the Securities and Exchange 
                Commission, Office of the Comptroller of the 
                Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance 
                Corporation, the Board of Governors of the 
                Federal Reserve System and the Federal Reserve 
                System, and the National Credit Union 
                Administration, to the extent they directly or 
                indirectly exercise supervisory or regulatory 
                authority over (1) innovative products and 
                services offered by nonbanks; (2) nonbank 
                entities; (3) digital assets; and (4) digital 
                asset intermediaries;
                  (v) matters related to financial technology 
                (Fintech) firms promoting greater financial 
                inclusion and providing consumer protection 
                under the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; 
                and
                  (vi) matters related to technologies of 
                machine learning and artificial intelligence.
          (F) Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.--
        The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Oversight and 
        Investigations includes--
                  (i) overseeing all agencies, departments, 
                operations, programs, matters within the 
                jurisdiction of the Committee;
                  (ii) overseeing agency, department, and 
                operational adherence to statutory authority, 
                including promulgating regulations;
                  (iii) conducting investigations within 
                agencies, departments, and programs; and
                  (iv) conducting research and analysis 
                regarding matters within the jurisdiction of 
                the Committee, including the impact or probable 
                impact of tax policies affecting matters within 
                the jurisdiction of the Committee.
    (2) In addition, each such subcommittee shall have specific 
responsibility for such other measures or matters as the Chair 
refers to it.
    (3) Each subcommittee of the Committee shall review and 
study, on a continuing basis, the application, administration, 
execution, and effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, 
the subject matter of which is within its general 
responsibility. This may include but is not limited to 
reviewing waste, fraud and abuse; environmental, social, and 
governance policies; diversity and inclusion policies; the 
impact of regulatory overreach; and adherence to the 
Administrative Procedure Act and congressional intent with 
respect to such laws. This may also include a description of 
the conditions and circumstances that may indicate the 
necessity of or desirability of enacting new or additional 
legislation; as well as its formulation, consideration and 
enactment of changes in Federal laws, and of such additional 
legislation as may be necessary and appropriate.

Referral of Measures and Matters to Subcommittees

    (b)(1) The Chair may regularly refer to one or more 
subcommittees such measures and matters as the Chair deems 
appropriate given its jurisdiction and responsibilities. In 
making such a referral, the Chair may designate a subcommittee 
of primary jurisdiction and subcommittees of additional or 
sequential jurisdiction.
    (2) All measures or matters shall be subject to 
consideration by the full Committee.
    (3) In referring any measure or matter to a subcommittee, 
the Chair may specify a date by which the subcommittee shall 
report thereon to the Committee.
    (4) The Chair, in his or her sole discretion, may discharge 
a subcommittee from consideration of any measure or matter 
referred to a subcommittee of the Committee.

Composition of Subcommittees

    (c)(1) Members shall be elected to each subcommittee and to 
the positions of chair and ranking minority member thereof, in 
accordance with the rules of the respective party caucuses. The 
Chair of the Committee shall designate a member of the majority 
party on each subcommittee as its vice chair. The Chair may 
designate one member of the Committee of the majority party who 
previously has served as the chair of the Committee as the 
Chair Emeritus.
    (2) The Chair and ranking minority member of the Committee 
shall be ex officio members with voting privileges of each 
subcommittee of which they are not assigned as members and may 
be counted for purposes of establishing a quorum in such 
subcommittees. The Chair Emeritus shall be an ex officio member 
without voting privileges of each subcommittee to which he or 
she is not assigned and shall not count for purposes of 
establishing a quorum in such subcommittees.
    (3) The subcommittees shall be comprised as follows:
          (A) The Subcommittee on Capital Markets, shall be 
        comprised of 23 members, 13 elected by the majority 
        caucus and 10 elected by the minority caucus.
          (B) The Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and 
        Monetary Policy shall be comprised of 23 members, 13 
        elected by the majority caucus and 10 elected by the 
        minority caucus.
          (C) The Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance shall 
        be comprised of 19 members, 10 elected by the majority 
        caucus and 9 elected by the minority caucus.
          (D) The Subcommittee on National Security, Illicit 
        Finance, and International Financial Institutions shall 
        be comprised of 16 members, 9 elected by the majority 
        caucus and 7 elected by the minority caucus.
          (E) The Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial 
        Technology and Inclusion shall be comprised of 18 
        members, 10 elected by the majority caucus and 8 
        elected by the minority caucus.
          (F) The Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations 
        shall be comprised of 12 members, 7 elected by the 
        majority caucus and 5 elected by the minority caucus.

Subcommittee Meetings and Hearings

    (d)(1) Each subcommittee of the Committee may be authorized 
at the sole direction of the Chair to meet, hold hearings, 
receive testimony, mark up legislation, and report to the full 
Committee on any measure or matter referred to it, consistent 
with subsection (a).
    (2) No subcommittee of the Committee may meet or hold a 
hearing at the same time as a meeting or hearing of the 
Committee.
    (3) The chair of each subcommittee shall set hearing and 
meeting dates only with the approval of the Chair with a view 
toward assuring the availability of meeting rooms and avoiding 
simultaneous scheduling of Committee and subcommittee meetings 
or hearings.

Effect of a Vacancy

    (e) Any vacancy in the membership of a subcommittee shall 
not affect the power of the remaining members to execute the 
functions of the subcommittee as long as the required quorum is 
present.

Records

    (f) Each subcommittee of the Committee shall provide the 
full Committee with copies of such records of votes taken in 
the subcommittee and such other records with respect to the 
subcommittee as the Chair deems necessary for the Committee to 
comply with all rules and regulations of the House.

                             Rule 6.--Staff


In General

    (a)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
professional and other staff of the Committee shall be 
appointed, and may be removed by the Chair, and shall work 
under the general supervision and direction of the Chair.
    (2) All professional and other staff provided to the 
minority party members of the Committee shall be appointed, and 
may be removed, by the ranking minority member of the 
Committee, and shall work under the general supervision and 
direction of such member.
    (3) It is intended that the skills and experience of all 
members of the Committee staff be available to all members of 
the Committee.

Subcommittee Staff

    (b) From funds made available for the appointment of staff, 
the Chair of the Committee shall, pursuant to clause 6(d) of 
rule X of the Rules of the House, ensure that sufficient staff 
is made available so that each subcommittee can carry out its 
responsibilities under the rules of the Committee and that the 
minority party is treated fairly in the appointment of such 
staff.

Compensation of Staff

    (c)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the Chair shall 
fix the compensation of all professional and other staff of the 
Committee.
    (2) The ranking minority member shall fix the compensation 
of all professional and other staff provided to the minority 
party members of the Committee.

                       Rule 7.--Budget and Travel


Budget

    (a)(1) The Chair, in consultation with other members of the 
Committee, shall prepare for each Congress a budget providing 
amounts for staff, necessary travel, investigation, and other 
expenses of the Committee and its subcommittees.
    (2) From the amount provided to the Committee in the 
primary expense resolution adopted by the House of 
Representatives, the Chair, after consultation with the ranking 
minority member, shall designate an amount to be under the 
direction of the ranking minority member for the compensation 
of the minority staff, travel expenses of minority members and 
staff, and minority office expenses. All expenses of minority 
members and staff shall be paid for out of the amount so set 
aside.

Travel

    (b)(1) The Chair may authorize travel for any member and 
any staff member of the Committee in connection with activities 
or subject matters under the general jurisdiction of the 
Committee. Before such authorization is granted, there shall be 
submitted to the Chair in writing the following:
          (A) The purpose of the travel.
          (B) The dates during which the travel is to occur.
          (C) The names of the States or countries to be 
        visited and the length of time to be spent in each.
          (D) The names of members and staff of the Committee 
        for whom the authorization is sought.
    (2) Members and staff of the Committee shall make a written 
report to the Chair on any travel they have conducted under 
this subsection, including a description of their itinerary, 
expenses, and activities, and of pertinent information gained 
as a result of such travel.
    (3) Members and staff of the Committee performing 
authorized travel on official business shall be governed by 
applicable laws, resolutions, and regulations of the House and 
of the Committee on House Administration.

                   Rule 8.--Committee Administration


Records

    (a)(1) There shall be a transcript made of each regular 
meeting and hearing of the Committee, and the transcript may be 
printed if the Chair decides it is appropriate or if a majority 
of the members of the Committee requests such printing. Any 
such transcripts shall be a substantially verbatim account of 
remarks actually made during the proceedings, subject only to 
technical, grammatical, and typographical corrections 
authorized by the person making the remarks. Nothing in this 
paragraph shall be construed to require that all such 
transcripts be subject to correction and publication.
    (2) The Committee shall keep a record of all actions of the 
Committee and of its subcommittees. The record shall contain 
all information required by clause 2(e)(1) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House and shall be available in electronic form 
and for public inspection at reasonable times in the offices of 
the Committee.
    (3) All Committee hearings, records, data, charts, and 
files shall be kept separate and distinct from the 
congressional office records of the Chair, shall be the 
property of the House, and all Members of the House shall have 
access thereto as provided in clause 2(e)(2) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House.
    (4) The records of the Committee at the National Archives 
and Records Administration shall be made available for public 
use in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The Chair shall notify the ranking minority 
member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of the rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on written request of any member of the 
Committee.

Committee Publications on the Internet

    (b) The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website 
for the purpose of carrying out the official responsibilities 
of the Committee, including communicating information about the 
Committee's activities. The ranking minority member may 
maintain an official website. To the maximum extent feasible, 
the Committee shall make its publications available in 
electronic form on the official Committee website maintained by 
the Chair.

Audio and Video Coverage of Committee Hearings and Meetings

    (c)(1) To the maximum extent feasible, the Committee shall 
provide audio and video coverage of each hearing or meeting for 
the transaction of business in a manner that allows the public 
to easily listen to and view the proceedings; and,
    (2) maintain the recordings of such coverage in a manner 
that is easily accessible to the public.
                      Committee on Foreign Affairs

MICHAEL T. McCAUL, Texas, Chairman

GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York, Ranking MemberTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey
BRAD SHERMAN, California             JOE WILSON, South Carolina
GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia         SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania
WILLIAM R. KEATING, Massachusetts    DARRELL ISSA, California
AMI BERA, California                 ANN WAGNER, Missouri
JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas                BRIAN J. MAST, Florida
DINA TITUS, Nevada                   KEN BUCK, Colorado
TED LIEU, California                 TIM BURCHETT, Tennessee
SUSAN WILD, Pennsylvania             MARK E. GREEN, Tennessee
DEAN PHILLIPS, Minnesota             ANDY BARR, Kentucky
COLIN Z. ALLRED, Texas               RONNY JACKSON, Texas
ANDY KIM, New Jersey                 YOUNG KIM, California
SARA JACOBS, California              MARIA ELVIRA SALAZAR, Florida
KATHY E. MANNING, North Carolina     BILL HUIZENGA, Michigan
SHEILA CHERFILUS-McCORMICK, Florida  AUMUA AMATA COLEMAN RADEWAGEN, 
GREG STANTON, Arizona                American Samoa
MADELEINE DEAN, Pennsylvania         J. FRENCH HILL, Arkansas
JARED MOSKOWITZ, Florida             WARREN DAVIDSON, Ohio
JONATHAN L. JACKSON, Illinois        JAMES R. BAIRD, Indiana
SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, California     MICHAEL WALTZ, Florida
JIM COSTA, California                THOMAS H. KEAN, Jr., New Jersey
JASON CROW, Colorado                 MICHAEL LAWLER, New York
BRADLEY SCOTT SCHNEIDER, Illinois    CORY MILLS, Florida
GABE AMO, Rhode Island               RICHARD McCORMICK, Georgia
                                     NATHANIEL MORAN, Texas
                                     JOHN JAMES, Michigan
                                     KEITH SELF, Texas

    RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                       (Adopted February 8, 2023)


                         1.--General Provisions

    (a) The Rules of the House of Representatives, and in 
particular, the committee rules enumerated in clause 2 of rule 
XI, are the rules of the Committee on Foreign Affairs 
(hereafter referred to as the ``Committee''), to the extent 
applicable.
    (b) A motion to recess and a motion to dispense with the 
first reading (in full) of a bill or resolution, if printed 
copies are available, are privileged non-debatable motions in 
Committee.
    (c) The Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs shall 
consult the Ranking Minority Member to the extent possible with 
respect to the business of the Committee. Each subcommittee of 
the Committee is a part of the Committee and is subject to the 
authority and direction of the Committee and to its rules, to 
the extent applicable.

                          2.--Date of Meeting

    The regular meeting date of the Committee shall be the 
first Tuesday of every month when the House of Representatives 
is in session pursuant to clause 2(b) of rule XI of the House 
of Representatives. Additional meetings may be called by the 
Chairman as the Chairman may deem necessary or at the request 
of a majority of the Members of the Committee in accordance 
with clause 2(c) of rule XI of the House of Representatives. 
The determination of the business to be considered at each 
meeting shall be made by the Chairman subject to clause 2(c) of 
rule XI of the House of Representatives. A regularly scheduled 
meeting need not be held if, in the judgment of the Chairman, 
there is no business to be considered.

                               3.--Quorum

    For purposes of taking testimony and receiving evidence, 
two Members shall constitute a quorum, and the Chairman of the 
full Committee or a subcommittee shall make every effort to 
ensure that the relevant Ranking Minority Member or another 
Minority Member is present at the time a hearing is convened.
    One-third of the Members of the Committee or subcommittee 
shall constitute a quorum for taking any action, except: (1) 
reporting a measure or recommendation; (2) closing Committee 
meetings and hearings to the public; (3) authorizing the 
issuance of subpoenas; and (4) any other action for which an 
actual majority quorum is required by any rule of the House of 
Representatives or by law.
    No measure or recommendation shall be reported to the House 
of Representatives unless a majority of the Committee is 
actually present. No measure or recommendation shall be 
reported to the full Committee by a subcommittee unless half of 
the subcommittee is actually present. A record vote may be 
demanded by one-fifth of the Members present or, in the 
apparent absence of a quorum, by any one Member.

              4.--Meetings and Hearings Open to the Public

    (a) Meetings
          (1) Each meeting for the transaction of business, 
        including the markup of legislation, of the Committee 
        or a subcommittee shall be open to the public except 
        when the Committee or subcommittee, in open session and 
        with a majority present, determines by record vote that 
        all or part of the remainder of the meeting on that day 
        shall be closed to the public, because disclosure of 
        matters to be considered would endanger national 
        security, would compromise sensitive law enforcement 
        information, or would tend to defame, degrade or 
        incriminate any person or otherwise violate any law or 
        rule of the House of Representatives. No person, other 
        than Members of the Committee and such congressional 
        staff and departmental representatives as the Committee 
        or subcommittee may authorize, shall be present at any 
        business or markup session which has been closed to the 
        public. This subsection does not apply to open 
        Committee hearings which are provided for by subsection 
        (b) of this rule.
          (2) The Chairman of the full Committee or a 
        subcommittee may postpone further proceedings when a 
        record vote is ordered on the question of approving any 
        measure or matter, or adopting an amendment. The 
        relevant Chairman may resume proceedings on a postponed 
        request at any time. When exercising postponement 
        authority, the relevant Chairman shall take all 
        reasonable steps necessary to notify Members on the 
        resumption of proceedings on any postponed record vote. 
        When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
        notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
        question, an underlying proposition shall remain 
        subject to further debate or amendment to the same 
        extent as when the question was postponed.
    (b) Hearings
          (1) Each hearing conducted by the Committee or a 
        subcommittee shall be open to the public except when 
        the Committee or subcommittee, in open session and with 
        a majority present, determines by record vote that all 
        or part of the remainder of that hearing on that day 
        should be closed to the public because disclosure of 
        testimony, evidence or other matters to be considered 
        would endanger the national security, would compromise 
        sensitive law enforcement information, or otherwise 
        would violate any law or rule of the House of 
        Representatives. Notwithstanding the preceding 
        sentence, a majority of those present, there being in 
        attendance the requisite number required under the 
        rules of the Committee to be present for the purpose of 
        taking testimony--
                  (A) may vote to close the hearing for the 
                sole purpose of discussing whether testimony or 
                evidence to be received would endanger the 
                national security, would compromise sensitive 
                law enforcement information, or violate 
                paragraph (2) of this subsection; or
                  (B) may vote to close the hearing, as 
                provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection.
          (2) Whenever it is asserted by a Member of the 
        Committee that the evidence or testimony at a hearing 
        may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person, 
        or it is asserted by a witness that the evidence or 
        testimony that the witness would give at a hearing may 
        tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate the witness--
                  (A) such testimony or evidence shall be 
                presented in executive session, notwithstanding 
                the provisions of paragraph (1) of this 
                subsection, if by a majority of those present, 
                there being in attendance the requisite number 
                required under the rules of the Committee to be 
                present for the purpose of taking testimony, 
                the Committee or subcommittee determines that 
                such evidence or testimony may tend to defame, 
                degrade, or incriminate any person; and
                  (B) the Committee or subcommittee shall 
                proceed to receive such testimony in open 
                session only if the Committee, a majority being 
                present, determines that such evidence or 
                testimony will not tend to defame, degrade, or 
                incriminate any person.
          (3) No Member of the House of Representatives may be 
        excluded from nonparticipatory attendance at any 
        hearing of the Committee or a subcommittee unless the 
        House of Representatives has by majority vote 
        authorized the Committee or subcommittee, for purposes 
        of a particular series of hearings, on a particular 
        article of legislation or on a particular subject of 
        investigation, to close its hearings to Members by the 
        same procedures designated in this subsection for 
        closing hearings to the public.
          (4) A Member of the House of Representatives who is 
        not a Member of the Committee may not be recognized to 
        participate in a Committee or Subcommittee hearing 
        except by the unanimous consent of Committee Members 
        present at such hearing. Participatory recognition of a 
        non-Committee Member shall occur only after all 
        Committee Members seeking recognition, both majority 
        and minority, have had their opportunity to participate 
        and question any witnesses.
          (5) The Committee or a subcommittee may by the 
        procedure designated in this subsection vote to close 
        one (1) subsequent day of hearing.
          (6) No congressional staff shall be present at any 
        meeting or hearing of the Committee or a subcommittee 
        that has been closed to the public, and at which 
        classified information will be involved, unless such 
        person is authorized access to such classified 
        information in accordance with rule XX of the House of 
        Representatives.

                   5.--Convening Hearings and Markups

    (a) Hearings
          (1) Notice. Public announcement shall be made of the 
        date, place, and subject matter of any hearing to be 
        conducted by the Committee or a subcommittee at the 
        earliest possible date, and in any event at least one 
        (1) week before the commencement of that hearing. If 
        the Chairman of the full Committee or a subcommittee, 
        with the concurrence of the relevant Ranking Minority 
        Member, determines that there is good cause to begin a 
        hearing sooner, or if the Committee or subcommittee so 
        determines by majority vote in the presence of the 
        number of members required under the rules of the 
        Committee for the taking of action, the Chairman of the 
        full Committee, if concurring, shall make the 
        announcement at the earliest possible date. No change 
        shall be made to a publicly announced hearing title 
        until after consultation with the relevant Ranking 
        Minority Member and notice to previously announced 
        witnesses.
          (2) Member Day Hearing. During the first session of 
        the Congress, the full Committee shall hold a hearing 
        at which it receives testimony from Members, Delegates, 
        and the Resident Commissioner on proposed legislation 
        within its jurisdiction.
    (b) Markups and Other Meetings to Transact Business
          (1) Convening. The Chairman of the full Committee or 
        a subcommittee may call or convene, as the relevant 
        Chairman considers necessary, meetings of the Committee 
        or subcommittee for the consideration of a bill or 
        resolution pending before the Committee or 
        subcommittee, as the case may be, or for the conduct of 
        other Committee or subcommittee business.
          (2) Notice. Public announcement shall be made by the 
        Chairman of the full Committee of the date, place, and 
        subject matter of any markup or other meeting to 
        conduct business at the earliest possible date, and in 
        any event at least one (1) week before the commencement 
        of such markup or meeting, unless the relevant Chairman 
        determines, in consultation with the relevant Ranking 
        Minority Member, that there is good cause to begin such 
        a markup or meeting on an earlier date. If such 
        determination is made, the Chairman of the full 
        Committee, if concurring in that determination, shall 
        make the announcement at the earliest possible date.
          (3) Agenda and Texts. The relevant Chairman shall 
        provide to all Committee or subcommittee Members an 
        agenda for each Committee and subcommittee markup or 
        other meeting to transact business, setting out all 
        items of business to be considered, including whenever 
        possible a copy of any measure scheduled for markup, at 
        least 48 hours (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
        holidays) before the meeting. Bills on subjects not 
        listed on such agenda shall be subject to a point of 
        order unless their consideration is agreed to by a two-
        thirds vote of the Committee or subcommittee, or by the 
        Chairman of the full Committee with the concurrence of 
        the Ranking Minority Member. The text of any measure to 
        be marked up shall be made publicly available in 
        electronic form at least 24 hours prior to the 
        commencement of the markup meeting, or at the time of 
        an announcement under subparagraph (b)(2) made within 
        24 hours before such meeting.
    (c) Publication. Public announcement of all hearings and 
markups shall be published in the Daily Digest portion of the 
Congressional Record and made publicly available in electronic 
form. Members shall be notified by the Staff Director of all 
meetings (including markups and hearings) and briefings of 
subcommittees and of the full Committee.
    (d) Member Seating. During Committee and subcommittee 
hearings and markups, chairs on the dais are for Members. No 
staff member other than a Committee or subcommittee staff 
director, counsel, or professional staff member may occupy a 
chair on the dais, unless authorized by the Chairman of the 
full Committee, after consultation with the Ranking Member of 
the Full Committee. Only one staff member each from the 
majority and the minority may occupy chairs on the dais at any 
time during a hearing or markup.

                             6.--Witnesses

    (a) Interrogation of Witnesses
          (1) In so far as practicable, witnesses shall be 
        permitted to present their oral statements without 
        interruption subject to reasonable time constraints 
        imposed by the Chairman of the full Committee or a 
        subcommittee, with questioning by the Committee Members 
        taking place afterward. Members should refrain from 
        questions until such statements are completed.
          (2) In recognizing Members, the relevant Chairman 
        shall, to the extent practicable, give preference to 
        the Members on the basis of their arrival at the 
        hearing, taking into consideration the majority and 
        minority ratio of the Members actually present. A 
        Member seeking recognition to speak or ask a question 
        shall address the relevant Chairman and not the 
        witness.
          (3) Subject to paragraph (4), each Member may 
        interrogate the witness for 5 minutes, the reply of the 
        witness being included in the 5-minute period. After 
        all Members have had an opportunity to ask questions, 
        any additional round of questioning shall begin again 
        under the 5-minute rule.
          (4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), the relevant 
        Chairman, with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
        Member, may permit one (1) or more majority Members of 
        the Committee designated by the relevant Chairman to 
        question a witness for a specified period of not longer 
        than 30 minutes. On such occasions, an equal number of 
        minority Members of the Committee designated by the 
        Ranking Minority Member shall be permitted to question 
        the same witness for the same period of time. Committee 
        staff may be permitted to question a witness for equal 
        specified periods either with the concurrence of the 
        Chairman and Ranking Minority Member of the full 
        Committee or by motion. However, in no case may 
        questioning by Committee staff proceed before each 
        Member of the Committee who wishes to speak under the 
        5-minute rule has had one opportunity to do so.
    (b) Testimony of Witnesses
          (1) Advance Filing Requirement. Each witness who is 
        to appear before the Committee or a subcommittee is 
        required to file testimony with the Committee or 
        subcommittee at least two (2) business days in advance 
        of that appearance. For purposes of this subsection, 
        testimony includes the written statement of a witness, 
        as well as any video, photographs, audio-visual matter, 
        posters, or other supporting materials that the witness 
        intends to present or display before the Committee. 
        Such testimony should be provided in electronic form to 
        the extent practicable. The Committee or subcommittee 
        shall notify Members at least two business days in 
        advance of a hearing of the availability of testimony 
        submitted by witnesses. In addition, each witness shall 
        provide sufficient copies, as determined by the 
        Chairman of the full Committee or a subcommittee, of 
        his or her proposed written statement to be provided to 
        Members and staff of the Committee or subcommittee, the 
        news media, and the general public. The text of the 
        written statement provided pursuant to this paragraph 
        shall be considered final, and may not be revised by 
        the witness after the Committee meeting at which the 
        witness appears.
          (2) Witness Preclusion and Waiver. The requirements 
        of paragraph (1) or any part thereof may be waived by 
        the Chairman of the full Committee or a subcommittee, 
        or the presiding Member, or the Ranking Member of the 
        Committee or subcommittee as it relates to witnesses 
        who are called by the minority to testify, provided 
        that the witness or the relevant Chairman or Ranking 
        Minority Member has submitted, prior to the witness's 
        appearance, a written explanation to the reasons 
        testimony has not been made available to the Committee 
        or subcommittee. If a witness who is not an official of 
        the U.S. Government has not submitted testimony as 
        required by paragraph (1) and no such written 
        explanation has been submitted, the witness shall be 
        released from testifying unless a majority of the 
        Committee or subcommittee votes to accept his or her 
        testimony.
          (3) Remote Witness Participation. Remote 
        participation is available only for witnesses appearing 
        in a non-governmental capacity and in exceptional 
        circumstances, in accordance with the regulations 
        promulgated pursuant to subsection 3(j) of House 
        Resolution 5. The Chairman of the full Committee or a 
        subcommittee shall promptly, and not later than 48 
        hours beforehand if possible, notify the relevant 
        Ranking Member of any witness who is likely to present 
        testimony other than in person, such as by 
        videoconference. A witness may not testify via 
        telephone or other audio-only medium without the 
        concurrence of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the 
        Committee or subcommittee. The relevant Chairman shall 
        make reasonable efforts to verify the identity of any 
        witness participating remotely.
          (4) `Truth In Testimony' Disclosure. In the case of a 
        witness appearing in a nongovernmental capacity, a 
        written statement of proposed testimony shall include:
                  (A) a curriculum vitae;
                  (B) a disclosure of the amount and source of 
                any Federal grant (or subgrant thereof) or 
                contract (or subcontract thereof), or of any 
                contract, grant or payment originating with a 
                foreign government, received during the past 36 
                months by the witness or by an entity 
                represented by the witness and related to the 
                subject matter of, and the witness's 
                representational capacity at, the hearing;
                  (C) a disclosure of whether the witness is 
                negotiating or awaiting approval to receive a 
                contract with, a grant or payment from, a 
                foreign government;
                  (D) a disclosure of whether the witness is a 
                fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a 
                director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) 
                of any organization or entity that has an 
                interest in the subject matter of the hearing; 
                and
                  (E) a disclosure of whether the witness is an 
                active registrant under the Foreign Agents 
                Registration Act (FARA).
          Such statements, with appropriate redactions to 
        protect the privacy, safety, or security of the 
        witness, shall be made publicly available in electronic 
        form 24 hours before the witness appears to the extent 
        practicable, but not later than one day after the 
        witness appears.
          (5) Witness Presentation. A witness shall limit his 
        or her oral presentation to a brief summary of his or 
        her written statement.
          (6) Translation. A witness requiring an interpreter 
        or translator should include in the testimony provided 
        pursuant to paragraph (1) the identity of the 
        interpreter or translator that the witness intends to 
        use. Unless properly noticed as a separate witness, an 
        interpreter or translator appearing before the 
        Committee should not present views or statements other 
        than those expressed by the witness.
    (c) Oaths. The Chairman of the full Committee or a 
subcommittee, or any Member of the Committee designated by the 
relevant Chairman, may administer oaths to any witness 
appearing before the Committee.

          7.--Preparation and Maintenance of Committee Records

    An accurate stenographic record shall be made of all 
hearings and markup sessions. Members of the Committee and any 
witness may examine the transcript of his or her own remarks 
and may make any grammatical or technical changes that do not 
substantively alter the record. Any such Member or witness 
shall return the transcript to the Committee offices within 
seven (7) calendar days (not including Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal holidays) after receipt of the transcript, or as soon 
thereafter as is practicable.
    Any information supplied for the record at the request of a 
Member of the Committee shall be provided to the Member when 
received by the Committee.
    Transcripts of hearings and markup sessions (except for the 
record of a meeting or hearing which is closed to the public) 
shall be printed as soon as is practicable after receipt of the 
corrected versions, except that the Chairman may order the 
transcript of a hearing to be printed without the corrections 
of a Member or witness if the Chairman determines that such 
Member or witness has been afforded a reasonable time to 
correct such transcript and such transcript has not been 
returned within such time.
    The records of the Committee at the National Archives and 
Records Administration shall be made available for public use 
in accordance with rule VII of the House of Representatives. 
The Chairman shall notify the Ranking Minority Member of any 
decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 4(b) of the 
rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and the matter 
shall be presented to the Committee for a determination on the 
written request of any Member of the Committee.
    The Committee shall, to the maximum extent feasible, make 
its publications available in electronic form, including 
official prints of hearings and markups.

         8.--Extraneous Materials in Committee Hearings Prints

    No extraneous material shall be printed in either the body 
or appendices of any Committee or subcommittee hearing, except 
matter which has been accepted for inclusion in the record 
during the hearing or by agreement of the Chairman of the full 
Committee or a subcommittee and Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee or subcommittee within five (5) calendar days of the 
hearing. Copies of bills and other legislation under 
consideration and responses to written questions submitted by 
Members shall not be considered extraneous material.
    Extraneous material in either the body or appendices of any 
hearing to be printed which would be in excess of eight (8) 
printed pages (for any one submission) shall be accompanied by 
a written request to the relevant Chairman. Such written 
request shall contain an estimate in writing from the Public 
Printer of the probable cost of publishing such material.

                  9.--Information on Committee Action

    (a) Record Votes. The result of each record vote in any 
meeting of the Committee outside of executive session shall be 
made publicly available in electronic form within 48 hours of 
such record vote. Such result shall include a description of 
the amendment, motion, order, or other proposition, the name of 
each Member voting for and against, and the Members present but 
not voting.
    (b) Amendments. Not later than 24 hours after the adoption 
of any amendment, or 48 hours after the disposition or 
withdrawal of any other amendment to a measure or matter 
considered by the Committee, the text of each such amendment 
shall be made publicly available in electronic form.
    (c) Hearing and Markup Attendance. Member attendance at 
each Committee hearing and markup shall be recorded and 
included in the Committee print of the transcript of that 
hearing or markup.

                              10.--Proxies

    Proxy voting is not permitted in the Committee or in 
subcommittees.

                              11.--Reports

    (a) Reports on Bills and Resolutions. To the extent 
practicable, not later than 24 hours before a report is to be 
filed with the Clerk of the House on a measure that has been 
ordered reported by the Committee, the Chairman shall make 
available for inspection by all Members of the Committee a copy 
of the draft Committee report in order to afford Members 
adequate information and the opportunity to draft and file any 
supplemental, minority or additional views which they may deem 
appropriate.
    With respect to each record vote on a motion to report any 
measure or matter of a public character, and on any amendment 
offered to the measure or matter, the total number of votes 
cast for and against, and the names of those Members voting for 
and against, shall be included in any Committee report on the 
measure or matter.
    (b) Prior Approval of Certain Reports. No Committee, 
subcommittee, or staff report, study, or other document which 
purports to express publicly the views, findings, conclusions, 
or recommendations of the Committee or a subcommittee may be 
released to the public or filed with the Clerk of the House 
unless approved by a majority of the Committee or subcommittee, 
as appropriate. A proposed investigative or oversight report 
shall be considered as read if it has been available to Members 
of the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such a day). In any case in which clause 2(l) of rule XI and 
clause 3(a)(1) of rule XIII of the House of Representatives 
does not apply, each Member of the Committee or subcommittee 
shall be given an opportunity to have views or a disclaimer 
included as part of the material filed or released, as the case 
may be.
    (c) Foreign Travel Reports. At the same time that the 
report required by clause 8(b)(3) of rule X of the House of 
Representatives, regarding foreign travel reports, is submitted 
to the Chairman, Members and employees of the Committee shall 
provide a report to the Chairman listing all official meetings, 
interviews, inspection tours and other official functions in 
which the individual participated, by country and date. Under 
extraordinary circumstances, the Chairman may waive the listing 
in such report of an official meeting, interview, inspection 
tour, or other official function. The report shall be 
maintained in the Committee offices and shall be available for 
public inspection during normal business hours. Except in 
extraordinary circumstances, no Member or employee of the 
Committee will be authorized for additional Committee travel 
until the reports described in this subsection have been 
submitted to the Chairman for that person's prior Committee 
travel.

                  12.--Reporting Bills and Resolutions

    Except in extraordinary circumstances, bills and 
resolutions will not be considered by the Committee unless and 
until the appropriate subcommittee has recommended the bill or 
resolution for Committee action, and will not be taken to the 
House of Representatives for action unless and until the 
Committee or a relevant subcommittee has ordered reported such 
bill or resolution, a quorum being present.
    Except in extraordinary circumstances, a bill or resolution 
originating in the House of Representatives that contains 
exclusively findings and policy declarations or expressions of 
the sense of the House of Representatives or the sense of the 
Congress shall not be considered by the Committee or a 
subcommittee unless such bill or resolution has at least 25 
House co-sponsors, at least 10 of whom are Members of the 
Committee.
    For purposes of this rule, extraordinary circumstances will 
be determined by the Chairman, after consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member and such other Members of the Committee 
as the Chairman deems appropriate.
    The Committee or a subcommittee shall not consider a bill 
or resolution originating in the House of Representatives that 
expresses appreciation, commends, congratulates, celebrates, 
recognizes the accomplishments of, or celebrates the 
anniversary of, an entity, event, group, individual, 
institution, team, or government program, or that acknowledges 
or recognizes a period of time for such purposes, except in 
circumstances determined by the Chairman with the concurrence 
of the Ranking Minority Member.
    The Chairman is directed to offer a motion under clause 1 
of rule XXII of the Rules of the House whenever the Chairman 
considers it appropriate.

                          13.--Staff Services

    (a) The Committee staff shall be selected and organized so 
that it can provide a comprehensive range of professional 
services in the field of foreign affairs to the Committee, the 
subcommittees, and all its Members. The staff shall include 
persons with training and experience in foreign affairs, making 
available to the Committee individuals with knowledge of major 
countries, areas, and U.S. overseas programs and operations.
    (b) Subject to clause 9 of rule X of the House of 
Representatives, the staff of the Committee, except as provided 
in paragraph (c), shall be appointed by the Chairman with the 
approval of the majority of the Members in the majority party 
of the Committee. Their remuneration shall be fixed by the 
Chairman, and they shall work under the general supervision and 
direction of, and may be removed by, the Chairman. Staff 
assignments are to be authorized by the Chairman or by the 
Staff Director under the direction of the Chairman.
    (c) Subject to clause 9 of rule X of the House of 
Representatives, the staff of the Committee assigned to the 
minority shall be appointed by the Ranking Minority Member with 
the approval of the majority of the minority party Members of 
the Committee. Their remuneration shall be fixed by the Ranking 
Minority Member, and they shall work under the general 
supervision and direction of, and may be removed by, the 
Ranking Minority Member.
    (d) The Chairman shall ensure that sufficient staff is made 
available to each subcommittee to carry out its 
responsibilities under the rules of the Committee. The Chairman 
shall ensure that the minority party is fairly treated in the 
appointment of such staff.

             14.--Number and Jurisdiction of Subcommittees

    (a) Full Committee. The full Committee is responsible for 
oversight and legislation relating to: Management, operations, 
and programs of the Department of State, the U.S. Agency for 
International Development, the U.S. International Development 
Finance Corporation, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the 
U.S. Agency for Global Media, the U.S. Trade and Development 
Agency, the Peace Corps, and other U.S. government entities 
within the Committee's jurisdiction; foreign assistance 
(including development assistance, the Millennium Challenge 
Account, HIV/AIDS in foreign countries, security assistance, 
and Public Law 480 programs abroad); national security 
developments affecting foreign policy; strategic planning and 
agreements; war powers, treaties, executive agreements, and the 
deployment and use of United States Armed Forces; peacekeeping, 
peace enforcement, and enforcement of United Nations or other 
international sanctions; nonproliferation, arms control and 
disarmament issues; activities and policies of the State, 
Commerce, and Defense Departments and other agencies related to 
the Arms Export Control Act, the Export Administration Act, and 
the Foreign Assistance Act, including export and licensing 
policy for munitions items and technology and dual-use 
equipment and technology; international law; global energy, 
environmental, cyberspace, and technology policy issues; 
promotion of democracy; international law enforcement issues, 
including narcotics control programs and activities; embassy 
security; international broadcasting; public diplomacy, 
including international communication and information policy, 
and international education and exchange programs; 
international economic policy and U.S. export promotion; and 
all other matters not specifically assigned to a subcommittee.
    The full Committee has jurisdiction over legislation 
regarding the United Nations, its affiliated agencies, and 
other international organizations, including assessed and 
voluntary contributions to such organizations.
    The full Committee may conduct oversight and investigations 
with respect to any matter within the jurisdiction of the 
Committee as defined in the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, including special oversight functions relating 
to customs administration, intelligence activities relating to 
foreign policy, international financial and monetary 
organizations, and international fishing agreements.
    (b) Subcommittees. There shall be seven (7) standing 
subcommittees. The names and jurisdiction of those 
subcommittees shall be as follows:
    (1) Regional Subcommittees. There shall be five (5) 
subcommittees with regional jurisdiction: the Subcommittee on 
Africa; the Subcommittee on Europe; the Subcommittee on the 
Indo-Pacific; the Subcommittee on the Middle East, North 
Africa, and Central Asia; and the Subcommittee on the Western 
Hemisphere.
    The regional subcommittees shall have jurisdiction over the 
following within their respective regions:
          (1) Matters affecting the political relations between 
        the United States and other countries and regions, 
        including resolutions or other legislative measures 
        directed to such relations.
          (2) Legislation with respect to disaster assistance 
        outside the Foreign Assistance Act, boundary issues, 
        and international claims.
          (3) Legislation with respect to region- or country-
        specific loans or other financial relations outside the 
        Foreign Assistance Act.
          (4) Legislation and oversight regarding human rights 
        practices in particular countries.
          (5) Oversight of regional lending institutions.
          (6) Oversight of matters related to the regional 
        activities of the United Nations, of its affiliated 
        agencies, and of other multilateral institutions.
          (7) Identification and development of options for 
        meeting future problems and issues relating to U.S. 
        interests in the region.
          (8) Oversight of base rights and other facilities 
        access agreements and regional security pacts.
          (9) Concurrent oversight jurisdiction with respect to 
        matters assigned to the functional subcommittees 
        insofar as they may affect the region.
          (10) Oversight of foreign assistance activities 
        affecting the region, with the concurrence of the 
        Chairman of the full Committee.
          (11) Such other matters as the Chairman of the full 
        Committee may determine.
    (2) Functional Subcommittees. There shall be two 
subcommittees with functional jurisdiction:
          Subcommittee on Global Health, Global Human Rights, 
        and International Organizations. Oversight of: 
        international health issues, including transboundary 
        infectious diseases, maternal health and child 
        survival, and programs related to the global ability to 
        address health issues; population issues; the United 
        Nations and its affiliated agencies (excluding 
        peacekeeping and enforcement of United Nations or other 
        international sanctions); the American Red Cross; and 
        the Peace Corps. In addition, legislation and oversight 
        pertaining to: implementation of the Universal 
        Declaration of Human Rights; other matters relating to 
        internationally-recognized human rights, including 
        legislation aimed at the promotion of human rights and 
        democracy generally; the Hague Convention on the Civil 
        Aspects of International Child Abduction, and related 
        issues; and such other matters as the Chairman of the 
        full Committee may determine.
          Subcommittee on Oversight and Accountability: As 
        directed or agreed to by the Chairman of the full 
        Committee, oversight and investigation of matters 
        within the jurisdiction of the Committee.

                15.--Powers and Duties of Subcommittees

    (a) In General. Each subcommittee is authorized to meet, 
hold hearings, receive evidence, and report to the full 
Committee on all matters referred to it.
    (b) Scheduling. Subcommittee chairmen shall set meeting 
dates after consultation with the Chairman, other subcommittee 
chairmen, the relevant Ranking Minority Member and other 
appropriate Members, with a view toward minimizing scheduling 
conflicts. Subcommittee meetings shall not be scheduled to 
occur simultaneously with meetings of the full Committee. 
Hearings shall not be scheduled to occur prior to the first 
vote or subsequent to the last vote of a legislative week, or 
outside of Washington, D.C., without prior consultation with 
the relevant Ranking Minority Member. In order to ensure 
orderly administration and fair assignment of hearing and 
meeting rooms, the subject, time, and location of hearings and 
meetings shall be arranged in advance with the Chairman through 
the Staff Director of the Committee.
    (c) Vice Chairmen. The Chairman of the Full Committee shall 
designate a Member of the majority party on each subcommittee 
as its vice chairman.
    (d) Participation. The Chairman of the full Committee and 
the Ranking Minority Member may attend the meetings and 
participate in the activities of all subcommittees of which 
they are not Members, except that they may not vote or be 
counted for a quorum in such subcommittees.
    (e) Required Oversight Hearings. During each 180-day period 
following organization of the Committee, each subcommittee 
shall hold at least one hearing on oversight of U.S. Government 
activities.

                   16.--Referral of Bills by Chairman

    In accordance with rule 14 of the Committee and to the 
extent practicable, relevant legislation and other matters 
referred to the Committee shall be referred by the Chairman to 
a subcommittee of primary jurisdiction within two (2) weeks. In 
accordance with rule 14 of the Committee, legislation may also 
be referred to additional subcommittees for consideration. 
Unless otherwise directed by the Chairman, such subcommittees 
shall act on or be discharged from consideration of legislation 
that has been approved by the subcommittee of primary 
jurisdiction within two (2) weeks of such action. In referring 
any legislation to a subcommittee, the Chairman may specify a 
date by which the subcommittee shall report thereon to the full 
Committee.
    Subcommittees with regional jurisdiction shall have joint 
jurisdiction with the Subcommittee on Global Health, Global 
Human Rights, and International Organizations over legislation 
regarding human rights practices in particular countries within 
their regions.
    The Chairman may designate a subcommittee Chairman or other 
Member to take responsibility as manager of a bill or 
resolution during its consideration in the House of 
Representatives.

      17.--Party Ratios on Subcommittees and Conference Committees

    The majority party caucus of the Committee shall determine 
an appropriate ratio of majority to minority party Members for 
each subcommittee. Party representation on each subcommittee or 
conference committee shall be no less favorable to the majority 
party than the ratio for the full Committee. The Chairman and 
the Ranking Minority Member are authorized to negotiate matters 
affecting such ratios including the size of subcommittees and 
conference committees.

                 18.--Subcommittee Funding and Records

    Each subcommittee shall have adequate funds to discharge 
its responsibility for legislation and oversight.
    In order to facilitate Committee compliance with clause 
2(e)(1) of rule XI of the House of Representatives, each 
subcommittee shall keep a complete record of all subcommittee 
actions which shall include a record of the votes on any 
question on which a record vote is demanded. The result of each 
record vote shall be promptly made available to the full 
Committee for inspection by the public in accordance with rule 
9 of the Committee.
    All subcommittee hearings, records, data, charts, and files 
shall be kept distinct from the congressional office records of 
the Member serving as Chairman of the subcommittee. 
Subcommittee records shall be coordinated with the records of 
the full Committee, shall be the property of the House, and all 
Members of the House shall have access thereto.

                 19.--Meetings of Subcommittee Chairmen

    The Chairman shall call a meeting of the subcommittee 
chairmen on a regular basis not less frequently than once a 
month. Such a meeting need not be held if there is no business 
to conduct. It shall be the practice at such meetings to review 
the current agenda and activities of each of the subcommittees.

                 20.--Access to Classified Information

    (a) Authorized Persons. In accordance with the stipulations 
of the Rules of the House of Representatives, all Members of 
the House who have executed the oath required by clause 13 of 
rule XXIII of the House of Representatives shall be authorized 
to have access to classified information within the possession 
of the Committee.
    Members of the Committee staff shall be considered 
authorized to have access to classified information within the 
possession of the Committee when they have the proper security 
clearances, when they have executed the oath required by clause 
13 of rule XXIII of the House of Representatives, and when they 
have a demonstrable need to know. The decision on whether a 
given staff member has a need to know will be made on the 
following basis:
          (1) In the case of the full Committee majority staff, 
        by the Chairman, acting through the Staff Director;
          (2) In the case of the full Committee minority staff, 
        by the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, acting 
        through the Minority Staff Director;
          (3) In the case of subcommittee majority staff, by 
        the chairman of the subcommittee;
          (4) In the case of the subcommittee minority staff, 
        by the Ranking Minority Member of the subcommittee.
    No other individuals shall be considered authorized 
persons, unless so designated by the Chairman of the full 
Committee.
    (b) Designated Persons. Each Committee Member is permitted 
to designate one member of his or her staff as having the right 
of access to information classified Confidential. Such 
designated persons must have the proper security clearance, 
have executed the oath required by clause 13 of rule XXIII of 
the House of Representatives, and have a need to know as 
determined by his or her principal. Upon request of a Committee 
Member in specific instances, a designated person also shall be 
permitted access to information classified Top Secret which has 
been furnished to the Committee pursuant to section 36 of the 
Arms Export Control Act, as amended. Upon the written request 
of a Committee Member and with the approval of the Chairman in 
specific instances, a designated person may be permitted access 
to other classified materials. Designation of a staff person 
shall be by letter from the Committee Member to the Chairman.
    (c) Location. Classified information will be stored in 
secure safes in the Office of the Security Officer and in the 
Office of the Minority Staff Director. All materials classified 
Top Secret or higher must be stored in a Secure 
Compartmentalized Information Facility (SCIF).
    (d) Handling. Materials classified Confidential or Secret 
may be taken from Committee offices to other Committee offices 
and hearing rooms by Members of the Committee and authorized 
Committee staff in connection with hearings and briefings of 
the Committee or its subcommittees for which such information 
is deemed to be essential. Removal of such information from the 
Committee offices shall be only with the permission of the 
Chairman under procedures designed to ensure the safe handling 
and storage of such information at all times. Except as 
provided in this paragraph, Top Secret materials may not be 
taken from approved storage areas for any purpose, except that 
such materials may be taken to hearings and other meetings that 
are being conducted at the Top Secret level when necessary. 
Materials classified Top Secret may otherwise be used under 
conditions approved by the Chairman after consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member.
    (e) Notice. Appropriate notice of the receipt of classified 
documents received by the Committee from the Executive Branch 
will be sent promptly to Committee Members through the Survey 
of Activities or by other means.
    (f) Access. Except as provided for above, access to 
materials classified Top Secret or otherwise restricted held by 
the Committee will be in approved Committee spaces. The 
following procedures will be observed:
          (1) Authorized persons will be permitted access to 
        classified documents after inquiring of the Staff 
        Director or an assigned staff member. Access to the 
        SCIF will be afforded during regular Committee hours.
          (2) Authorized persons will be required to identify 
        themselves, to identify the documents or information 
        they wish to view, and to sign the Classified Materials 
        Log, which is kept with the classified information.
          (3) The assigned staff member will be responsible for 
        maintaining a log which identifies: (1) authorized 
        persons seeking access, (2) the classified information 
        requested, and (3) the time of arrival and departure of 
        such persons. The assigned staff member will also 
        assure that the classified materials are returned to 
        the proper location.
    (g) Divulgence. Classified information provided to the 
Committee by the Executive Branch shall be handled in 
accordance with the procedures that apply within the Executive 
Branch for the protection of such information. Any classified 
information to which access has been gained through the 
Committee may not be divulged to any unauthorized person. 
Classified material shall not be photocopied or otherwise 
reproduced. In no event shall classified information be 
discussed in a non-secure environment. Apparent violations of 
this rule should be reported as promptly as possible to the 
Chairman for appropriate action.
    (h) Other Regulations. The Chairman, after consultation 
with the Ranking Minority Member, may establish such additional 
regulations and procedures as in his judgment may be necessary 
to safeguard classified information under the control of the 
Committee. Members of the Committee will be given notice of any 
such regulations and procedures promptly. They may be modified 
or waived in any or all particulars by a majority vote of the 
full Committee.

          21.--Broadcasting of Committee Hearings and Meetings

    All Committee and subcommittee meetings or hearings which 
are open to the public may be covered, in whole or in part, by 
television broadcast, radio broadcast, and still photography, 
or by any such methods of coverage in accordance with the 
provisions of clause 3 of House rule XI.
    The Chairman of the full Committee or a subcommittee shall 
determine, in his or her discretion, the number of television 
and still cameras permitted in a hearing or meeting room, but 
shall not limit the number of television or still cameras to 
fewer than two (2) representatives from each medium.
    Such coverage shall be in accordance with the following 
requirements contained in section 116(b) of the Legislative 
Reorganization Act of 1970, and clause 4 of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives:
    (a) If the television, Internet or radio coverage of the 
hearing or meeting is to be presented to the public as live 
coverage, that coverage shall be conducted and presented 
without commercial sponsorship.
    (b) No witness served with a subpoena by the Committee 
shall be required against his will to be photographed at any 
hearing or to give evidence or testimony while the broadcasting 
of that hearing, by radio or television is being conducted. At 
the request of any such witness who does not wish to be 
subjected to radio, television, internet or still photography 
coverage, all lenses shall be covered and all microphones used 
for coverage turned off. This subparagraph is supplementary to 
clause 2(k)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives relating to the protection of the rights of 
witnesses.
    (c) The allocation among cameras permitted by the Chairman 
of the full Committee or a subcommittee in a hearing room shall 
be in accordance with fair and equitable procedures devised by 
the Executive Committee of the Radio and Television 
Correspondents' Galleries.
    (d) Television cameras shall be placed so as not to 
obstruct in any way the space between any witness giving 
evidence or testimony and Member of the Committee or its 
subcommittees or the visibility of that witness and that Member 
to each other.
    (e) Television cameras shall operate from fixed positions 
but shall not be placed in positions which obstruct 
unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing by the other media.
    (f) Equipment necessary for coverage by the television and 
radio media shall not be installed in, or removed from, the 
hearing or meeting room while the Committee or subcommittee is 
in session.
    (g) Floodlights, spotlights, strobe lights, and flashguns 
shall not be used in providing any method of coverage of the 
hearing or meeting, except that the television media may 
install additional lighting in the hearing room, without cost 
to the Government, in order to raise the ambient lighting level 
in the hearing room to the lowest level necessary to provide 
adequate television coverage of the hearing or meeting at the 
current state-of-the-art level of television coverage.
    (h) In the allocation of the number of still photographers 
permitted by the Chairman of the full Committee or a 
subcommittee in a hearing or meeting room, preference shall be 
given to photographers from Associated Press Photos, United 
Press International News pictures, and Reuters. If requests are 
made by more of the media than will be permitted by the 
Chairman of the full Committee or a subcommittee for coverage 
of the hearing or meeting by still photography, that coverage 
shall be made on the basis of a fair and equitable pool 
arrangement devised by the Standing Committee of Press 
Photographers.
    (i) Photographers shall not position themselves, at any 
time during the course of the hearing or meeting, between the 
witness table and the Members of the Committee or its 
subcommittees.
    (j) Photographers shall not place themselves in positions 
which obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing by the 
other media.
    (k) Personnel providing coverage by the television and 
radio media shall be currently accredited to the Radio and 
Television Correspondents' Galleries.
    (l) Personnel providing coverage by still photography shall 
be currently accredited to the Press Photographers' Gallery 
Committee of Press Photographers.
    (m) Personnel providing coverage by the television and 
radio media and by still photography shall conduct themselves 
and their coverage activities in an orderly and unobtrusive 
manner.

                          22.--Subpoena Powers

    A subpoena may be authorized and issued by the Chairman, in 
accordance with clause 2(m) of rule XI of the House of 
Representatives, in the conduct of any investigation or 
activity or series of investigations or activities within the 
jurisdiction of the Committee, following consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member.
    In addition, a subpoena may be authorized and issued by the 
Committee or its subcommittees in accordance with clause 2(m) 
of rule XI of the House of the Representatives, in the conduct 
of any investigation or activity or series of investigations or 
activities, only when authorized by the Committee or 
subcommittee, a majority being present. Authorized subpoenas 
shall be signed by the Chairman or by any Member designated by 
the Committee.

            23.--Recommendation for Appointment of Conferees

    Whenever the Speaker is to appoint a conference committee, 
the Chairman shall recommend to the Speaker as conferees those 
Members of the Committee who are primarily responsible for the 
legislation (including to the full extent practicable the 
principal proponents of the major provisions of the bill as it 
passed the House), who have actively participated in the 
Committee or subcommittee consideration of the legislation, and 
who agree to attend the meetings of the conference. With regard 
to the appointment of minority Members, the Chairman shall 
consult with the Ranking Minority Member.

                         24.--General Oversight

    Not later than March 1 of the first session of a Congress, 
the Committee shall adopt an oversight plan in accordance with 
the provisions of clause 2(d) of rule X of the House of 
Representatives.
    In accordance with the provisions of clause 2(n) of rule XI 
of the House of Representatives, the Committee or a 
subcommittee thereof shall hold at least one hearing during 
each 120-day period following its establishment on the topic of 
waste, fraud, abuse, or mismanagement in programs within its 
jurisdiction, as documented in reports received from a Federal 
Office of the Inspector General or the Comptroller General of 
the United States that have been provided to the Ranking 
Minority Member prior to the notice of the hearing pursuant to 
Committee rule 5.

                 25.--Other Procedures and Regulations

    The Chairman, in consultation with the Ranking Minority 
Member, may establish such other procedures and take such 
actions as may be necessary to carry out the foregoing rules or 
to facilitate the effective operation of the Committee. Any 
additional procedures or regulations may be modified or 
rescinded in any or all particulars by a majority vote of the 
full Committee.
                     Committee on Homeland Security

MARK E. GREEN, Tennessee, Chairman

BENNIE G. THOMPSON, Mississippi,     MICHAEL T. McCAUL, Texas
  Ranking Member                     CLAY HIGGINS, Louisiana
SHEILA JACKSON LEE, Texas            MICHAEL GUEST, Mississippi
DONALD M. PAYNE, Jr., New Jersey     DAN BISHOP, North Carolina
ERIC SWALWELL, California            CARLOS A. GIMENEZ, Florida
J. LUIS CORREA, California           AUGUST PFLUGER, Texas
TROY A. CARTER, Louisiana            ANDREW R. GARBARINO, New York
SHRI THANEDAR, Michigan              MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE, Georgia
SETH MAGAZINER, Rhode Island         TONY GONZALES, Texas
GLENN IVEY, Maryland                 NICK LaLOTA, New York
DANIEL S. GOLDMAN, New York          MIKE EZELL, Mississippi
ROBERT GARCIA, California            ANTHONY D'ESPOSITO, New York
DELIA C. RAMIREZ, Illinois           LAUREL M. LEE, Florida
ROBERT MENENDEZ, New Jersey          MORGAN LUTTRELL, Texas
YVETTE D. CLARKE, New York           DALE W. STRONG, Alabama
DINA TITUS, Nevada                   JOSH BRECHEEN, Oklahoma
                                     ELIJAH CRANE, Arizona

   RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON HOMELAND SECURITY FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)


                      Rule I.--General Provisions

    (A) Applicability of the Rules of the U.S. House of 
Representatives.--The Rules of the U.S. House of 
Representatives (the ``House'') are the rules of the Committee 
on Homeland Security (the ``Committee'') and its subcommittees 
insofar as applicable.
    (B) Applicability to Subcommittees.--Except where the terms 
``Full Committee'' and ``subcommittee'' are specifically 
mentioned, the following rules shall apply to the Committee's 
subcommittees and their respective Chairs and Ranking Minority 
Members to the same extent as they apply to the Full Committee 
and its Chair and Ranking Minority Member.
    (C) Appointments by the Chair.--Clause 2(d) of rule XI of 
the House shall govern the designation of a Vice Chair of the 
Full Committee.
    (D) Conferences.--The Chair is authorized to offer a motion 
under clause 1 of rule XXII of the Rules of the House whenever 
the Chair considers it appropriate.
    (E) Committee Website.--The Chair shall maintain an 
official Committee web site for the purposes of furthering the 
Committee's legislative and oversight responsibilities, 
including communicating information about the Committee's 
activities to Committee Members, other Members, and the public 
at large. The Ranking Minority Member may maintain a similar 
web site for the same purposes. The official Committee web site 
shall display a link on its home page to the web site 
maintained by the Ranking Minority Member.
    (F) Activity Report.--The Committee shall submit a report 
to the House on the activities of the Committee in accordance 
with House rule XI 1(d).

                        Rule II.--Subcommittees

    (A) Generally.--The Full Committee shall be organized into 
the following six standing subcommittees and each shall have 
specific responsibility for such measures or matters as the 
Chair refers to it:
          (1) Subcommittee on Border Security and Enforcement
          (2) Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Law 
        Enforcement, and Intelligence
          (3) Subcommittee on Cybersecurity and Infrastructure 
        Protection
          (4) Subcommittee on Emergency Management and 
        Technology
          (5) Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and 
        Accountability
          (6) Subcommittee on Transportation and Maritime 
        Security
    (B) Selection and Ratio of Subcommittee Members.--The Chair 
and Ranking Minority Member of the Full Committee shall select 
their respective Members of each subcommittee. The ratio of 
Majority to Minority Members shall be comparable to the Full 
Committee, consistent with the party ratios established by the 
Majority.
    (C) Ex Officio Members.--The Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member of the Full Committee shall be ex officio members of 
each subcommittee but are not authorized to vote on matters 
that arise before each subcommittee. The Chair and Ranking 
Minority Member of the Full Committee shall only be counted to 
satisfy the quorum requirement for the purpose of taking 
testimony and receiving evidence.
    (D) Powers and Duties of Subcommittees.--Except as 
otherwise directed by the Chair of the Full Committee, each 
subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold hearings, receive 
testimony, mark up legislation, and report to the Full 
Committee on all matters within its purview. Subcommittee 
Chairs shall set hearing and meeting dates only with the 
approval of the Chair of the Full Committee. To the greatest 
extent practicable, no more than one meeting and hearing should 
be scheduled for a given time.

                  Rule III.--Special Committee Panels

    (A) Designation.--The Chair of the Full Committee may 
designate a special panel of the Committee consisting of 
Members of the Committee to inquire into and take testimony on 
a matter or matters that warrant enhanced consideration, and to 
report to the Committee.
    (B) Party Ratios and Appointment.--The chair of a special 
panel shall be appointed by the Chair of the Full Committee. 
The Ranking Minority Member of the Full Committee may select a 
ranking minority member for a special panel and may appoint 
additional minority members, consistent with the ratio of the 
full committee. The Chair and Ranking Minority Member may serve 
as ex officio members.
    (C) Duration.--No special panel shall continue in existence 
for more than six months.
    (D) Jurisdiction.--No special panel shall have legislative 
jurisdiction.

                       Rule IV.--Regular Meetings

    (A) Regular Meeting Date.--The regular meeting date and 
time for the transaction of business of the Full Committee 
shall be at 10:00 a.m. on the first Wednesday that the House is 
in Session each month, unless otherwise directed by the Chair.
    (B) Additional Meetings.--At the discretion of the Chair, 
additional meetings of the Committee may be scheduled for the 
consideration of any legislation or other matters pending 
before the Committee, or to conduct other Committee business. 
The Committee shall meet for such purposes pursuant to the call 
of the Chair.
    (C) Consideration.--Except in the case of a special meeting 
held under clause 2(c)(2) of House rule XI, the determination 
of the business to be considered at each meeting of the 
Committee shall be made by the Chair.

                    Rule V.--Notice and Publication

    (A) Notice.--
          (1) Hearings.--(a) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(3) of rule 
        XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives, the 
        Chair of the Committee shall make public announcement 
        of the date, place, and subject matter of any hearing 
        before the Full Committee or subcommittee, which may 
        not commence earlier than one week after such notice.
          (b) However, a hearing may begin sooner than 
        specified in (a) if the Chair of the Committee, with 
        the concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member, 
        determines that there is good cause to begin such 
        hearing sooner, or if the Committee so determines by 
        majority vote, a quorum being present for the 
        transaction of business. If such a determination is 
        made, the Chair shall make the announcement required 
        under (a) at the earliest possible date. To the extent 
        practicable, the names of all witnesses scheduled to 
        appear at such hearing shall be provided to Members no 
        later than 48 hours prior to the commencement of such 
        hearing.
          (2) Meetings.--(a) The Chair shall announce the date, 
        time, place and subject matter of any meeting, which 
        may not commence earlier than the third calendar day 
        (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except 
        when the House is in session on such a day) on which 
        Members have notice thereof except in the case of a 
        special meeting called under clause 2(c)(2) of House 
        rule XI. These notice requirements may be waived if the 
        Chair with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
        Member, determines that there is good cause to begin 
        the meeting sooner or if the Committee so determines by 
        majority vote, a quorum being present for the 
        transaction of business.
          (b) At least 48 hours prior to the commencement of a 
        meeting for the markup of legislation, or at the time 
        of announcement of the meeting, if less than 48 hours 
        under rule V(A)(2), the text of such legislation to be 
        marked up shall be provided to the Members, made 
        publicly available in electronic form, and posted on 
        the official Committee web site.
          (c) Not later than 24 hours after concluding a 
        meeting to consider legislation, the text of such 
        legislation as ordered forwarded or reported, including 
        any amendments adopted or defeated, shall be made 
        publicly available in electronic form and posted on the 
        official Committee web site.
          (3) Briefings.--The Chair shall provide notice of the 
        date, time, place, and subject matter of a Member 
        briefing. To the extent practicable, a Member briefing 
        shall not commence earlier than the third day on which 
        Members have notice thereof.
    (B) Publication.--House rule XI 2(g)(3)(C) is hereby 
incorporated by reference.

           Rule VI.--Open Meetings and Hearings; Broadcasting

    (A) Open Meetings.--
          (1) All meetings and hearings of the Committee shall 
        be open to the public including to radio, television, 
        and still photography coverage, except as provided by 
        rule XI of the Rules of the House or when the 
        Committee, in open session and with a majority present, 
        determines by recorded vote that all or part of the 
        remainder of that hearing on that day shall be closed 
        to the public because disclosure of testimony, 
        evidence, or other matters to be considered would 
        endanger the national security, compromise sensitive 
        law enforcement information, tend to defame, degrade or 
        incriminate a witness, or violate any law or rule of 
        the House of Representatives.
          (2) The Committee or Subcommittee may meet in 
        executive session for up to five additional consecutive 
        days of hearings if agreed to by the same procedure.
    (B) Broadcasting.--Whenever any hearing or meeting 
conducted by the Committee is open to the public, the Committee 
shall permit that hearing or meeting to be covered by 
television broadcast, internet broadcast, print media, and 
still photography, or by any of such methods of coverage, in 
accordance with the provisions of clause 4 of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House. Operation and use of any Committee operated 
broadcast system shall be fair and nonpartisan and in 
accordance with clause 4(b) of rule XI and all other applicable 
rules of the Committee and the House. Priority shall be given 
by the Committee to members of the Press Galleries. Pursuant to 
clause 2(e) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Committee shall, to the greatest extent 
practicable, provide audio and video coverage of each hearing 
or meeting in a manner that allows the public to easily listen 
to and view the proceedings and shall maintain the recordings 
of such coverage in a manner that is easily accessible to the 
public.
    (C) Transcripts.--A transcript shall be made of the 
testimony of each witness appearing before the Committee during 
a Committee hearing. All transcripts of meetings or hearings 
that are open to the public shall be made available.

            Rule VII.--Procedures for Meetings and Hearings

    (A) Opening Statements.--At any meeting of the Committee, 
the Chair and Ranking Minority Member shall be entitled to 
present oral opening statements of five minutes each. Other 
Members may submit written opening statements for the record. 
The Chair presiding over the meeting may permit additional 
opening statements by other Members of the Full Committee or of 
that subcommittee, with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
Member.
    (B) The Five-Minute Rule.--The time any one Member may 
address the Committee on any bill, motion, or other matter 
under consideration by the Committee shall not exceed five 
minutes, and then only when the Member has been recognized by 
the Chair, except that this time limit may be extended when 
permitted by unanimous consent.
    (C) Postponement of Vote.--The Chair may postpone further 
proceedings when a recorded vote is ordered on the question of 
approving any measure or matter or adopting an amendment and 
may resume proceedings on a postponed vote at any time after 
reasonable notice to Members by the Clerk or other designee of 
the Chair. When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.
    (D) Record.--Members may have 10 business days to submit to 
the Chief Clerk of the Committee their statements for the 
record, and, in the case of a hearing, additional questions for 
the hearing record to be directed towards a witness at the 
hearing.

                         Rule VIII.--Witnesses

    (A) Questioning of Witnesses.--
          (1) Questioning of witnesses by Members will be 
        conducted under the five-minute rule unless the 
        Committee adopts a motion permitted by clause 2(j)(2) 
        of House rule XI.
          (2) In questioning witnesses under the five-minute 
        rule, the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member shall 
        first be recognized. In a subcommittee meeting or 
        hearing, the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
        Full Committee are then recognized. To the extent 
        practicable, all other Members will be recognized in 
        the order of seniority on the Committee, alternating 
        between Majority and Minority Members. To the extent 
        practicable, each Member shall be recognized at least 
        once before any Member is given a second opportunity to 
        question a witness.
          (3) The Chair, in consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member, or the Committee by motion, may permit 
        a specified number of Members to question a witness for 
        a period longer than five minutes, but the time 
        allotted must be equally apportioned to the Majority 
        and the Minority and may not exceed one hour in the 
        aggregate.
          (4) The Chair, in consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member, or the Committee by motion, may permit 
        Committee staff of the Majority and Minority to 
        question a witness for a specified period of time, but 
        the time allotted must be equally apportioned to the 
        Majority and Minority staff and may not exceed one hour 
        in the aggregate.
          (5) Subsection 3(j) of H. Res. 5 is hereby 
        incorporated by reference.
    (B) Minority Witnesses.--House rule XI 2(j)(1) is hereby 
incorporated by reference.
    (C) Oath or Affirmation.--The Chair of the Committee or any 
Member designated by the Chair, may administer an oath to any 
witness.
    (D) Statements by Witnesses.--
          (1) Consistent with the notice given, and to the 
        greatest extent practicable, each witness shall submit 
        a prepared or written statement for the record of the 
        proceedings (including, where practicable, an 
        electronic copy) with the Clerk of the Committee no 
        less than 48 hours in advance of the witness's 
        appearance before the Committee.
          (2) In the case of a witness appearing in a non-
        governmental capacity, a written statement of proposed 
        testimony shall include a curriculum vita and a 
        disclosure of any Federal grants or contracts, or 
        contracts or payments originating with a foreign 
        government, received during the current calendar year 
        or either of the two preceding calendar years by the 
        witness or by an entity represented by the witness and 
        related to the subject matter of the hearing. Such 
        disclosures shall include the amount and source of each 
        Federal grant (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or 
        subcontract thereof) related to the subject matter of 
        the hearing, and the amount and country of origin of 
        any payment or contract related to the subject matter 
        jurisdiction of the hearing originating with a foreign 
        government. Such statements, with the appropriate 
        redactions to protect the privacy or security of the 
        witness, shall be made publicly available in electronic 
        form not later than one day after the witness appears.

                            Rule IX.--Quorum

    Quorum Requirements.--Two Members shall constitute a quorum 
for purposes of taking testimony and receiving evidence. One-
third of the Members of the Committee shall constitute a quorum 
for conducting business, except for (1) reporting a measure or 
recommendation; (2) closing Committee meetings to the public, 
pursuant to Committee rule IV; (3) any other action for which 
an actual majority quorum is required by any rule of the House 
of Representatives or by law. The Chair's staff shall consult 
with the Ranking Minority Member's staff when scheduling 
meetings and hearings, to ensure that a quorum for any purpose 
will include at least one Minority Member of the Committee.

                            Rule X.--Decorum

    (A) Breaches of Decorum.--The Chair may punish breaches of 
order and decorum, by censure and exclusion from a hearing or 
meeting; and the Committee may cite the offender to the House 
for contempt.
    (B) Access to Dais.--Access to the dais before, during, and 
after a hearing, markup, or other meeting of the Committee 
shall be limited to Members and staff of the Committee. Subject 
to availability of space on the dais, Committee Members' 
personal staff may be present on the dais during a hearing if 
their employing Member is seated on the dais and during a 
markup or other meeting if their employing Member is the author 
of a measure or amendment under consideration by the Committee, 
but only during the time that the measure or amendment is under 
active consideration by the Committee, or otherwise at the 
discretion of the Chair, or of the Ranking Minority Member for 
personal staff employed by a Minority Member.
    (C) Wireless Communications Use Prohibited.--During a 
hearing, mark-up, or other meeting of the Committee, ringing or 
audible sounds or conversational use of cellular telephones or 
other electronic devices is prohibited in the Committee room.

                  Rule XI.--Referrals to Subcommittees

    Referral of Bills and Other Matters by the Chair.--Except 
for bills and other matters retained by the Chair for Full 
Committee consideration, each bill or other matter referred to 
the Full Committee shall be referred by the Chair to one or 
more subcommittees within two weeks of receipt by the 
Committee. In referring any measure or matter to a 
subcommittee, the Chair may specify a date by which the 
subcommittee shall report thereon to the Full Committee. Bills 
or other matters referred to subcommittees may be reassigned or 
discharged by the Chair.

                     Rule XII.--Subpoenas; Counsel

    (A) Authorization.--The power to authorize and issue 
subpoenas is delegated to the Chair of the Full Committee, as 
provided for under clause 2(m)(3)(A)(i) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives. The Chair shall notify the 
Ranking Minority Member prior to issuing any subpoena under 
such authority. To the extent practicable, the Chair shall 
consult with the Ranking Minority Member at least 24 hours in 
advance of a subpoena being issued under such authority, 
excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays. The Chair 
of the Full Committee shall notify Members of the Committee of 
the authorization and issuance of a subpoena under this rule as 
soon as practicable, but in no event later than one week after 
service of such subpoena.
    (B) Disclosure.--Provisions may be included in a subpoena 
with the concurrence of the Chair and the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Full Committee, or by the Committee, to prevent 
the disclosure of the Full Committee's demands for information 
when deemed necessary for the security of information or the 
progress of an investigation, including but not limited to 
prohibiting the revelation by witnesses and their counsel of 
Full Committee's inquiries.
    (C) Subpoena duces tecum.--A subpoena duces tecum may be 
issued whose return to the Committee Clerk shall occur at a 
time and place other than that of a regularly scheduled 
meeting.
    (D) Counsel.--When representing a witness or entity before 
the Committee in response to a document request, request for 
transcribed interview, or subpoena from the Committee, or in 
connection with testimony before the Committee at a hearing, 
counsel for the witness or entity must promptly submit to the 
Committee a notice of appearance specifying the following: (a) 
counsel's name, firm or organization, and contact information; 
and (b) each client represented by the counsel in connection 
with the proceeding. Submission of a notice of appearance 
constitutes acknowledgement that counsel is authorized to 
accept service of process by the Committee on behalf of such 
client(s), and that counsel is bound by and agrees to comply 
with all applicable House and Committee rules and regulations.
    (E) Deposition Authority.--Section 3(k) of H. Res. 5 is 
hereby incorporated by reference.

                      Rule XIII.--Committee Staff

    (A) Generally.--Committee staff members are subject to the 
provisions of clause 9 of House rule X and must be eligible to 
be considered for routine access to classified information.
    (B) Staff Assignments.--For purposes of these rules, 
Committee staff means the employees of the Committee, 
detailees, fellows, interns, or any other person engaged by 
contract or otherwise to perform services for, or at the 
request of, the Committee. All such persons shall be either 
Majority, Minority, or shared staff. The Chair shall appoint, 
supervise, where applicable determine remuneration of, and may 
remove Majority staff. The Ranking Minority Member shall 
appoint, supervise, where applicable determine remuneration of, 
and may remove Minority staff. In consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, the Chair may appoint, supervise, determine 
remuneration of and may remove shared staff that is assigned to 
service of the Committee. The Chair shall certify Committee 
staff appointments, including appointments by the Ranking 
Minority Member, as required.
    (C) Divulgence of Information.--Prior to the public 
acknowledgement by the Chair or the Committee of a decision to 
initiate an investigation of a particular person, entity, or 
subject, no member of the Committee staff shall knowingly 
divulge to any person any information, including non-classified 
information, which comes into his or her possession by virtue 
of his or her status as a member of the Committee staff, if the 
member of the Committee staff has a reasonable expectation that 
such information may alert the subject of a Committee 
investigation to the existence, nature, or substance of such 
investigation, unless authorized to do so by the Chair or the 
Committee.

     Rule XIV.--Classified and Controlled Unclassified Information

    (A) Security Precautions.--Committee Members and staff 
shall operate under strict security precautions administered by 
the Security Officer of the Committee consistent with the 
Committee's Security and Access Control Policy. A security 
officer shall be on duty at all times during normal office 
hours. Classified documents and controlled unclassified 
information (CUI)--formerly known as sensitive but unclassified 
(SBU) information--may be destroyed, discussed, examined, 
handled, reviewed, stored, transported and used only in an 
appropriately secure manner in accordance with all applicable 
laws, executive orders, and other governing authorities. Such 
documents may be removed from the Committee's offices only in 
furtherance of official Committee business. Appropriate 
security procedures, as determined by the Chair in consultation 
with the Ranking Minority Member, shall govern the handling of 
such documents removed from the Committee's offices.
    (B) Temporary Custody of Executive Branch Material.--
Executive branch documents or other materials containing 
classified information in any form that were not made part of 
the record of a Committee hearing, did not originate in the 
Committee or the House, and are not otherwise records of the 
Committee shall, while in the custody of the Committee, be 
segregated and maintained by the Committee in the same manner 
as Committee records that are classified. Such documents and 
other materials shall be returned to the Executive branch 
agency from which they were obtained at the earliest 
practicable time.
    (C) Access by Committee Staff.--Access to classified 
information supplied to the Committee shall be limited to 
Committee staff members with appropriate security clearances 
and a need-to-know, as determined by the Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member, and under the direction of the Majority or 
Minority Staff Director.
    (D) Maintaining Confidentiality.--No Committee Member or 
Committee staff shall disclose, in whole or in part or by way 
of summary, to any person who is not a Committee Member or 
authorized Committee staff for any purpose or in connection 
with any proceeding, judicial or otherwise, any testimony given 
before the Committee in executive session except for purposes 
of obtaining an official classification of such testimony. 
Classified information and controlled unclassified information 
(CUI) shall be handled in accordance with all applicable laws, 
executive orders, and other governing authorities and 
consistently with the provisions of these rules and Committee 
procedures.
    (E) Oath.--Before a Committee Member or Committee staff may 
have access to classified information, the following oath (or 
affirmation) shall be executed:
          I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will not 
        disclose any classified information received in the 
        course of my service on the Committee on Homeland 
        Security, except as authorized by the Committee or the 
        House of Representatives or in accordance with the 
        Rules of such Committee or the Rules of the House.
    Copies of the executed oath (or affirmation) shall be 
retained by the Clerk of the Committee as part of the records 
of the Committee.
    (F) Disciplinary Action.--The Chair shall immediately 
consider disciplinary action in the event any Committee Member 
or Committee staff member fails to conform to the provisions of 
these rules governing the disclosure of classified or 
unclassified information. Such disciplinary action may include, 
but shall not be limited to, immediate dismissal from the 
Committee staff, criminal referral to the Justice Department, 
and notification of the Speaker of the House. With respect to 
Minority staff, the Chair shall consider such disciplinary 
action in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member.

                      Rule XV.--Committee Records

    (A) Committee Records.--House rule XI 2(e) is hereby 
incorporated by reference.
    (B) Legislative Calendar.--The Clerk of the Committee shall 
maintain a printed calendar for the information of each 
Committee Member showing any procedural or legislative measures 
considered or scheduled to be considered by the Committee, and 
the status of such measures and such other matters as the 
Committee determines shall be included. The calendar shall be 
revised from time to time to show pertinent changes. A copy of 
such revisions shall be made available to each Member of the 
Committee upon request.
    (C) Members Right To Access.--Members of the Committee and 
of the House shall have access to all official Committee 
Records. Access to Committee files shall be limited to 
examination within the Committee offices at reasonable times. 
Access to Committee Records that contain classified information 
shall be provided in a manner consistent with these rules.
    (D) Removal of Committee Records.--Files and records of the 
Committee are not to be removed from the Committee offices. No 
Committee files or records that are not made publicly available 
shall be photocopied by any Member.
    (E) Executive Session Records.--Evidence or testimony 
received by the Committee in executive session shall not be 
released or made available to the public unless authorized by 
the Committee, a majority being present. Such information may 
be made available to appropriate government personnel for 
purposes of classification. Members may examine the Committee's 
executive session records, but may not make copies of, or take 
personal notes from, such records.
    (F) Availability of Committee Records.--The Committee shall 
keep a complete record of all Committee action including 
recorded votes and attendance at hearings and meetings. 
Information so available for public inspection shall include a 
description of each amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition, including the name of the Member who offered the 
amendment, motion, order, or other proposition, and the name of 
each Member voting for and each Member voting against each such 
amendment, motion, order, or proposition, as well as the names 
of those Members present but not voting. Such record shall be 
made available to the public at reasonable times within the 
Committee offices and also made publicly available in 
electronic form and posted on the official Committee web site 
within 48 hours of such recorded vote.
    (G) Separate and Distinct.--All Committee records and files 
must be kept separate and distinct from the office records of 
the Members serving as Chair and Ranking Minority Member. 
Records and files of Members' personal offices shall not be 
considered records or files of the Committee.
    (H) Disposition of Committee Records.--At the conclusion of 
each Congress, non-current records of the Committee shall be 
delivered to the Clerk of the House in accordance with rule VII 
of the Rules of the House.
    (I) Archived Records.--The records of the Committee at the 
National Archives and Records Administration shall be made 
available for public use in accordance with rule VII of the 
Rules of the House. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority 
Member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of the rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on the written request of any member of the 
Committee. The Chair shall consult with the Ranking Minority 
Member on any communication from the Archivist of the United 
States or the Clerk of the House concerning the disposition of 
noncurrent records pursuant to clause 3(b) of the rule.

                       Rule XVI.--Committee Rules

    (A) Availability of Committee Rules in Electronic Form.--
House rule XI 2(a) is hereby incorporated by reference.
    (B) Changes to Committee Rules.--These rules may be 
modified, amended, or repealed by the Full Committee provided 
that a notice in writing of the proposed change has been given 
to each Member at least 48 hours prior to the meeting at which 
action thereon is to be taken and such changes are not 
inconsistent with the Rules of the House of Representatives.
                   Committee on House Administration

 BRYAN STEIL, Wisconsin, Chairman

JOSEPH D. MORELLE, New York, Ranking MemberLOUDERMILK, Georgia
TERRI A. SEWELL, Alabama             H. MORGAN GRIFFITH, Virginia
DEREK KILMER, Washington             GREGORY F. MURPHY, North Carolina
NORMA J. TORRES, California          STEPHANIE I. BICE, Oklahoma
                                     MIKE CAREY, Ohio
                                     LAUREL M. LEE, Florida
                                     ANTHONY D'ESPOSITO, New York

 RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON HOUSE ADMINISTRATION FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 28, 2023)

    Be it resolved, that the Rules of the Committee on House 
Administration for the 118th Congress are hereby adopted, as 
follows

                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) The Rules of the House of Representatives are the Rules 
of the Committee so far as applicable and are incorporated by 
reference as if set forth fully herein.
          (1) Should changes be adopted by the House of 
        Representatives to the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives, such new version of the Rules of the 
        House of Representatives shall immediately be 
        incorporated by reference without intervening Committee 
        action.
    (b) The Committee incorporates by reference all 
requirements imposed on the Committee by statute as if set 
forth fully herein.
          (1) Should new or amended statutory requirements 
        imposed on the Committee be adopted, such new or 
        amended requirements shall be immediately incorporated 
        by reference without intervening Committee action.
    (c) The following motions shall be privileged in the 
Committee and shall be decided without debate.
          (1) A motion to recess from day to day, or to recess 
        subject to the call of the Chairman (within 24 hours), 
        shall be privileged; and
          (2) A motion to dispense with the first reading (in 
        full) of a bill or resolution shall be privileged if 
        printed copies are available.
    (d) Each subcommittee is a part of the Committee and is 
subject to the authority and direction of the Committee and the 
Committee rules, so far as applicable.
    (e) The Committee shall hold at least one hearing during 
each 120-day period following its organization on the topic of 
waste, fraud, abuse, or mismanagement in Government programs 
that it authorizes.
          (1) Such hearings shall include a focus on the most 
        egregious examples of waste, fraud, abuse, or 
        mismanagement as documented by any report the Committee 
        has received from a Federal Office of the Inspector 
        General or the Comptroller of the United States.
    (f) The Committee shall hold at least one hearing during 
any session in which the Committee receives disclaimers of 
agency financial statements of any Federal agency that it 
authorizes or such disclaimers from representatives of any such 
agency.
    (g) The Committee shall hold at least one hearing on issues 
raised by reports issued by the Comptroller of the United 
States indicating that Federal programs or operations that the 
Committee authorizes are at high risk of waste, fraud, abuse, 
or mismanagement known as the ``high-risk list'' or the ``high-
risk series''.
    (h) The committee is authorized at any time to conduct such 
investigations and studies as it may consider necessary or 
appropriate in the exercise of its responsibilities under House 
rule X, and, subject to the adoption of expense resolutions as 
required by rule X, clause 6 of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives to incur expenses (including travel expenses) 
in connection therewith.
    (i) A proposed investigative or oversight report shall be 
considered as read in Committee if it has been available to the 
members of the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such a day).
    (j) A report of an investigation or study conducted jointly 
by more than one committee may be filed jointly, provided that 
each of the committees complies independently with all 
requirements for approval and filing of the report.
    (k) After an adjournment sine die of the last regular 
session of a Congress, an investigative or oversight report may 
be filed with the Clerk of the House of Representatives at any 
time, provided that a member who gives timely notice of 
intention to file supplemental, minority, additional, or 
dissenting views shall be entitled to not fewer than seven 
calendar days in which to submit such views for inclusion in 
the report.
    (l) The Committee is authorized to have printed and bound 
testimony and other data presented at hearings held by the 
committee or as otherwise determined by the Chairman, and to 
make such information available to the public. All costs of 
stenographic services and transcripts in connection with any 
meeting, hearing, or other activity of the Committee shall be 
paid from the applicable accounts of the House described in 
clause 1(k)(1) of rule X of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (m) The Committee shall submit to the House no later than 
January 2 of each odd-numbered year a report on the activities 
of the Committee pursuant to rules X and XI of the of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives. Such report shall include
          (1) Separate sections summarizing the legislative and 
        oversight activities of the Committee during the 
        Congress;
          (2) A summary of the authorization and oversight 
        plans submitted by the Committee under clause 2(d) of 
        rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives;
          (3) A summary of the actions taken and 
        recommendations made with respect to the authorization 
        and oversight plans specified in subparagraph (2), 
        above;
          (4) A summary of any additional oversight activities 
        undertaken by the Committee and any recommendations 
        made or actions taken thereon;
          (5) A delineation of any hearings held pursuant to 
        clauses 2(n), 2(o), or 2(p) of rule XI of the Rules of 
        the House of Representatives; and
          (6) A list of hearings conducted with remote witness 
        participation.
          (7) After an adjournment sine die of the last regular 
        session of a Congress, or after December 15 of an even-
        numbered year, whichever occurs first, the Chairman may 
        file this report with the Clerk of the House of 
        Representatives at any time and without approval of the 
        Committee, provided that
                  i. A copy of the report has been available to 
                each member of the Committee for at least seven 
                calendar days; and
                  ii. The report includes any supplemental, 
                minority, additional, or dissenting views 
                submitted by a member of the Committee.
    (n) The Committee's Rules shall be made publicly available 
in electronic form and published in the Congressional Record 
not later than 30 days after the Committee is organized in each 
odd-numbered year.
    (o) Unless context clearly requires otherwise,
          (1) All words, phrases, and terms of art have the 
        meanings given them in the U.S. Constitution or the 
        Rules of the House of Representatives or, in the 
        alternative, their meanings in usual congressional or 
        parliamentary usage or daily usage.
          (2) ``Chairman'' means the member of the House of 
        Representatives appointed by the Speaker to lead the 
        Committee on House Administration or, when context 
        requires, the member of the Committee appointed by the 
        Chairman to lead a given subcommittee.
          (3) ``Clerk'' means the Clerk of the Committee. 
        References to the Clerk of the House will be express.
          (4) ``Committee'' means the Committee on House 
        Administration of the U.S. House of Representatives or, 
        when context requires, a subcommittee of the Committee.
          (5) ``Committee rules'' mean this document, as may be 
        duly amended by the Committee.
          (6) ``House of Representatives'' or ``House'' means 
        the U.S. House of Representatives.
          (7) ``House rules'' means the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives. When used in the singular, this refers 
        to a specific provision of the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives.

                 Rule 2.--Regular and Special Meetings

    (a) The provisions of rule 9 of these Committee Rules shall 
apply as applicable to hearings except as described below in 
this rule 2.
    (b)
          (1) The regular meeting date of the Committee on 
        House Administration shall be the second Wednesday of 
        every month when the House is in session in accordance 
        with clause 2(b) of rule XI of the Rules of the House 
        of Representatives. If the House is not in session on 
        the second Wednesday of the month, the regular meeting 
        date shall be the third Wednesday of that month.
          (2) Additional meetings may be called by the Chairman 
        of the Committee as he deems necessary or at the 
        request of a majority of the members of the Committee 
        in accordance with clause 21(c) of rule XI of the Rules 
        of the House of Representatives.
          (3) The determination of the business to be 
        considered at each meeting shall be made by the 
        Chairman in accordance with clause 2(c) of rule XI of 
        the Rules of the House of Representatives. A regularly 
        scheduled meeting may be dispensed with, if, in the 
        judgment of the Chair, there is no need for the 
        meeting.
          (4) To the extent practicable, the Chairman shall 
        call to order promptly all scheduled meetings.
    (c) If the Chairman is not present at any meeting of the 
Committee, the ranking member of the majority party who is 
present shall preside at the meeting.
    (d)(1) The Chairman shall make public announcement of the 
date, place, and subject matter of any meeting to be conducted 
on any measure or matter. Such meetings shall not commence 
earlier than the third calendar day (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such a day) on which members of the Committee have notice 
thereof.
    (2) If the Chairman, with the concurrence of the ranking 
minority member, determines that there is good cause to 
schedule or to begin sooner a meeting of the Committee (or if 
the Committee so determines by majority vote, a quorum being 
present), the Chair shall make the announcement at the earliest 
possible date. The announcement shall be made available 
publicly in electronic form and published in the Daily Digest.
    (e) The Chairman shall make available publicly in 
electronic form at least 24 hours before a meeting of the 
Committee the text of any legislation, resolution, regulation, 
or other document to be marked up, provided that the text of 
any legislation, resolution, regulation, or other document to 
be marked up at a hearing announced with fewer than 24 hours' 
notice pursuant to rule 2(c) of the Rules of the Committee 
shall be made available publicly with such announcement.

                         Rule 3.--Open Meetings

    (a) As required by clause 2(g) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, each meeting for the transaction 
of business, including for the mark-up of legislation by the 
Committee, shall be open to the public except when the 
Committee in open session and with a quorum present determines 
by record vote that all or part of the remainder of the meeting 
on that day shall be closed to the public because disclosure of 
matters to be considered would endanger national security, 
would compromise sensitive law enforcement information, would 
tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person, or would 
otherwise violate any relevant law or the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (b) No person other than members of the Committee and such 
congressional staff and such other persons as the Committee may 
authorize shall be present in any Committee meeting that has 
been closed to the public.
    (c) The Committee may vote by the same procedure described 
above in Paragraph (a) to close one subsequent day of hearing.

                    Rule 4.--Records and Roll Calls

    (a)(1) A record vote shall be held if requested by any 
member of the Committee.
    (2) The result of each record vote in any meeting of the 
Committee shall be available for inspection by the public at 
reasonable times at the Committee offices, including a 
description of the amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition voted upon, the name of each member voting for and 
against such proposition, and a list of the members present but 
not voting.
    (3) The Chairman shall make available publicly in 
electronic form the record of the votes on any question on 
which a record vote is demanded not later than 48 hours after 
such vote is taken (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or legal 
holidays except when the House is in session on such a day). 
Such record shall include a description of the amendment, 
motion, order, or other proposition voted upon, the name of 
each member voting for and against such proposition, and a list 
of the members present but not voting.
    (4) The Chairman shall make available publicly in 
electronic form the text of any amendment to a measure or 
matter adopted by the Committee not later than 24 hours after 
such amendment is adopted.
    (b)(1) Subject to subparagraph (2), below, the Chairman may 
postpone further proceedings when a record vote is ordered on 
the question of approving any measure or matter or adopting an 
amendment. The Chair may resume proceedings on a postponed 
request at any time.
    (2) In exercising postponement authority under subparagraph 
(1), above, the Chairman shall take all reasonable steps 
necessary to notify members of the resumption of proceedings on 
any postponed record vote.
    (3) When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as before the 
question was postponed.
    (c) All Committee hearings, records, data, and files shall 
be kept separate and distinct from the congressional office 
records of the Chairman and shall constitute property of the 
House of Representatives and, pursuant to the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, all members of the House of 
Representatives shall have access thereto.
    (d) Committee records that are held at the National 
Archives shall be made available pursuant to rule VII of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives. The Chairman shall 
notify the ranking minority member of any decision to withhold 
a record pursuant to such Rule for disposition upon written 
request of any Committee member.
    (e) To the maximum extent feasible, the Committee shall 
make its publications available in electronic form, keeping in 
mind the importance of accessibility standards and machine-
readable formats to the Committee's openness and transparency 
goals.
    (f) Unless the Chairman, in consultation with the ranking 
minority member, deems it appropriate, the Committee shall not 
conduct business by poll.

               Rule 5.--Proxies and Remote Participation

    (a) No vote by any member of the Committee may be cast 
other than in person at the location where the Committee is 
sitting, including, but not limited to, through the use of a 
remote participation software platform, by proxy, or through 
other means.
    (b) Subject to Paragraph (c), below, and pursuant to 
Section 3(j) of H. Res. 5 and the regulations adopted by the 
Committee on Rules for the Remote Participation of Committee 
Witnesses, the Chairman may, with written approval from the 
Majority Leader, authorize a witness to appear remotely before 
the Committee, provided that
          (1) such witness is appearing in a non-governmental 
        capacity;
          (2) such witness is not appearing in response to a 
        subpoena (unless both the Chairman and the Majority 
        Leader authorize such testimony in writing and publish 
        their authorization in the Congressional Record);
          (3) the testimony of such witness is necessary; and
          (4) such witness is only available to participate if 
        such authorization to appear remotely is granted due to 
        extreme hardship or other exceptional circumstances.
          (5) Should such authorization be granted, the 
        official record of the committee proceeding shall 
        include
                  i. a letter from the chair detailing the 
                necessity of allowing the witness to 
                participate remotely;
                  ii. a description of why the witness could 
                not participate in person;
                  iii. an explanation of why such testimony was 
                necessary for purposes of fulfilling Congress' 
                Article I responsibility; and
                  iv. a letter from the Majority Leader 
                approving such remote participation.
          (6) The witness should conduct a pre-hearing 
        technology test with staff designated for this purpose 
        by the Chairman to ensure that the witness will have 
        sufficient internet access during the hearing and to 
        minimize the possibility of any technical issues.
          (7) Any text-based or private messaging function in 
        the remote participation software platform must be 
        disabled unless it is used to provide technical support 
        to the witness. Such support conversations may be 
        excluded from the public video stream and will not be 
        considered a committee record.
          (8) Only witnesses approved for remote participation 
        may have participatory access on the remote 
        participation software platform.
          (9) A witness participating remotely should appear 
        before a non-partisan, professionally appropriate 
        background that is minimally distracting to members and 
        to other witnesses to the greatest extent possible. The 
        Chairman reserves the authority to enforce rules of 
        decorum for all committee proceedings.
          (10) A witness participating remotely shall be 
        visible on-screen within the remote participation 
        software platform until excused by the Chairman. 
        Further, such witness must agree to remain on the 
        remote participation software platform until excused by 
        the Chairman.
          (11) A witness participating remotely shall disclose 
        to the Chairman and ranking minority member any 
        additional individual(s) present with such witness but 
        not visible on screen.
          (12) Counsel for a witness participating remotely 
        shall be allowed access to the remote participation 
        software platform if they are not in the physical 
        presence of such witness. It is recommended that 
        counsel facilitate a separate secure line of 
        communication with the witness. A witness may not be 
        unmuted by any other individual and should be allowed 
        to use such secure line of communication while 
        testifying to confer with counsel.
          (13) A witness may not allow an individual not 
        invited to testify to speak on the platform. The 
        Chairman may only provide an exception when the other 
        individual is necessary to facilitate the witness's 
        participation in the hearing (including for translation 
        services).
          (14) The Chairman may not authorize remote 
        participation by more than one witness at a committee 
        hearing without the written approval of the Majority 
        Leader published in the Congressional Record.
    (c) The regulations described in Paragraph (b), above, are 
incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. A copy 
of such regulations in effect as of the date of the Committee's 
adoption of these Rules is printed above solely for convenience 
but shall in no way control in the event of a conflict with the 
regulations adopted by the Committee on Rules. Further, should 
the Committee on Rules adopt changes to such regulations or new 
regulations pertaining to this subject matter, such regulations 
shall immediately and without intervening action be made part 
of the Committee rules by this reference as if fully set forth 
herein, replacing the previous version. In such case, adoption 
by the Committee on Rules shall be sufficient notice to all 
members of the Committee of this change.

             Rule 6.--Power To Sit and Act; Subpoena Power

    (a) For the purpose of carrying out any of its functions 
and duties under rules X and XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Committee is authorized (subject to 
subparagraph (b)(1), below)
          (1) to sit and act at such times and places within 
        the United States, whether the House is in session, has 
        recessed, or has adjourned, and to hold such hearings 
        as it considers necessary; and
          (2) to require, by subpoena or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of such witnesses and/or the 
        production of such books, records, correspondence, 
        memoranda, papers, documents, and other materials, 
        whether tangible or intangible, that the Committee 
        deems necessary.
    (b) The Chairman or any member of the Committee designated 
by the Chairman, may administer oaths to any witnesses.
    (c)(1) A subpoena may be authorized and issued by the 
Chairman in accordance with clause 2(m) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives in the conduct of any 
investigation or activity or series of investigations or 
activities within the jurisdiction of the Committee.
    (2) Following authorization and issuance of such subpoena, 
the Chairman shall notify the ranking minority member and shall 
provide such member a full copy of the proposed subpoena, 
including any proposed document schedule, at that time.
    (3) A subpoena duces tecum may specify terms of return 
other than at a meeting or hearing of the Committee.
    (4) The Committee may issue subpoenas for documents or 
testimony to any person or entity, whether governmental, 
public, or private, within the United States, including, but 
not limited to, the President, Vice President, whether current 
or former, in a personal or official capacity, as well as the 
White House, the Office of the President, the Executive Office 
of the President, and any individual currently or formerly 
employed in the White House, Office of the President, or 
Executive Office of the President.

                            Rule 7.--Quorums

    (a) No measure or recommendation shall be reported to the 
House unless a majority of the Committee is actually present.
    (b) For purposes of taking any action other than reporting 
any measure, issuance of subpoena, closing meetings, 
promulgating Committee orders or regulations, or changing the 
Rules of the Committee, one-third of the members of the 
Committee actually present shall constitute a quorum.
    (c) For purposes of taking testimony and receiving 
evidence, two members actually present shall constitute a 
quorum.

                          Rule 8.--Amendments

    (a) Any amendment offered to any pending legislation before 
Committee must be made available in written form. If such 
amendment is not available in written form, the Chairman will 
allow an appropriate period of time for the provision thereof.
    (b) In general, members of the Committee shall endeavor to 
submit all amendments electronically. If such amendment is not 
available in electronic form, the Chairman will allow an 
appropriate period of time for the creation thereof.
    (c) The general order of consideration of amendments shall 
be within the discretion of the Chairman. However, he shall 
endeavor to apply the following order of precedence in all 
cases unless circumstances, in his discretion, warrant 
otherwise:
          (1) Amendments submitted in writing and 
        electronically at least 24 hours before the Committee's 
        consideration of the measure or matter.
          (2) Amendments submitted in writing and 
        electronically but fewer than 24 hours before the 
        Committee's consideration of the measure or matter.
          (3) Amendments submitted in writing but not 
        electronically.

                      Rule 9.--Hearing Procedures

    (a) The provisions of rule 2 of the Committee rules shall 
apply as applicable to hearings except as described below in 
this rule 9.
    (b) The Chairman shall make public announcement of the 
date, time, place, and subject matter of any hearing to be 
conducted on any measure or matter at least seven days before 
the commencement of that hearing.
    (c) If the Chairman, with the concurrence of the ranking 
minority member, determines that there is good cause to 
schedule or to begin sooner a meeting of the Committee (or if 
the Committee so determines by majority vote, a quorum being 
present), the Chair shall make the announcement at the earliest 
possible date. The announcement shall be made available 
publicly in electronic form and published in the Daily Digest.
    (d) Pursuant to clause 2(j)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, when any hearing is conducted by 
the Committee upon any measure or matter, the minority party 
members of the Committee, shall be entitled, upon request to 
the Chairman before the end of the hearing by a majority of 
those minority members actually present, to call witnesses 
selected by the minority to testify with respect to that 
measure or matter during at least one day of hearings thereon.
          (1) Pursuant to Committee precedent, this requirement 
        shall be fulfilled if the Chairman permits the minority 
        members of the Committee to call at least one witness 
        during at least one day of hearings on a measure or 
        matter, even if the minority members of the Committee 
        choose not to call a witness.
    (e) Any members of the Committee may have the privilege of 
sitting with any subcommittee during its hearings, meetings, or 
deliberations and may participate in such hearings, meetings, 
or deliberations, but except as provided in subparagraph (1), 
below, no member who is not a member of the subcommittee shall 
count for a quorum nor offer any motion or amendment or vote on 
any matter before the subcommittee.
          (1) Except as described in subsubparagraph (i), 
        below, the Chairman and the ranking minority member 
        shall be ex officio members with voting privileges of 
        each subcommittee for which they are not assigned as 
        members and may be counted as members of each such 
        subcommittee for the purposes of establishing a quorum.
                  (i) This provision shall not apply to the 
                Subcommittee on Modernization.
    (f) Except as provided below, members of the Committee may 
question a witness only when they have been recognized by the 
Chairman for that purpose, and only for a five-minute period 
until all members actually present have had an opportunity to 
question a witness.
          (1) Pursuant to clause 2(j)(2)(B) of rule XI of the 
        Rules of the House of Representatives, the five-minute 
        period for questioning a witness by any one member may 
        be extended.
          (2) Pursuant to Committee precedent, the Chair may 
        decline to extend a member's time for questioning.
    (g) The Chairman shall establish a reasonable order for the 
questioning of witness by members of the Committee.
    (h) Pursuant to clause 2(j)(2)(C) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives, Committee may adopt a motion 
permitting committee staff for its majority and minority party 
members to question a witness for equal specified periods. The 
time for extended questioning of a witness under this paragraph 
shall be equal for the majority party and the minority party 
and shall not exceed one hour in the aggregate.
    (i) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(C) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, a member of the House of 
Representatives may not be excluded from nonparticipatory 
attendance at a hearing of the Committee unless the House by 
majority vote authorizes the Committee to close certain 
proceedings to members of the House who are not members of the 
Committee.
    (j) All witnesses who appear before the Committee shall, to 
the extent practicable, submit in advance written statements of 
proposed testimony.
          (1) Further, non-governmental witnesses shall also 
        submit
                  (i) An accurate and up-to-date curriculum 
                vitae;
                  (ii) A disclosure of any Federal grants or 
                contracts or contracts, grants, or payments 
                originating with a foreign government, in 
                either case received during the past 36 months 
                by the witness or by an entity represented by 
                the witness and related to the subject matter 
                of the hearing; and
                          1. This disclosure shall include
                                  a. The amount and source of 
                                each Federal grant (or subgrant 
                                thereof) or contract (or 
                                subcontract thereof) related to 
                                the subject matter of the 
                                hearing; and
                                  b. The amount and country of 
                                origin of any payment or 
                                contract related to the subject 
                                matter of the hearing 
                                originating with a foreign 
                                government.
                  (iii) A disclosure of whether the witness is 
                a fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a 
                director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) 
                of any organization or entity that has an 
                interest in the subject matter of the hearing.
          (2) Such submissions by non-governmental witnesses, 
        with appropriate redactions to protect the privacy or 
        security of the witness, shall be made available 
        publicly in electronic form 24 hours before the witness 
        appears to the extent practicable, but not later than 
        one day after the witness appears.
    (k) All witnesses who appear before the Committee shall 
limit their initial presentations to the Committee to brief 
summaries of their testimony.
    (l) Pursuant to clause 5 of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, the Chairman may, in his discretion, 
choose to reimburse witnesses who demonstrate extreme indigency 
or who would otherwise not be able to appear before the 
Committee for actual expenses of travel to or from the place of 
examination, provided that the witness is not local to the 
place of examination.
    (m) The following additional provisions shall apply to 
hearings of the Committee as applicable:
          (1) The Chairman shall announce in an opening 
        statement the subject of a hearing's investigation.
          (2) A copy of the Committee rules and clause 2(k) of 
        rule XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
        shall be made available to each witness.
          (3) Witnesses at hearings may be accompanied by their 
        own counsel for the purpose of advising them concerning 
        their constitutional rights.
          (4) The Chair may punish breaches of order and 
        decorum and of breaches of professional ethics on the 
        part of counsel by censure and exclusion from hearings. 
        The Committee may cite the offender to the House for 
        contempt.
          (5) Whenever it is asserted by a member of the 
        committee that the evidence or testimony at a hearing 
        may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person, 
        or it is asserted by a witness that the evidence or 
        testimony that the witness would give at a hearing may 
        tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate the witness--
                  (i) Notwithstanding clause 2(g) of rule XI of 
                the Rules of the House of Representatives, such 
                testimony or evidence shall be presented in 
                executive session if, in the presence of at 
                least two members actually present, the 
                committee determines by majority vote that such 
                evidence or testimony may tend to defame, 
                degrade, or incriminate any person; and
                  (ii) The committee shall proceed to receive 
                such testimony in open session only if the 
                committee, a majority being present, determines 
                that such evidence or testimony will not tend 
                to defame, degrade, or incriminate any person.
                  In either case, the committee shall afford 
                such person an opportunity voluntarily to 
                appear as a witness and receive and dispose of 
                requests from such person to subpoena 
                additional witnesses.
          (6) Except as provided in subparagraph (5), above, 
        the Chairman shall receive and the Committee shall 
        dispose of requests to subpoena additional witnesses.
          (7) Evidence or testimony taken in executive session 
        and proceedings conducted in executive session may be 
        released or used in public sessions only when 
        authorized by the Committee, a majority being present.
          (8) In the discretion of the committee, witnesses may 
        submit brief and pertinent sworn statements for 
        inclusion in the record. The Committee is the sole 
        judge of the pertinence of testimony and evidence 
        adduced at its hearing.
          (9) A witness may obtain a transcript copy of the 
        testimony such witness given at a public session or, if 
        given at an executive session, when authorized by the 
        Committee.

         Rule 10.--Procedures for Reporting Measures or Matters

    (a)
          (1) The Chairman shall report or cause to be reported 
        promptly to the House of Representatives any measure 
        approved by the Committee and to take or cause to be 
        taken all steps necessary to bring such measure to a 
        vote.
          (2) In any event, the Committee's report on a measure 
        that has been approved by the Committee shall be filed 
        within seven calendar days (excluding Saturdays, 
        Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in 
        session on such a day) after the day on which there has 
        been filed with the Clerk of the Committee a written 
        request, signed by a majority of the members of the 
        Committee, for the reporting of that measure. Upon the 
        filing of any such request, the Clerk of the committee 
        shall transmit immediately to the Chairman notice of 
        the filing of such request.
    (b)
          (1) No measure or recommendation shall be reported to 
        the House unless a majority of the Committee is 
        actually present.
          (2) With respect to each record vote on a motion to 
        report any measure or matter of a public character and 
        on any amendment offered to such measure or matter, the 
        total number of votes cast for and against, the names 
        of those members voting for and against, and the 
        specific votes of those members, whether for or 
        against, shall be included in the Committee report on 
        the measure or matter.
    (c) The Committee's report on a measure or matter that has 
been approved by the Committee shall include the matters 
required by clause 3(c) of rule XII of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives.
    (d) If, at the time any measure or matter is ordered 
reported by the Committee, any member of the Committee gives 
notice of intention to file supplemental, minority, additional, 
or dissenting views, that member shall be entitled to no fewer 
than two additional calendar days (not to include Saturdays or 
Sundays or legal holidays unless the House is in session on 
such a day) to file such views in writing and signed by such 
member with the Clerk of the Committee. All such views so filed 
by one or more members of the Committee shall be included 
within and shall be part of the Committee's report on such 
measure or matter. The Committee's report with respect to such 
measure or matter shall be produced electronically and be 
printed in a single volume (unless practicality requires 
additional volumes) that
          (1) Shall include all supplemental, minority, 
        additional, or dissenting views as far as practicable 
        in the form submitted by the time of the filing of the 
        report; and
          (2) Shall bear upon its cover a recital that any such 
        supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
        (and any material submitted under paragraph (c), above) 
        are included as part of the report. This subparagraph 
        does not preclude
                  i. The immediate filing or printing of a 
                Committee report unless timely request for the 
                opportunity to file supplemental, minority, 
                additional, or dissenting views has been made 
                as provided in paragraph (c), above;
                  ii. The filing of any supplemental report 
                upon any measure or matter that may be required 
                for the correction of any technical error in a 
                previous report made by the Committee upon that 
                measure or matter.
          (3) Shall, when appropriate, contain the documents 
        required by clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
        the House of Representatives.
    (e) The Chairman is directed to offer a motion under clause 
1 of rule XXII of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
whenever the Chairman considers it appropriate. The Chairman 
shall notify the ranking minority member of his decision.
    (f) If the Committee has held hearings on a measure or 
matter to be considered in the House, the Committee shall make 
every reasonable effort to have such hearings published and 
available to members of the House prior to such consideration.
    (g) The Chairman may designate any majority member of the 
Committee to manage time during the consideration of a bill or 
resolution by the House.

                     Rule 11.--Committee Oversight

    (a) The Committee shall conduct oversight of matters within 
the jurisdiction of the Committee in accordance with clauses 2 
and 4 of rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (b) Pursuant to clause 2(d) of rule X of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, the Committee shall no later than 
March 1 adopt at a meeting open to the public and with a quorum 
present its Authorization and Oversight plan for that Congress.

     Rule 12.--Review of Continuing Programs; Budget Act Provisions

    (a) The Committee shall, in its consideration of all bills 
and joint resolutions of public character within its 
jurisdiction, ensure that appropriation for continuing programs 
and activities of the Federal Government will be made annually 
to the maximum extent feasible and consistent with the nature, 
requirement, and objectives of the programs and activities 
involved.
    (b) The Committee shall review from time to time each 
continuing program within its jurisdictions for which 
appropriations are not made annually in order to ascertain 
whether such program could be modified so that appropriations 
therefore would be made annually.
    (c) In accordance with clause 4(f)(1) of rule X of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives, the Committee shall 
submit to the Committee on the Budget
          (1) Its views and estimates with respect to all 
        matters to be set forth in the concurrent resolution on 
        the budget for the ensuing fiscal year that are within 
        its jurisdiction or functions; and
          (2) An estimate of the total amounts of new budget 
        authority and budget outlays resulting thereform, to be 
        provided or authorized in all bills and resolutions 
        within its jurisdiction that it intends to be effective 
        during that fiscal year.
    (d) Whenever the Committee is directed in a concurrent 
resolution on the budget to determine and recommend changes in 
laws, bills, or resolutions under the reconciliation process, 
it shall promptly make such determination and recommendations 
and report a reconciliation bill or resolution (or both) to the 
House of Representatives or submit such recommendations to the 
Committee on the Budget in accordance with the Congressional 
Budget Act of 1974.

               Rule 13.--A Transparent and Open Committee

    (a) The Chairman shall maintain an official Committee 
website for the purpose of furthering the Committee's 
legislative and oversight responsibilities and other 
activities, including communicating information about the 
Committee's activities to members of the Committee, to other 
members of the House of Representatives, and to the public. The 
ranking minority member may maintain a similar website for the 
same purpose, including communicating information about the 
activities of the minority members to members of the Committee, 
to other members of the House of Representatives, and to the 
public.
    (b) The coverage of Committee proceedings shall be 
permitted and conducted only in strict conformity with the 
following:
          (1) The purpose of the provisions of this Paragraph 
        (b) is to provide a means, in conformity with 
        acceptable standards of dignity, propriety, and 
        decorum, by which Committee proceedings that are open 
        to the public may be covered by audio and visual 
        means--
                  i. For the education, enlightenment, and 
                information of the general public, on the basis 
                of accurate and impartial news coverage, 
                regarding the operations, procedures, and 
                practices of the House as a legislative and 
                representative body, and regarding the 
                measures, public issues, and other matters 
                before the House and its committees, the 
                consideration thereof, and the action taken 
                thereof; and
                  ii. For the development of the perspective 
                and understanding of the general public with 
                respect to the role and function of the House 
                under the Constitution as an institution of the 
                Federal Government.
          (2) Whenever any hearing or meeting conducted by the 
        Committee is open to the public, those proceedings 
        shall be open to coverage by audio and visual means 
        (including other means, such as those that may be 
        suggested by accessibility best practices, upon 
        approval by the Chairman) as provided in rule XI, 
        clause 4 of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
        and subject to the limitations therein.
                  i. The Committee may not limit the number of 
                television or still cameras to fewer than two 
                representatives from each medium (except for 
                legitimate space or safety considerations, in 
                which case pool coverage shall be authorized).
          (3) Pursuant to clause 4(b) of rule XI of the Rules 
        of the House of Representatives, no audio or video 
        recordings of Committee proceedings may be used or made 
        available for any partisan political campaign purpose.
          (4) Pursuant to clause 4(c) of rule XI of the Rules 
        of the House of Representatives, the general conduct of 
        each Committee proceeding covered under authority of 
        this Rule and the personal behavior of Committee 
        members and staff, other Government officials and 
        personnel, witnesses television, radio, and press media 
        personnel, and the general public at the hearing, shall 
        be in strict conformity with and observance of the 
        applicable standards of dignity, propriety, courtesy, 
        and decorum traditionally observed by the House in its 
        operations, and may not be such as to--
                  i. Distort the objects and purposes of the 
                hearing or other meeting or the activities of 
                Committee members in connection with that 
                hearing or meeting or in connection with the 
                general work of the Committee or of the House; 
                or
                  ii. Cast discredit or dishonor on the House, 
                the Committee, or a Member, Delegate, or 
                Resident Commissioner or bring the House, the 
                Committee, or a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
                Commissioner into disrepute.
          (5) If audio or visual coverage of Committee 
        proceedings is to be presented to the public as live 
        coverage, that coverage shall be conducted without 
        commercial sponsorship.
          (6) The allocation among the television media of the 
        positions or the number of television cameras permitted 
        by the Chairman in a Committee hearing or meeting room 
        shall be in accordance with fair and equitable 
        procedures devised by the Executive Committee of the 
        Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (7) Television cameras shall be placed so as not to 
        obstruct in any way the space between a witness giving 
        evidence or testimony and any member of the Committee 
        or the visibility of that witness and that member to 
        each other.
          (8) Television cameras shall operate from fixed 
        positions but may not be placed in positions that 
        obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing or 
        meeting by the other media.
          (9) Equipment necessary for coverage by the 
        television and radio media may not be installed in, or 
        removed from, the Committee hearing or meeting room 
        while the Committee is in session.
          (10)
                  i. Except as provided in subsubparagraph 
                (ii), below, floodlights, spotlights, 
                strobelights, and flashguns may not be used in 
                providing any method of coverage of Committee 
                proceedings.
                  ii. Pursuant to approval by the Chairman, the 
                television media may install additional 
                lighting in the Committee's rooms, without cost 
                to the Government, in order to raise the 
                ambient lighting level to the lowest level 
                necessary to provide adequate television 
                coverage of Committee proceedings at the 
                current state of the art for television 
                coverage.
          (11) If requests are made by more of the media than 
        will be permitted by the Chairman for coverage of a 
        hearing or meeting by still photography, that coverage 
        shall be permitted on the basis of a fair and equitable 
        pool arrangement devised by the Standing Committee of 
        Press Photographers.
          (12) Photographers may not position themselves 
        between the witness table and the members of the 
        Committee at any time during the course of a Committee 
        proceeding.
          (13) Photographers may not place themselves in 
        positions that obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of 
        the hearing by the other media.
          (14) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media shall be currently accredited to the 
        Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (15) Personnel providing coverage by still 
        photography shall be currently accredited to the Press 
        Photographer's Gallery.
          (16) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media and by still photographer shall conduct 
        themselves and their coverage activities in an orderly 
        and unobtrusive manner.

                       Rule 14.--Committee Staff

    (a) The staff of the Committee on House Administration 
shall be appointed as follows
          (1) The staff shall be appointed by the Chairman 
        except as provided in subparagraph (2), below, may be 
        removed by the Chairman, and shall work under the 
        general supervision and direction of the Chairman.
          (2) All staff provided to the minority party members 
        of the Committee shall be appointed by the ranking 
        minority member, may be removed by the ranking minority 
        member of the Committee, and shall be under the general 
        supervision and direction of such member.
          (3) The appointment of all professional staff shall 
        be subject to the approval of the Committee as provided 
        by and subject to the provisions of clause 9 of rule X 
        of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
          (4) The Chairman shall fix the compensation of all 
        staff of the Committee (including following 
        consultation with the ranking minority member of the 
        Committee for the staff provided to the minority party 
        members) within the budget approved for such purposes 
        by the Committee.
    (b) The Chairman is authorized to appoint the Clerk of the 
Committee (and such deputies or assistants as the Chairman in 
his discretion determines may be necessary) to perform the 
required and usual duties on behalf of the Committee.
          (1) Upon such appointment, the Chairman shall inform 
        the Committee.
          (2) Further, the Chairman is authorized to appoint an 
        acting Clerk of the Committee to perform the required 
        and usual duties of the Clerk of the Committee on 
        behalf of the Committee until a permanent clerk is 
        named.
    (c) The Chairman is authorized to appoint the 
Parliamentarian of the Committee (and such deputies or 
assistants as the Chairman in his discretion determines may be 
necessary) to perform the required and usual duties on behalf 
of the Committee.
          (1) Upon such appointment, the Chairman shall inform 
        the Committee.
          (2) Further, the Chairman is authorized to appoint an 
        acting Parliamentarian of the Committee to perform the 
        required and usual duties of the Parliamentarian of the 
        Committee on behalf of the Committee until a permanent 
        parliamentarian is named.

                 Rule 15.--Travel of Members and Staff

    (a) Consistent with the primary expense resolution and such 
additional expense resolutions as may have been approved, the 
provisions of this rule 15 shall govern travel of Committee 
members and staff.
    (b) Travel for any member of or staff to the Committee 
shall be paid only upon the prior authorization of the Chairman 
or his designee.
    (c) The Chairman may authorize travel for any such 
individual in connection with attendance at hearings, meetings, 
or other proceedings conducted by the Committee and meetings, 
conferences, and investigations which involve activities or 
subject matter under the general jurisdiction of the Committee. 
Before such authorization is granted there shall be submitted 
to the Chairman in writing the following information:
          (1) The purpose of the travel;
          (2) The dates during which the travel will occur;
          (3) The locations to be visited and the length of 
        time to be spent in each; and
          (4) The names of members and staff seeking 
        authorization.
    (d)
          (1) The Chairman must provide prior authorization in 
        the case of travel outside the United States by members 
        or staff of the Committee for the purpose of conducting 
        Committee business involving activities or subject 
        matter under the legislative or oversight assignment of 
        the Committee.
          (2) Before such authorization is given, there shall 
        be submitted to the Chairman, in writing, a request for 
        such authorization. Such requests shall be filed in a 
        manner that allows for a reasonable period of time for 
        review before such travel is scheduled to begin, shall 
        include the following information:
                  i. The purpose of the travel;
                  ii. The dates during which the travel will 
                occur;
                  iii. The locations, including country names, 
                to be visited and the length of time to be 
                spent in each;
                  iv. An agenda of anticipated activities for 
                each country for which travel is authorized 
                together with a description of the purpose to 
                be served and the areas of committee 
                jurisdiction involved; and
                  v. The names of members and staff for whom 
                authorization is sought.
          (3) At the conclusion of any Committee business 
        outside of the United States authorized by this rule 
        15, the members and staff attending such Committee 
        business shall submit to the Chairman a written report 
        of their activities and other pertinent observations or 
        information gained as a result of such travel.
    (e) During any authorized travel on official business 
authorized by the Committee, members and staff of shall be 
governed by all applicable law, the Rules of the House of 
Representatives, the Rules of the Committee, and any applicable 
resolutions or regulations of the House of Representatives or 
the Committee.

                         Rule 16.--Depositions

    (a) Subject to Paragraph (c), below, and pursuant to 
Section (k) of House Res. 5 and regulations promulgated by the 
Committee on Rules, the Chairman may, upon consultation with 
the ranking minority member, authorize the taking of 
depositions, including pursuant to subpoena, and designate a 
member of or counsel to the Committee to conduct such 
depositions.
          (1) Notices for the taking of depositions shall 
        specify the date, time, and place of examination. 
        Depositions shall be taken under oath administered by a 
        member of the Committee authorized by these Rules to 
        administer oaths. Depositions may continue from day to 
        day.
          (2) Consultation with the ranking minority member 
        shall include three days' notice before any deposition 
        is taken. All members of the Committee shall also 
        receive three days' written notice that a deposition 
        will be taken, except in exigent circumstances. For the 
        purposes of these procedures, a day shall not include 
        Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day.
          (3) Witness may be accompanied at a deposition by two 
        designated personal, nongovernmental attorneys to 
        advise them of their rights. Only members of the 
        Committee, Committee staff designated by the Chairman 
        or the ranking minority member, an official reporter, 
        the witness, and the witness' two designated attorneys 
        are permitted to attend. Other persons, including 
        government agency personnel, may not attend.
          (4) The Chairman may designate a deposition as part 
        of a joint investigation between committees, and, in 
        that case, provide notice of the deposition to the 
        members of the committees. If such a designation is 
        made, the chair and ranking minority member of the 
        additional committee(s) may designate committee staff 
        to attend pursuant to subparagraph (3), above. Members 
        and designated staff may attend and ask questions as 
        set forth below.
          (5) A deposition shall be conducted by any member or 
        committee counsel designated by the chair or ranking 
        minority member of the committee that noticed the 
        deposition. When depositions are conducted by committee 
        counsel, there shall be no more than two committee 
        counsel permitted to question a witness per round. One 
        of the committee counsel shall be designated by the 
        chair and the other by the ranking minority member per 
        round.
          (6) Deposition questions shall be propounded in 
        rounds. The length of each round shall not exceed 60 
        minutes per side and shall provide equal time to the 
        majority and the minority. In each round, the member(s) 
        or committee counsel designated by the chair shall ask 
        questions first, and the member(s) or committee counsel 
        designated by the ranking minority member shall ask 
        questions second.
          (7) Objections must be stated concisely and in a non-
        argumentative and non-suggestive manner. A witness' 
        attorney may not instruct a witness to refuse to answer 
        a question, except to preserve a privilege. In the 
        event of professional, ethical, or other misconduct by 
        the witness' attorney during the deposition, the 
        Committee may take any appropriate disciplinary action. 
        The witness may refuse to answer a question only to 
        preserve a privilege. When the witness has refused to 
        answer a question to preserve a privilege, members or 
        staff
                  i. Proceed with the deposition; or
                  ii. Either at that time or at a subsequent 
                time, seek a ruling from the Chairman either by 
                telephone or otherwise.
    If the Chairman overrules any such objection and thereby 
orders a witness to answer any question to which an objection 
was lodged, the witness shall be ordered to answer. If a member 
of the Committee chooses to appeal the ruling of the Chairman, 
such appeal must be made within three days, in writing, and 
shall be preserved for Committee consideration. The Committee's 
ruling on appeal shall be filed with the Clerk of the Committee 
and shall be provided to the members of the Committee and 
witness no fewer than three days before the reconvened 
deposition.
    A deponent who refuses to answer a question after being 
directed to answer by the Chairman may be subject to sanction, 
except that no sanction may be imposed if the ruling of the 
Chairman is reversed by the Committee on appeal.
          (8) The Chairman shall ensure that the testimony is 
        either transcribed or electronically recorded or both. 
        If a witness' testimony is transcribed, the witness or 
        the witness' attorney shall be afforded an opportunity 
        to review a copy. No later than five days after the 
        witness has been notified of the opportunity to review 
        the transcript, the witness may submit suggested 
        changes to the Chairman. Committee staff may make any 
        typographical and technical changes. Substantive 
        changes, modifications, clarifications, or amendments 
        to the deposition transcript submitted by the witness 
        must be accompanied by a letter signed by the witness 
        requesting the changes and a statement of the witness' 
        reasons for each proposed change. Any substantive 
        changes, modifications, clarifications, or amendments 
        shall be included as an appendix to the transcript 
        conditioned upon the witness signing the transcript.
          (9) The transcriber shall certify that the transcript 
        is a true record of the testimony, and the transcript 
        shall be filed, together with any electronic record, 
        with the Clerk of the Committee in Washington, D.C. 
        Depositions shall be considered to have been taken in 
        Washington, D.C., as well as the location actually 
        taken once filed with the Clerk of the Committee for 
        the Committee's use. The Chairman and the ranking 
        minority member shall be provided with a copy of the 
        transcripts of the deposition at the same time.
          (10) The Chairman and ranking minority member shall 
        consult regarding the release of deposition testimony, 
        transcripts, or recordings, and portions thereof. If 
        either objects in writing to a proposed release of 
        deposition testimony, transcript, or recording, or a 
        portion thereof, the matter shall be promptly referred 
        to the Committee for resolution.
    (b) The regulations described in Paragraph (a), above, are 
incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. A copy 
of such regulations in effect as of the date of the Committee's 
adoption of these rules is printed above solely for convenience 
but shall in no way control in the event of a conflict with the 
regulations adopted by the Committee on Rules. Further, should 
the Committee on Rules adopt changes to such regulations or new 
regulations pertaining to this subject matter, such regulations 
shall immediately and without intervening action be made part 
of the Committee rules by this reference as if fully set forth 
herein, replacing the previous version. In such case, adoption 
by the Committee on Rules shall be sufficient notice to all 
members of the Committee of this change.

           Rule 17.--Number and Jurisdiction of Subcommittees

    (a) There shall be three standing subcommittees with party 
membership ratios as indicated.
    (b) Except as may be noted, each subcommittee shall have 
jurisdiction as stated by the Committee rules, may conduct 
oversight over such subject matter, and may consider 
legislation as may be referred to it by the Chairman.
    (c) The names, jurisdictions, and membership ratios of the 
subcommittees are as follows:
          (1) Subcommittee on Elections
                  i. Matters relating to federal elections and 
                such other matters as may be referred to the 
                subcommittee.
                  ii. Four majority party members and two 
                minority party members.
          (2) Subcommittee on Oversight
                  i. Matters relating to congressional 
                security, accountability of the legislative 
                branch security and safety apparatus, 
                legislative branch operations, and such other 
                matters as may be referred to the subcommittee.
                  ii. Four majority party members and two 
                minority party members.
          (3) Subcommittee on Modernization
                  i. Matters relating to modernization of the 
                House of Representatives and the Legislative 
                Branch and such other matters as may be 
                referred to the subcommittee.
                  ii. Two majority party members and two 
                minority party members.
    (d) The Chairman may establish additional subcommittees, 
including standing, special, and select subcommittees, as well 
as task forces and panels, each with ratios of membership 
appropriate for its work, to operate pursuant to jurisdiction 
assigned by the Chairman and for the period of time determined 
by the Chairman, which may be for the remainder of the 
Congress, in all cases as the Chairman determines appropriate. 
Following such an action, the Chairman shall inform the full 
Committee.

           Rule 18.--Referral of Legislation to Subcommittees

    (a) The Chairman may refer legislation or other matters to 
subcommittees according to their jurisdiction or otherwise as 
the Chairman considers appropriate. The Chairman may discharge 
any subcommittee of any matter referred to it.

              Rule 19.--Powers and Duties of Subcommittees

    (a) Subcommittees are authorized to meet, to hold hearings, 
to receive evidence, to mark up legislation referred to them, 
and to report to the full committee on all matters referred to 
them.
    (b) No subcommittee shall meet during any full Committee 
meeting, hearing, or other proceeding.

               Rule 20.--Other Procedures and Regulations

    (a) The Chairman may establish such other procedures and 
take such actions as may be necessary to carry out the 
responsibilities of the Committee or to facilitate its 
effective operation.
    (b) The Chairman may direct staff of the Committee to make 
any necessary technical or conforming changes to these rules 
without intervening Committee action. In all cases, the 
Chairman shall cause the most current version of the Rules to 
be available to members of the Committee.
                       Committee on the Judiciary

    JIM JORDAN, Ohio, Chairman

JERROLD NADLER, New York,            DARRELL ISSA, California
  Ranking Member                     KEN BUCK, Colorado
ZOE LOFGREN, California              MATT GAETZ, Florida
SHEILA JACKSON LEE, Texas            ANDY BIGGS, Arizona
STEVE COHEN, Tennessee               TOM McCLINTOCK, California
HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., GeorgiaOMAS P. TIFFANY, Wisconsin
ADAM B. SCHIFF, California           THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky
ERIC SWALWELL, California            CHIP ROY, Texas
TED LIEU, California                 DAN BISHOP, North Carolina
PRAMILA JAYAPAL, Washington          VICTORIA SPARTZ, Indiana
J. LUIS CORREA, California           SCOTT FITZGERALD, Wisconsin
MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania       CLIFF BENTZ, Oregon
JOE NEGUSE, Colorado                 BEN CLINE, Virginia
LUCY MCBATH, Georgia                 LANCE GOODEN, Texas
MADELEINE DEAN, Pennsylvania         JEFFERSON VAN DREW, New Jersey
VERONICA ESCOBAR, Texas              TROY E. NEHLS, Texas
DEBORAH K. ROSS, North Carolina      BARRY MOORE, Alabama
CORI BUSH, Missouri                  KEVIN KILEY, California
GLENN IVEY, Maryland                 HARRIET M. HAGEMAN, Wyoming
BECCA BALINT, Vermont                NATHANIEL MORAN, Texas
                                     LAUREL M. LEE, Florida
                                     WESLEY HUNT, Texas
                                     RUSSELL FRY, South Carolina

     RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 1, 2023)


                               Rule I.--

    The Rules of the House of Representatives are the rules of 
the Committee on the Judiciary and its Subcommittees with the 
following specific additions thereto.

                      Rule II.--Committee Meetings

    (a) The regular meeting day of the Committee on the 
Judiciary for the conduct of its business shall be on Wednesday 
of each week while the House is in session.
    (b) Additional meetings may be called by the Chair and a 
regular meeting of the Committee may be dispensed with when, in 
the judgment of the Chair, there is no need therefor.
    (c) The Chair shall furnish each Member of the Committee or 
Subcommittee with the date, place, and a list of bills and 
subjects to be considered at a Committee or Subcommittee 
meeting, which may not commence earlier than the third day on 
which Members have notice thereof (excluding Saturdays, Sundays 
and legal holidays when the House is not in session).
    (d) At least 48 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, the text of such 
legislation shall be made publicly available in electronic 
form.
    (e) In an emergency that does not reasonably allow for the 
notice as requirements in (c) and (d), the Chair may waive the 
notice requirements with the concurrence of the Ranking 
Minority Member.
    (f) To the maximum extent practicable, amendments to a 
measure or matter shall be submitted in writing or 
electronically to the designee of both the Chair and Ranking 
Member at least 24 hours prior to the consideration of the 
measure or matter. The Chair may give priority to amendments 
submitted in advance.
    (g) At the start of each meeting, the Chair, or the Chair's 
designee, may lead the Committee in the Pledge of Allegiance to 
the Flag, in accordance with Section 4 of Title 4, United 
States Code.
    (h) Committee and Subcommittee meetings for the transaction 
of business, i.e. meetings other than those held for the 
purpose of taking testimony, shall be open to the public except 
when the Committee or Subcommittee determines by majority vote 
to close the meeting because disclosure of matters to be 
considered would endanger national security, would compromise 
sensitive law enforcement information, or would tend to defame, 
degrade or incriminate any person or otherwise would violate 
any law or rule of the House.
    (i) Every motion made to the Committee and entertained by 
the Chair shall be reduced to writing upon demand of any 
Member, and a copy made available to each Member present.
    (j) All amendments or any other material offered or 
submitted by any Member, including motions reduced to writing 
pursuant to a demand under paragraph (h), shall be emailed to 
[email protected]. All items submitted shall be in 
.pdf format.
    (k) For purposes of taking any action at a meeting of the 
full Committee or any Subcommittee thereof for which a majority 
is not required, a quorum shall be constituted by the presence 
of not less than one-third of the Members of the Committee or 
Subcommittee, respectively.
    (l)(1) Subject to subparagraph (2), the Chair may postpone 
further proceedings when a record vote is ordered on the 
question of approving any measure or matter or adopting an 
amendment. The Chair may resume proceedings on a postponed 
request at any time.
    (2) In exercising postponement authority under subparagraph 
(1), the Chair shall take all reasonable steps necessary to 
notify Members on the resumption of proceedings on any 
postponed record vote.
    (3) When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.
    (m) Transcripts of markups shall be recorded and may be 
published in the same manner as hearings before the Committee.
    (n) Without further action of the Committee, the Chair is 
directed to offer a motion under clause 1 of rule XXII of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives whenever the Chair 
considers it appropriate.

                          Rule III.--Hearings

    (a) The Committee Chair or any Subcommittee Chair shall 
make public announcement of the date, place, and subject matter 
of any hearing to be conducted by it on any measure or matter 
at least one week before the commencement of that hearing. If 
the Chair of the Committee, or Subcommittee, with the 
concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member, determines there is 
good cause to begin the hearing sooner, or if the Committee or 
Subcommittee so determines by majority vote, a quorum being 
present for the transaction of business, the Chair or 
Subcommittee Chair shall make the announcement at the earliest 
possible date.
    (b) At the start of each hearing, the Chair, any 
Subcommittee Chair, or their designee may lead the Committee or 
Subcommittee, respectively, in the Pledge of Allegiance to the 
Flag, in accordance with Section 4 of Title 4, United States 
Code.
    (c) Committee and Subcommittee hearings shall be open to 
the public except when the Committee or Subcommittee determines 
by majority vote to close the hearing because disclosure of 
matters to be considered would endanger national security, 
would compromise sensitive law enforcement information, or 
would tend to defame, degrade or incriminate any person or 
otherwise would violate any law or rule of the House.
    (d) For purposes of taking testimony and receiving evidence 
before the Committee or any Subcommittee, a quorum shall be 
constituted by the presence of two Members.
    (e) In the course of any hearing each Member shall be 
allowed five minutes for the interrogation of a witness until 
such time as each Member who so desires has had an opportunity 
to question the witness.
    (f) Every motion made to the Committee and entertained by 
the Chair shall be reduced to writing upon demand of any 
Member, and a copy made available to each Member present.
    (g) All material offered or submitted by any Member, 
including motions reduced to writing pursuant to a demand under 
paragraph (e), shall be emailed to 
[email protected]. All items submitted shall be in 
.pdf format.
    (h) The transcripts of those hearings conducted by the 
Committee which are decided to be printed shall be published in 
verbatim form, with the material requested for the record 
inserted at that place requested, or at the end of the record, 
as appropriate. Individuals, including Members of Congress, 
whose comments are to be published as part of a Committee 
document shall have five legislative days following the hearing 
to verify the accuracy of the transcription in advance of 
publication. Individuals, including Members of Congress, whose 
comments are to be published as part of a Committee document 
may review the accuracy of the transcription in the Committee 
office. Any requests by those Members, staff or witnesses to 
correct any errors other than errors in the transcription, or 
disputed errors in transcription, shall be appended to the 
record, and the appropriate place where the change is requested 
will be footnoted.
    (i) Prior to approval by the Chair of hearings conducted 
jointly with another congressional Committee, a memorandum of 
understanding may be prepared that specifies, to the extent 
possible, any deviation from rule III of the Committee rules, 
and incorporates an agreement for the publication of the 
verbatim transcript. The Chair shall provide any such 
memorandum of understanding to the Ranking Minority Member 
prior to the commencement of such hearing.

                          Rule IV.--Subpoenas

    (a) A subpoena may be authorized and issued by the Chair, 
in accordance with clause 2(m) of rule XI of the House of 
Representatives, in the conduct of any investigation or 
activity or series of investigations or activities within the 
jurisdiction of the Committee, following consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member.
    (b) In addition, a subpoena may be authorized and issued by 
the Committee or its Subcommittees in accordance with clause 
2(m) of rule XI of the House of Representatives, in the conduct 
of any investigation or activity or series of investigations or 
activities, when authorized by a majority of the Members 
voting, a majority of the Committee or Subcommittee being 
present. Authorized subpoenas shall be signed by the Chair or 
by any Member designated by the Committee.
    (c) At least one calendar day before issuing any subpoena 
pursuant to subsection (a), the Chair shall consult with the 
Ranking Minority Member regarding the authorization and 
issuance of such subpoena and shall provide a draft copy of the 
proposed subpoena, including a draft of any proposed document 
schedule, at that time.
    (d) The Chair may waive the requirements of subsection (c) 
in the event of an emergency that does not reasonably allow for 
advance written notice, including, but not limited to, when a 
witness who is voluntarily before the Committee refuses to 
answer a question.

                         Rule V.--Broadcasting

    Whenever a hearing or meeting conducted by the Committee or 
any Subcommittee is open to the public, those proceedings shall 
be open to coverage by television, radio and still photography 
subject to the requirements of clause 4 of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.

                        Rule VI.--Subcommittees

    (a) The full Committee shall have jurisdiction over such 
matters as determined by the Chair, and relevant oversight.
    (b) There shall be six standing Subcommittees of the 
Committee on the Judiciary, with jurisdictions as follows:
    The Subcommittee on the Constitution and Limited Government 
shall have jurisdiction over the following subject matters: 
constitutional rights, constitutional amendments, Federal civil 
rights, claims against the United States, Federal charters of 
incorporation, non-immigration private claims bills, ethics in 
government, tort liability, including medical malpractice and 
product liability, legal reform generally, other appropriate 
matters as referred by the Chair, and relevant oversight.
    The Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the 
Internet shall have jurisdiction over the following subject 
matters: administration of U.S. Courts, Legal Services 
Corporation, Federal Rules of Evidence, Civil and Appellate 
Procedure, judicial ethics, patent and trademark law, 
copyright, information technology, other appropriate matters as 
referred by the Chair, and relevant oversight.
    The Subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government 
Surveillance shall have jurisdiction over the following subject 
matters: Federal Criminal Code, drug policy, sentencing, parole 
and pardons, internal and homeland security, Federal Rules of 
Criminal Procedure, prisons, criminal law enforcement, and 
other appropriate matters as referred by the Chair, and 
relevant oversight.
    The Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and 
Enforcement shall have jurisdiction over the following subject 
matters: immigration and naturalization, border security, 
admission of refugees, treaties, conventions and international 
agreements, private immigration bills, non-border immigration 
enforcement, other appropriate matters as referred by the 
Chair, and relevant oversight.
    The Subcommittee on the Administrative State, Regulatory 
Reform, and Antitrust shall have jurisdiction over the 
following subject matters: the antitrust laws and competition 
policy, bankruptcy and commercial law, bankruptcy judgeships, 
Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, administrative law, the 
Administrative Conference of the United States, state taxation 
affecting interstate commerce, interstate compacts, other 
appropriate matters as referred by the Chair, and relevant 
oversight.
    The Subcommittee on Responsiveness and Accountability to 
Oversight shall have jurisdiction over the responsiveness of 
agencies, departments, and entities to oversight requests of 
the Committee and any Subcommittee of the Committee and the 
operations of their congressional liaisons or offices of 
legislative affairs, with respect to the necessity or 
desirability of enacting, changing, or repealing any 
legislation within the jurisdiction of the Committee.
    (c) Pursuant to House Resolution 12, 118th Congress, there 
shall be one select Subcommittee of the Committee on the 
Judiciary, with jurisdiction as follows:
    The Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal 
Government shall have such jurisdiction as set forth in House 
Resolution 12.
    (d) The Chair of the Committee and Ranking Minority Member 
thereof shall be ex officio Members, but not voting Members, of 
each standing Subcommittee to which such Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member has not been assigned by resolution of the 
Committee. Ex officio Members shall not be counted as present 
for purposes of constituting a quorum at any hearing or meeting 
of such standing Subcommittee.

             Rule VII.--Powers and Duties of Subcommittees

    Each Subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold hearings, 
receive evidence, and report to the full Committee on all 
matters referred to it or under its jurisdiction. Subcommittee 
chairs shall set dates for hearings and meetings of their 
respective Subcommittees after consultation with the Chair and 
other Subcommittee chairs with a view toward avoiding 
simultaneous scheduling of full Committee and Subcommittee 
meetings or hearings whenever possible.

                  Rule VIII.--Non-Legislative Reports

    No report of the Committee or Subcommittee which does not 
accompany a measure or matter for consideration by the House 
shall be published unless all Members of the Committee or 
Subcommittee issuing the report shall have been apprised of 
such report and given the opportunity to give notice of 
intention to file supplemental, additional, or dissenting views 
as part of the report. In no case shall the time in which to 
file such views be less than three calendar days (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays when the House is not in 
session).

                      Rule IX.--Committee Records

    The records of the Committee at the National Archives and 
Records Administration shall be made available for public use 
according to the Rules of the House. The Chair shall notify the 
Ranking Minority Member of any decision to withhold a record 
otherwise available, and the matter shall be presented to the 
Committee for a determination on the written request of any 
Member of the Committee.

                  Rule X.--Official Committee Website

    (a) The Chair shall maintain an official website on behalf 
of the Committee for the purpose of furthering the Committee's 
legislative and oversight responsibilities, including 
communicating information about the Committee's activities to 
Committee Members and other Members of the House.
    (b) The Chair shall make the record of the votes on any 
question on which a record vote is demanded in the full 
Committee available on the Committee's official website not 
later than 48 hours after such vote is taken. Such record shall 
identify or describe the amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition, the name of each Member voting for and each Member 
voting against such amendment, motion, order, or proposition, 
and the names of the Members voting present.
    (c) Not later than 24 hours after the adoption of any 
amendment to a measure or matter considered by the Committee or 
its Subcommittees, the Chair shall make the text of each such 
amendment publicly available in electronic form.
    (d) Not later than 48 hours after the disposition or 
withdrawal of any other amendment to a measure or matter 
considered by the Committee or its Subcommittees, the Chair 
shall make the text of each such amendment publicly available 
in electronic form.
    (e) Not later than 3 days after the conclusion of a 
Committee meeting, the transcript of such meeting and the text 
of all amendments offered shall be made available on the 
Committee website.
    (f) The Ranking Member is authorized to maintain a similar 
official website on behalf of the Committee Minority for the 
same purpose, including communicating information about the 
activities of the Minority to Committee Members and other 
Members of the House.

                         Rule XI.--Depositions

    Pursuant to section 3(k) of House Resolution 5, 118th 
Congress, the Chair may order the taking of depositions, 
including by subpoena. Section 3(k) of House Resolution 5 and 
the Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority shall 
govern depositions conducted by the Committee on the Judiciary 
and its Subcommittees, and are reproduced herein.
    House Resolution 5, section 3:
    (k) Deposition Authority.--
          (1) In general.--During the One Hundred Eighteenth 
        Congress, the chair of a standing committee (other than 
        the Committee on Rules), and the chair of the permanent 
        Select Committee on Intelligence, upon consultation 
        with the ranking minority member of such committee, may 
        order the taking of depositions, including pursuant to 
        subpoena, by a member or counsel of such committee.
          (2) Regulations.--Depositions taken under the 
        authority prescribed in this subsection shall be 
        subject to regulations issued by the chair of the 
        Committee on Rules and printed in the Congressional 
        Record.
          (3) Persons permitted to attend depositions.--
        Deponents may be accompanied at a deposition by two 
        designated personal, nongovernmental attorneys to 
        advise them of their rights. Only members, committee 
        staff designated by the chair or ranking minority 
        member, an official reporter, the witness, and the 
        witness's two designated attorneys are permitted to 
        attend. Other persons, including government agency 
        personnel, may not attend.
    Regulations for the use of Deposition Authority:
    1. Notices for the taking of depositions shall specify the 
date, time, and place of examination. Depositions shall be 
taken under oath administered by a member or a person otherwise 
authorized to administer oaths. Depositions may continue from 
day to day.
    2. Consultation with the ranking minority member shall 
include three days' notice before any deposition is taken. All 
members of the committee shall also receive three days written 
notice that a deposition will be taken, except in exigent 
circumstances. For purposes of these procedures, a day shall 
not include Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when 
the House is in session on such a day.
    3. Witnesses may be accompanied at a deposition by two 
designated personal, nongovernmental attorneys to advise them 
of their rights. Only members, committee staff designated by 
the chair or ranking minority member, an official reporter, the 
witness, and the witness's two designated attorneys are 
permitted to attend. Other persons, including government agency 
personnel, may not attend.
    4. The chair of the committee noticing the deposition may 
designate that deposition as part of a joint investigation 
between committees, and in that case, provide notice to the 
members of the committees. If such a designation is made, the 
chair and ranking minority member of the additional 
committee(s) may designate committee staff to attend pursuant 
to regulation 3. Members and designated staff of the committees 
may attend and ask questions as set forth below.
    5. A deposition shall be conducted by any member or 
committee counsel designated by the chair or ranking minority 
member of the Committee that noticed the deposition. When 
depositions are conducted by committee counsel, there shall be 
no more than two committee counsel permitted to question a 
witness per round. One of the committee counsel shall be 
designated by the chair and the other by the ranking minority 
member per round.
    6. Deposition questions shall be propounded in rounds. The 
length of each round shall not exceed 60 minutes per side and 
shall provide equal time to the majority and the minority. In 
each round, the member(s) or committee counsel designated by 
the chair shall ask questions first, and the member(s) or 
committee counsel designated by the ranking minority member 
shall ask questions second.
    7. Objections must be stated concisely and in a non-
argumentative and nonsuggestive manner. A witness's attorney 
may not instruct a witness to refuse to answer a question, 
except to preserve a privilege. In the event of professional, 
ethical, or other misconduct by the witness's attorney during 
the deposition, the Committee may take any appropriate 
disciplinary action. The witness may refuse to answer a 
question only to preserve a privilege. When the witness has 
refused to answer a question to preserve a privilege, members 
or staff may (i) proceed with the deposition, or (ii) either at 
that time or at a subsequent time, seek a ruling from the Chair 
either by telephone or otherwise. If the Chair overrules any 
such objection and thereby orders a witness to answer any 
question to which an objection was lodged, the witness shall be 
ordered to answer. If a member of the committee chooses to 
appeal the ruling of the chair, such appeal must be made within 
three days, in writing, and shall be preserved for committee 
consideration. The Committee's ruling on appeal shall be filed 
with the clerk of the Committee and shall be provided to the 
members and witness no less than three days before the 
reconvened deposition. A deponent who refuses to answer a 
question after being directed to answer by the chair may be 
subject to sanction, except that no sanctions may be imposed if 
the ruling of the chair is reversed by the committee on appeal.
    8. The Committee chair shall ensure that the testimony is 
either transcribed or electronically recorded or both. If a 
witness's testimony is transcribed, the witness or the 
witness's attorney shall be afforded an opportunity to review a 
copy. No later than five days after the witness has been 
notified of the opportunity to review the transcript, the 
witness may submit suggested changes to the chair. Committee 
staff may make any typographical and technical changes. 
Substantive changes, modifications, clarifications, or 
amendments to the deposition transcript submitted by the 
witness must be accompanied by a letter signed by the witness 
requesting the changes and a statement of the witness's reasons 
for each proposed change. Any substantive changes, 
modifications, clarifications, or amendments shall be included 
as an appendix to the transcript conditioned upon the witness 
signing the transcript.
    9. The individual administering the oath, if other than a 
member, shall certify on the transcript that the witness was 
duly sworn. The transcriber shall certify that the transcript 
is a true record of the testimony, and the transcript shall be 
filed, together with any electronic recording, with the clerk 
of the committee in Washington, DC. Depositions shall be 
considered to have been taken in Washington, DC, as well as the 
location actually taken once filed there with the clerk of the 
committee for the committee's use. The chair and the ranking 
minority member shall be provided with a copy of the 
transcripts of the deposition at the same time.
    10. The chair and ranking minority member shall consult 
regarding the release of deposition testimony, transcripts, or 
recordings, and portions thereof. If either objects in writing 
to a proposed release of a deposition testimony, transcript, or 
recording, or a portion thereof, the matter shall be promptly 
referred to the committee for resolution.
    11. A witness shall not be required to testify unless the 
witness has been provided with a copy of section 3(k) of H. 
Res. 5, 118th Congress, and these regulations.
                     Committee on Natural Resources

    BRUCE WESTERMAN, Arkansas, 
             Chairman

RAUL M. GRIJALVA, Arizona            DOUG LAMBORN, Colorado
  Ranking Member                     ROBERT J. WITTMAN, Virginia
GRACE F. NAPOLITANO, California      TOM McCLINTOCK, California
GREGORIO KILILI CAMACHO SABLAN, Northern Mariana Islandsona
JARED HUFFMAN, California            GARRET GRAVES, Louisiana
RUBEN GALLEGO, Arizona               AUMUA AMATA COLEMAN RADEWAGEN, 
JOE NEGUSE, Colorado                 American Samoa
MIKE LEVIN, California               DOUG LAMALFA, California
KATIE PORTER, California             DANIEL WEBSTER, Florida
TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ, New Mexico   JENNIFFER GONZALEZ-COLON, Puerto 
MELANIE A. STANSBURY, New Mexico     Rico
MARY SATTLER PELTOLA, Alaska         RUSS FULCHER, Idaho
ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ, New York   PETE STAUBER, Minnesota
KEVIN MULLIN, California             JOHN R. CURTIS, Utah
VAL T. HOYLE, Oregon                 THOMAS P. TIFFANY, Wisconsin
SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, California     JERRY L. CARL, Alabama
SETH MAGAZINER, Rhode Island         MATTHEW M. ROSENDALE, Sr., Montana
NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York         LAUREN BOEBERT, Colorado
ED CASE, Hawaii                      CLIFF BENTZ, Oregon
DEBBIE DINGELL, Michigan             JENNIFER A. KIGGANS, Virginia
SUSIE LEE, Nevada                    JAMES C. MOYLAN, Guam
                                     WESLEY HUNT, Texas
                                     MIKE COLLINS, Georgia
                                     ANNA PAULINA LUNA, Florida
                                     JOHN S. DUARTE, California
                                     HARRIET M. HAGEMAN, Wyoming

   RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 1, 2023)


                Rule 1.--Rules of the House; Vice Chairs

    (a) Applicability of House Rules.--
          (1) The Rules of the House of Representatives, so far 
        as they are applicable, are the Rules of the Committee 
        on Natural Resources (hereinafter in these rules 
        referred to as the ``Committee'') and its 
        Subcommittees.
          (2) Each Subcommittee is part of the Committee and is 
        subject to the authority, direction and rules of the 
        Committee. References in these rules to ``Committee'' 
        and ``Chair'' shall apply to each subcommittee and its 
        Chair wherever applicable.
          (3) House rule XI is incorporated and made a part of 
        the rules of the Committee to the extent applicable.
    (b) Vice Chair.--Unless inconsistent with other rules, the 
Chair shall designate a Vice Chair of the Committee and appoint 
Vice Chairs of the Subcommittees. If the Chair of the Committee 
or Subcommittee is not present at any meeting of the Committee 
or Subcommittee, as the case may be, the Vice Chair shall 
preside. If the Vice Chair is not present, the Ranking Member 
of the Majority party on the Committee or Subcommittee who is 
present, or the Chair's designee, shall preside at that 
meeting.

                      Rule 2.--Meetings In General

    (a) Scheduled Meetings.--The Committee shall meet at 10 
a.m. the first Wednesday of each month when the House is in 
session if so noticed by the Chair under Committee rule 3(a). 
The Committee shall also meet at the call of the Chair subject 
to advance notice to all Members of the Committee. Special 
meetings shall be called and convened by the Chair as provided 
in clause 2(c)(1) of House rule XI. Any Committee meeting or 
hearing that conflicts with a party caucus, conference, or 
similar party meeting shall be rescheduled at the discretion of 
the Chair, in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member. 
The Committee may not sit during a joint session of the House 
and Senate or during a recess when a joint meeting of the House 
and Senate is in progress.
    (b) Open Meetings.--Each meeting for the transaction of 
business, including the markup of legislation, and each hearing 
of the Committee or a Subcommittee shall be open to the public, 
except as provided by clause 2(g) and clause 2(k) of House rule 
XI.
    (c) Broadcasting.--Whenever a meeting for the transaction 
of business, including the markup of legislation, or a hearing 
is open to the public, that meeting or hearing shall be open to 
coverage by audio and visual recordings in accordance with 
clauses 2(a)(1) and 4 of House rule IX. The provisions of 
clause 4(f) of House rule XI are specifically made part of 
these rules by reference. To the maximum extent practicable, 
the Committee shall provide audio and visual coverage of each 
hearing or meeting for the transaction of business in a manner 
that allows the public to easily listen to and view the 
proceedings, and maintain the recordings of such coverage in a 
manner that is easily accessible to the public. Operation and 
use of any Committee internet broadcast system shall be fair, 
and nonpartisan, and in accordance with clause 4(b) of House 
rule XI and all other applicable rules of the Committee and the 
House.
    (d) Authorization and Oversight Plan.--No later than March 
1 of the first session of each Congress, the Committee shall 
prepare and submit its authorization and oversight plan for 
that Congress in accordance with clause 2(d) of House rule X.

           Rule 3.--Meeting and Hearing Procedures in General

    (a) Notice and Information for Members and the Public.--
          (1) The Chair shall publicly announce the date, place 
        and subject matter of a Committee hearing or meeting in 
        accordance with clause 2(g)(3) of House rule XI.
          (2) A hearing or meeting may begin sooner if the 
        Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
        Member, determines that there is good cause to begin 
        the meeting or hearing sooner, or if the Committee so 
        determines by majority vote. In these cases, the Chair 
        shall publicly announce the meeting or hearing at the 
        earliest possible time. The Committee shall promptly 
        notify the Daily Digest Clerk of the Congressional 
        Record and shall promptly make publicly available in 
        electronic form the appropriate information as soon as 
        possible after the public announcement is made.
          (3) To the extent practicable, a background 
        memorandum prepared by the Majority staff summarizing 
        the major provisions of any bill being considered by 
        the Committee, including the need for the bill and its 
        effect on current law, will be available for the 
        Members of the Committee and the public no later than 
        48 hours before the meeting.
    (b) Public Availability of Markup Text.--At least 24 hours 
prior to the markup of any legislation (or at the time of an 
announcement under paragraph (a)(2) above made within 24 hours 
before such meeting), the Chair shall cause the text of such 
legislation to be made publicly available in electronic form.
    (c) Meetings and Hearings to Begin Promptly.--Each meeting 
or hearing of the Committee shall begin promptly at the time 
stipulated in the public announcement of the meeting or 
hearing.
    (d) Addressing the Committee.--A Committee Member may 
address the Committee or a Subcommittee on any bill, motion, or 
other matter under consideration or may question a witness at a 
hearing only when recognized by the Chair for that purpose. The 
time a Member may address the Committee or Subcommittee for any 
purpose or to question a witness shall be limited to five 
minutes, except as provided in Committee rule 4(f), and except 
that the Chair may extend this time period equally for the 
majority and minority party for the purpose of Members 
questioning a witness who requires an interpreter. In 
recognizing Members to question witnesses, the Chair shall take 
into consideration the ratio of the Majority to Minority 
Members present and shall establish the order of recognition 
for questioning in a manner so as not to disadvantage the 
Members of the Majority or the Members of the Minority. Members 
shall limit remarks to the subject matter under consideration.
    (e) Quorums.--
          (1) A majority of the Members of the Committee shall 
        constitute a quorum for the reporting of any measure or 
        recommendation, the authorizing of a subpoena under 
        Committee rule 4(d); the closing of any meeting or 
        hearing to the public under clause 2(g)(1), clause 
        2(g)(2)(A) and clause 2(k)(5)(B) of House rule XI; and 
        the releasing of executive session materials under 
        clause 2(k)(7) of House rule XI. Testimony and evidence 
        may be received at any hearing at which there are at 
        least two Members of the Committee present. For the 
        purpose of transacting all other business of the 
        Committee, one-third of the Members shall constitute a 
        quorum.
          (2) When a call of the roll is required to ascertain 
        the presence of a quorum, the offices of all Members 
        shall be notified, and the Members shall have not less 
        than 15 minutes to prove their attendance. The Chair 
        shall have the discretion to waive this requirement 
        when a quorum is actually present or whenever a quorum 
        is secured and may direct the Director of Legislative 
        Operations or their designee to note the names of all 
        Members present within the 15-minute period.
    (f) Participation of Members in Committee and 
Subcommittees.--
          (1) Any Member of the Committee may sit with any 
        Subcommittee during any meeting or hearing, and by 
        unanimous consent of the Members of the Subcommittee 
        may participate in such meeting or hearing. However, a 
        Member who is not a Member of the Subcommittee may not 
        vote on any matter before the Subcommittee, be counted 
        for purposes of establishing a quorum, or raise points 
        of order.
          (2) Any Member of the House who is not a Member of 
        the Committee may sit with the full Committee or any 
        Subcommittee during any meeting or hearing, and by 
        unanimous consent of the Members of the Committee or 
        Subcommittee may participate in such meeting or 
        hearing. Unless otherwise provided by unanimous 
        consent, such participation includes but is not limited 
        to the right to seek recognition, to submit materials 
        for the record as described in Committee rule 3(o), and 
        to introduce a constituent witness as described in 
        Committee rule 4(f)(1). However, a Member of the House 
        who is not a Member of the Committee may not vote on 
        any matter, be counted for purposes of establishing a 
        quorum, raise points of order, or offer motions.
    (g) Proxies.--No vote in the Committee or its Subcommittees 
may be cast by proxy.
    (h) Recorded Votes.--Recorded votes shall be ordered on the 
demand of one-fifth of the Members present, or by any Member in 
the apparent absence of a quorum.
    (i) Postponed Recorded Votes.--
          (1) Subject to paragraph (2), the Chair may, after 
        consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, postpone 
        further proceedings when a recorded vote is ordered on 
        the question of approving any measure or matter or 
        adopting an amendment. The Chair shall resume 
        proceedings on a postponed request at any time after 
        reasonable notice, but no later than the next meeting 
        day.
          (2) Notwithstanding any intervening order for the 
        previous question, when proceedings resume on a 
        postponed question under paragraph (1), an underlying 
        proposition shall remain subject to further debate or 
        amendment to the same extent as when the question was 
        postponed.
          (3) This rule shall apply to Subcommittee 
        proceedings.
    (j) Privileged Motions.--A motion to recess from day to 
day, a motion to recess subject to the call of the Chair 
(within 24 hours), and a motion to dispense with the first 
reading (in full) of a bill or resolution if printed or 
electronic copies are available and have been properly 
circulated by the Director of Legislative Operations or their 
designee, are nondebatable motions of high privilege.
    (k) Layover and Copy of Bill.--No measure or recommendation 
reported by a Subcommittee shall be considered by the Committee 
until two calendar days from the time of Subcommittee action. 
No bill shall be considered by the Committee unless a copy has 
been delivered to the office of each Member of the Committee 
requesting a copy. These requirements may be waived by a 
majority vote of the Committee at the time of consideration of 
the measure or recommendation.
    (l) Access to Dais and Conference Room.--Access to the 
hearing rooms' daises (and to the conference rooms adjacent to 
the Committee hearing rooms) shall be limited to Members of 
Congress and employees of the Committee during a meeting or 
hearing of the Committee, except that Committee Members' 
personal staff may be present on the daises if their employing 
Member is the author of a bill or amendment under consideration 
by the Committee, but only during the time that the bill or 
amendment is under active consideration by the Committee.
    (m) Cellular Telephones and other Electronic Devices.--
During a meeting or hearing of the Committee, ringing or 
audible sounds or conversational use of cellular telephones or 
other electronic devices is prohibited on the Committee dais or 
in the Committee hearing rooms.
    (n) Motion to go to Conference with the Senate.--The Chair 
may offer a motion under clause 1 of House rule XXII whenever 
the Chair considers it appropriate.
    (o) Materials for Record.--Other than witness questions for 
the hearing record, materials must be submitted within 10 
business days following the last day of the hearing or meeting. 
Witness questions for the hearing record must be submitted to 
the Director of Legislative Operations or their designee within 
3 business days following the last day of the hearing. The 
materials submitted must address the subject matter of the 
hearing or meeting. Only a Member of the Committee (including a 
Member participating as provided in Committee rule 3(f)) or an 
invited witness may submit materials for inclusion in the 
hearing or meeting record.

                       Rule 4. Hearing Procedures

    (a) Written Statement; Oral Testimony.--Witnesses who are 
to appear before the Committee or a Subcommittee shall file 
with the Director of Legislative Operations or their designee, 
at least two business days before the day of their appearance, 
a written statement of their proposed testimony, including to 
the extent practicable English translations of any portions not 
in English. Witnesses shall limit their oral presentation to a 
five-minute summary of the written statement, unless the Chair, 
in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, extends this 
time period. Subject to the approval of the Committee, the 
Chair may waive oral testimony of any witness who has submitted 
written testimony for the record. Any witness appearing before 
the Committee shall remain available for questioning by the 
Committee, unless excused by the Chair. In addition, a witness 
appearing in a nongovernmental capacity shall file such 
disclosure materials required by clause 2(g)(5) of House rule 
XI. Any witness appearing in a nongovernmental capacity shall 
also disclose any current or pending litigation that involves 
the Federal Government. Failure to comply with these disclosure 
requirements may result in the exclusion of the written 
testimony from the hearing record and/or the barring of an oral 
presentation of the testimony. Disclosure materials may be 
signed electronically.
    (b) Minority Witnesses.--When any hearing is conducted by 
the Committee or any Subcommittee upon any measure or matter, 
the Minority party Members on the Committee or Subcommittee 
shall be entitled, upon request to the Chair by a majority of 
those Minority Members before the completion of the hearing, to 
call witnesses selected by the Minority to testify with respect 
to that measure or matter during at least one day of hearings 
thereon.
    (c) Information for Members.--After announcement of a 
hearing, the Committee shall make available as soon as 
practicable to all Members of the Committee a tentative witness 
list and to the extent practicable the Majority staff shall 
make publicly available a memorandum explaining the subject 
matter of the hearing (including relevant legislative reports 
and other necessary material). In addition, the Chair shall 
make available to the Members of the Committee any official 
reports from departments and agencies on the subject matter as 
they are received.
    (d) Subpoenas.--
          (1) The Chair of the Committee may authorize and 
        issue a subpoena under clause 2(m) of House rule XI.
          (2) The Committee may authorize and issue a subpoena 
        under clause 2(m) of House rule XI if authorized by a 
        majority of the Members voting.
          (3) Subpoenas shall be signed only by the Chair of 
        the Committee. Subpoenas may be served by any person 
        designated by the Chair.
    (e) Oaths.--The Chair of the Committee, the Chairs of the 
Subcommittees, or any Member designated by the Chair may 
administer oaths to any witness before the Committee. All 
witnesses appearing in hearings may be administered the 
following oath by the Chair or his designee prior to receiving 
the testimony: ``Do you solemnly swear or affirm, under penalty 
of law, that the testimony that you are about to give is the 
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you 
God?''
    (f) Opening Statements; Questioning of Witnesses.--
          (1) Opening Statements may be made by the Chair and 
        the Ranking Member or their designee. Such Statements 
        shall be limited to five minutes in length. If a 
        witness scheduled to testify at any hearing of the 
        Committee is a constituent of a Member of the Committee 
        (including a Member participating under Committee rule 
        3(f)), that Member may be recognized for up to 30 
        seconds to briefly introduce the witness at the 
        hearing.
          (2) The questioning of witnesses in Committee and 
        Subcommittee hearings may be initiated by the Chair, 
        followed by the Ranking Minority Member and all other 
        Members alternating between the Majority and Minority 
        parties. In recognizing Members to question witnesses, 
        the Chair shall take into consideration the ratio of 
        the Majority to Minority Members present and shall 
        establish the order of recognition for questioning in a 
        manner so as not to disadvantage the Members of the 
        Majority or the Members of the Minority. A motion is in 
        order to allow designated Majority and Minority party 
        Members to question a witness for a specified period to 
        be equally divided between the Majority and Minority 
        parties. This period shall not exceed one hour in the 
        aggregate.
    (g) Claims of Privilege.--Claims of common-law privileges 
made by witnesses in hearings, or by interviewees or deponents 
in investigations or inquiries, are applicable only at the 
discretion of the Chair, subject to appeal to the Committee.

                  Rule 5. Filing of Committee Reports

    (a) Duty of Chair.--Whenever the Committee authorizes the 
favorable reporting of a measure from the Committee, the Chair 
or the Chair's designee shall report the same to the House of 
Representatives and shall take all steps necessary to secure 
its passage without any additional authority needing to be set 
forth in the motion to report each individual measure. In 
appropriate cases, the authority set forth in this rule shall 
extend to moving in accordance with the Rules of the House of 
Representatives that the House be resolved into the Committee 
of the Whole House on the State of the Union for the 
consideration of the measure; and to moving in accordance with 
the Rules of the House of Representatives for the disposition 
of a Senate measure that is substantially the same as the House 
measure as reported. Subject to the approval of the Chair and 
the Ranking Minority Member, staff may make necessary technical 
and conforming changes to measures that the Committee has 
authorized to be reported favorably.
    (b) Filing.--A report on a measure that has been approved 
by the Committee shall be filed within seven calendar days 
(exclusive of days on which the House of Representatives is not 
in session) after the day on which there has been filed with 
the relevant Full Committee staff a written request, signed by 
a majority of the Members of the Committee, for the reporting 
of that measure. Upon the filing with the relevant Full 
Committee staff of this request, the staff shall transmit 
immediately to the Chair notice of the filing of that request.
    (c) Supplemental, Additional, Dissenting, or Minority 
Views.--Any Member may, if notice is given by any Member at the 
time a measure or matter is approved by the Committee, file 
supplemental, additional, dissenting, or minority views. These 
views must be in writing and signed by each Member joining 
therein and be filed with the Committee Chief Counsel not less 
than two additional calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays 
and legal holidays except when the House is in session on those 
days) of the time the bill or resolution is approved by the 
Committee. This paragraph shall not preclude the filing of any 
supplemental report on any measure or matter that may be 
required for the correction of any technical error in a 
previous report made by the Committee on that bill or 
resolution.
    (d) Review by Members.--Each Member of the Committee shall 
be given an opportunity to review each proposed Committee 
report before it is filed with the Clerk of the House of 
Representatives. Nothing in this paragraph extends the time 
allowed for filing supplemental, additional, dissenting, or 
minority views under paragraph (c).
    (e) Disclaimer.--All Committee or Subcommittee reports 
printed and not approved by a majority vote of the Committee or 
Subcommittee, as appropriate, shall contain the following 
disclaimer on the cover of the report: ``This report has not 
been officially adopted by the (Committee on Natural Resources) 
(Subcommittee) and therefore may not necessarily reflect the 
views of its Members.''

 Rule 6. Establishment of Subcommittees; Full Committee Jurisdiction; 
                             Bill Referrals

    (a) Subcommittees.--There shall be five standing 
Subcommittees of the Committee, with the following jurisdiction 
and responsibilities:
Subcommittee on Federal Lands
          (1) Measures and matters related to the National Park 
        System and its units, including Federal reserved water 
        rights.
          (2) The National Wilderness Preservation System.
          (3) Wild and Scenic Rivers System, National Trails 
        System, national heritage areas and other national 
        units established for protection, conservation, 
        preservation or recreational development, other than 
        coastal barriers.
          (4) Military parks and battlefields, national 
        cemeteries administered by the Secretary of the 
        Interior, parks in and within the vicinity of the 
        District of Columbia and the erection of monuments to 
        the memory of individuals.
          (5) Federal and non-Federal outdoor recreation plans, 
        programs and administration including the Land and 
        Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 and the Outdoor 
        Recreation Act of 1963.
          (6) Preservation of prehistoric ruins and objects of 
        interest on the public domain and other historic 
        preservation programs and activities, including 
        national monuments, historic sites and programs for 
        international cooperation in the field of historic 
        preservation.
          (7) Matters concerning the following agencies and 
        programs: Urban Parks and Recreation Recovery Program, 
        Historic American Buildings Survey, Historic American 
        Engineering Record, and U.S. Holocaust Memorial.
          (8) Public lands generally, including measures or 
        matters relating to entry, easements, withdrawals, 
        grazing, and Federal reserved water rights.
          (9) Forfeiture of land grants and alien ownership, 
        including alien ownership of mineral lands.
          (10) Cooperative efforts to encourage, enhance, and 
        improve international programs for the protection of 
        the environment and the conservation of natural 
        resources otherwise within the jurisdiction of the 
        Subcommittee.
          (11) Forest reservations, including management 
        thereof, created from the public domain.
          (12) Public forest lands generally, including 
        measures or matters related to entry, easements, 
        withdrawals, grazing, and Federal reserved water 
        rights.
          (13) General and continuing oversight and 
        investigative authority over activities, policies, and 
        programs within the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee.

Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries

          (1) Generation and marketing of electric power from 
        Federal water projects by Federally chartered or 
        Federal regional power marketing authorities.
          (2) All measures and matters concerning water 
        resources planning conducted pursuant to the Water 
        Resources Planning Act, water resource research and 
        development programs, and saline water research and 
        development.
          (3) Compacts relating to the use and apportionment of 
        interstate waters, water rights, and major interbasin 
        water or power movement programs.
          (4) All measures and matters pertaining to irrigation 
        and reclamation projects and other water resources 
        development and recycling programs, including policies 
        and procedures.
          (5) Indian water rights and settlements.
          (6) Activities and programs of the Water Resources 
        and Ecosystem Mission Areas or their successors within 
        the U.S. Geological Survey.
          (7) The Endangered Species Act.
          (8) Fisheries management and fisheries research 
        generally, including the management of all commercial 
        and recreational fisheries (including the 
        reauthorization of the Magnuson Stevens Fishery 
        Conservation and Management Act), interjurisdictional 
        fisheries, international fisheries agreements, 
        aquaculture, seafood safety, and fisheries promotion.
          (9) All matters pertaining to the protection of 
        coastal and marine environments, estuarine protection, 
        and coastal barriers.
          (10) Oceanography.
          (11) Ocean engineering, including materials, 
        technology, and systems.
          (12) Marine sanctuaries.
          (13) U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.
          (14) All matters regarding Antarctica within the 
        Committee's jurisdiction.
          (15) Sea Grant programs and marine extension 
        services.
          (16) Cooperative efforts to encourage, enhance and 
        improve international programs for the protection of 
        the environment and the conservation of natural 
        resources otherwise within the jurisdiction of the 
        Subcommittee.
          (17) Coastal zone management.
          (18) Wildlife resources, including research, 
        restoration, and conservation.
          (19) Measures and matters related to the U.S. Fish 
        and Wildlife Service, including ecological services, 
        fish and aquatic conservation, international affairs, 
        migratory birds, national wildlife refuge system, 
        wildlife and sport fish restoration, and the Lacey Act.
          (20) General and continuing oversight and 
        investigative authority over activities, policies, and 
        programs within the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee.

Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources

          (1) Planning for and development of energy from solar 
        and wind resources on land belonging to the United 
        States, including the outer Continental Shelf.
          (2) All matters and measures affecting geothermal 
        resources.
          (3) Marine hydrokinetic energy development on the 
        outer Continental Shelf.
          (4) All matters related to the leasing, development, 
        and conservation of fossil fuel resources belonging to 
        the United States, including on the outer Continental 
        Shelf and land where the surface is owned by entities 
        other than the United States, including decommissioning 
        of relevant facilities and reclamation of affected 
        areas.
          (5) Mitigation of energy and mining related impacts 
        on Federal lands and resources.
          (6) Terrestrial and geological sequestration of 
        carbon dioxide, except for matters involving 
        implementation of land or forestry management 
        strategies.
          (7) All measures and matters concerning the Office of 
        Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.
          (8) All measures and matters concerning the U.S. 
        Geological Survey, except for the activities and 
        programs of the Water Resources and Ecosystem Mission 
        Areas or their successors.
          (9) Collection and management of energy and mineral 
        revenues.
          (10) Mining interests generally, including all 
        matters involving mining regulation and enforcement, 
        including the reclamation of mined lands, the 
        environmental effects of mining, mineral land laws and 
        claims, long-range mineral programs, and seabed mining.
          (11) Conservation of United States uranium supply.
          (12) Geospatial data collection and management, 
        except for nautical charts (or data collected by the 
        National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration).
          (13) Helium supply and management of the Federal 
        helium program.
          (14) Rights-of-way over public lands for pipeline 
        transportation of oil, natural gas, carbon dioxide, 
        helium, and hydrogen.
          (15) Measures and matters concerning the 
        transportation of natural gas from or within Alaska and 
        disposition of oil transported by the trans-Alaska oil 
        pipeline.
          (16) Cooperative efforts to encourage, enhance and 
        improve international programs for the protection of 
        the environment and the conservation of natural 
        resources otherwise within the jurisdiction of the 
        Subcommittee.
          (17) Rights-of-way over public lands for energy-
        related transmission.
          (18) All matters relating to mineral withdrawals on 
        public lands and public forest lands.
          (19) General and continuing oversight and 
        investigative authority over activities, policies, and 
        programs within the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee.

Subcommittee on Indian and Insular Affairs

          (1) All matters related to the Federal trust 
        responsibility to Native Americans and the sovereignty 
        of Native Americans.
          (2) Measures relating to the welfare of Native 
        Americans, including management of Indian lands in 
        general and special measures relating to claims that 
        are paid out of Indian funds.
          (3) All matters regarding Native Alaskans.
          (4) All matters regarding the relations of the United 
        States with Native Americans and Native American 
        tribes, including special oversight functions under 
        House rule X.
          (5) All matters regarding Native Hawaiians.
          (6) All matters regarding insular areas of the United 
        States.
          (7) All measures or matters regarding the Freely 
        Associated States.
          (8) General and continuing oversight and 
        investigative authority over activities, policies, and 
        programs within the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee.

Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations

          (1) Primary and general oversight and investigative 
        authority on all activities, policies, and programs 
        within the jurisdiction of the Committee under House 
        rule X.
    (b) Full Committee.--The following measures and matters 
shall be retained at the Full Committee:
          (1) Environmental and habitat measures of general 
        applicability, including the National Environmental 
        Policy Act.
          (2) Cooperative efforts to encourage, enhance, and 
        improve international programs for the protection of 
        the environment and the conservation of natural 
        resources otherwise within the jurisdiction of the Full 
        Committee.
          (3) All other measures and matters retained by the 
        Full Committee, including those retained under 
        Committee rule 6(e).
          (4) General and continuing oversight and 
        investigative authority over activities, policies, and 
        programs within the jurisdiction of the Full Committee.
    (c) Ex-officio Members.--The Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee may serve as ex-officio Members of each 
standing Subcommittee to which the Chair or the Ranking 
Minority Member have not been assigned. Ex-officio Members 
shall have the right to fully participate in Subcommittee 
activities but may not vote and may not be counted in 
establishing a quorum.
    (d) Powers and Duties of Subcommittees.--Each Subcommittee 
is authorized to meet, hold hearings, receive evidence and 
report to the Committee on all matters within its jurisdiction. 
Each Subcommittee shall review and study on a continuing basis 
the application, administration, execution and effectiveness of 
those statutes, or parts of statutes, the subject matter of 
which is within that Subcommittee's jurisdiction; and the 
organization, operation, and regulations of any Federal agency 
or entity having responsibilities in or for the administration 
of such statutes, to determine whether these statutes are being 
implemented and carried out in accordance with the intent of 
Congress. Each Subcommittee shall review and study any 
conditions or circumstances indicating the need for enacting 
new or supplemental legislation within the jurisdiction of the 
Subcommittee. Each Subcommittee shall have general and 
continuing oversight and investigative authority over 
activities, policies, and programs within the jurisdiction of 
the Subcommittee.
    (e) Referral to Subcommittees; Recall.--
          (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2) and for those 
        measures or matters retained at the Full Committee, 
        every legislative measure or other matter referred to 
        the Committee shall be referred to the maximum extent 
        possible to the Subcommittee of jurisdiction within two 
        weeks of the date of its referral to the Committee. If 
        any measure or matter is within or affects the 
        jurisdiction of one or more Subcommittees the Chair may 
        refer that measure or matter simultaneously to two or 
        more Subcommittees for concurrent consideration or for 
        consideration in sequence subject to appropriate time 
        limits, or divide the matter into two or more parts and 
        refer each part to a Subcommittee.
          (2) The Chair, with the approval of a majority of the 
        Majority Members of the Committee, may refer a 
        legislative measure or other matter to a select or 
        special Subcommittee. A legislative measure or other 
        matter referred by the Chair to a Subcommittee may be 
        recalled from the Subcommittee for direct consideration 
        by the Full Committee, or for referral to another 
        Subcommittee, provided Members of the Committee receive 
        one-week's written notice of the recall and a majority 
        of the Members of the Committee do not object. In 
        addition, a legislative measure or other matter 
        referred by the Chair to a Subcommittee may be recalled 
        from the Subcommittee at any time by majority vote of 
        the Committee for direct consideration by the Full 
        Committee or for referral to another Subcommittee.
    (f) Consultation.--Each Subcommittee Chair shall consult 
with the Chair of the Full Committee prior to setting dates for 
Subcommittee meetings and hearings with a view toward avoiding 
whenever possible conflicting Committee and Subcommittee 
meetings and hearings.
    (g) Vacancy.--A vacancy in the membership of a Subcommittee 
shall not affect the power of the remaining Members to execute 
the functions of the Subcommittee.

         Rule 7.--Task Forces, Special or Select Subcommittees

    (a) Appointment.--The Chair of the Committee is authorized, 
after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, to appoint 
Task Forces, or special or select Subcommittees, to carry out 
the duties and functions of the Committee.
    (b) Ex-officio Members.--The Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee may serve as ex-officio Members of each 
Task Force, or special or select Subcommittee if they are not 
otherwise Members. Ex-officio Members shall have the right to 
fully participate in activities but may not vote and may not be 
counted in establishing a quorum.
    (c) Party Ratios.--The ratio of Majority Members to 
Minority Members, excluding ex-officio Members, on each Task 
Force, special or select Subcommittee shall be as close as 
practicable to the ratio on the Full Committee.
    (d) Temporary Resignation.--Members can temporarily resign 
their position on a Subcommittee to serve on a Task Force, 
special or select Subcommittee without prejudice to the 
Member's seniority on the Subcommittee.
    (e) Chair and Ranking Minority Member.--The Chair of any 
Task Force, or special or select Subcommittee shall be 
appointed by the Chair of the Committee. The Ranking Minority 
Member shall select a Ranking Minority Member for each Task 
Force, or standing, special or select Subcommittee.

                  Rule 8.--Recommendation of Conferees

    Whenever it becomes necessary to appoint conferees on a 
particular measure, the Chair shall recommend to the Speaker as 
conferees those Majority Members primarily responsible for the 
measure. Similarly, the Ranking Member shall recommend to the 
Minority Leader as conferees those Minority Members primarily 
responsible for the measure. The ratio of Majority Members to 
Minority Members recommended for conferences shall be no 
greater than the ratio on the Committee.

                       Rule 9.--Committee Records

    (a) Segregation of Records.--All Committee records shall be 
kept separate and distinct from the office records of 
individual Committee Members serving as Chairs or Ranking 
Minority Members. These records shall be the property of the 
House and all Members shall have access to them in accordance 
with clause 2(e)(2) of House rule XI.
    (b) Availability.--The Committee shall make available to 
the public for review at reasonable times in the Committee 
office transcripts of public meetings and hearings, except 
those that are unrevised or unedited and intended solely for 
the use of the Committee.
    (c) Archived Records.--Records of the Committee that are 
deposited with the National Archives shall be made available 
for public use pursuant to House rule VII. The Chair shall 
notify the Ranking Minority Member of any decision, pursuant to 
clause 3(b)(3) or clause 4 of House rule VII, to withhold, or 
to provide a time, schedule or condition for availability of, 
any record otherwise available. At the written request of any 
Member of the Committee, the matter shall be presented to the 
Committee for a determination and shall be subject to the same 
notice and quorum requirements for the conduct of business 
under Committee rule 3.
    (d) Records of Closed Meetings.--Notwithstanding the other 
provisions of this rule, no records of Committee meetings or 
hearings that were closed to the public pursuant to the Rules 
of the House of Representatives shall be released to the public 
unless the Committee votes to release those records in 
accordance with the procedure used to close the Committee 
meeting.
    (e) Classified Materials.--All classified materials shall 
be maintained in an appropriately secured location and shall be 
released only to authorized persons for review, who shall not 
remove the material from the Committee offices without the 
written permission of the Chair.
    (f) Committee Information Available for the Public.--As 
required by the Rules of the House of Representatives, the 
Chair shall cause to be made available publicly in electronic 
form the following:
          (1) a record of the votes on any question on which a 
        recorded vote is taken.
          (2) copies of all amendments adopted, voted down, or 
        withdrawn.
          (3) the rules of the Committee, once adopted, and any 
        amendments thereto, in accordance with clause 2(a)(2) 
        of House rule XI.
          (4) the statements required under clause 2(g)(5) of 
        House rule XI, with appropriate redactions to protect 
        the privacy of the witness.

                Rule 10.--Committee Budget and Expenses

    (a) Budget--At the beginning of each Congress, after 
consultation with the Chair of each Subcommittee and the 
Ranking Minority Member, the Chair shall present to the 
Committee for its approval a budget covering the funding 
required for staff, travel, and miscellaneous expenses.
    (b) Expense Resolution--Upon approval by the Committee of 
each budget, the Chair, acting pursuant to clause 6 of House 
rule X, shall prepare and introduce in the House a supporting 
expense resolution, and take all action necessary to bring 
about its approval by the Committee on House Administration and 
by the House of Representatives.
    (c) Amendments--The Chair shall report to the Committee any 
amendments to each expense resolution and any related changes 
in the budget.
    (d) Additional Expenses--Authorization for the payment of 
additional or unforeseen Committee expenses may be procured by 
one or more additional expense resolutions processed in the 
same manner as set out under this rule.
    (e) Monthly Reports--Copies of each monthly report prepared 
by the Chair for the Committee on House Administration that 
shows expenditures made during the reporting period and 
cumulative for the year, anticipated expenditures for the 
projected Committee program, and detailed information on 
travel, shall be available to each Member.

                       Rule 11.--Committee Staff

    (a) Rules and Policies--Committee staff are subject to the 
provisions of clause 9 of House rule X, as well as any written 
personnel policies the Committee may from time to time adopt.
    (b) Majority and Nonpartisan Staff--The Chair shall 
appoint, determine the remuneration of, and may remove, the 
legislative and administrative employees of the Committee not 
assigned to the Minority. The legislative and administrative 
staff of the Committee not assigned to the Minority shall be 
under the general supervision and direction of the Chair, who 
shall establish and assign the duties and responsibilities of 
Committee staff and delegate any authority the Chair determines 
appropriate.
    (c) Minority Staff--The Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee shall appoint, determine the remuneration of, and may 
remove, the legislative and administrative staff assigned to 
the Minority within the budget approved for those purposes. The 
legislative and administrative staff assigned to the Minority 
shall be under the general supervision and direction of the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee who may delegate any 
authority the Ranking Member determines appropriate.
    (d) Availability--The skills and services of all Committee 
staff shall be available to all Members of the Committee.

                       Rule 12.--Committee Travel

    In addition to any written travel policies the Committee 
may from time to time adopt, all travel of Members and staff of 
the Committee or its Subcommittees to hearings, meetings, 
conferences, and investigations, including all foreign travel, 
must be authorized by the Full Committee Chair prior to any 
public notice of the travel and prior to the actual travel. In 
the case of Minority staff, all travel shall first be approved 
by the Ranking Minority Member. Funds authorized for the 
Committee under clauses 6 and 7 of House rule X are for 
expenses incurred in the Committee's activities within the 
United States.

                  Rule 13.--Changes to Committee Rules

    The rules of the Committee may be modified, amended, or 
repealed by a majority vote of the Committee provided that 
written notice of the proposed change has been provided to each 
Member of the Committee prior to the meeting date on which the 
changes are to be discussed and voted on consistent with 
Committee rule 3(a). A change to the rules of the Committee 
shall be published in the Congressional Record no later than 30 
days after its approval and made publicly available in 
electronic form.

                       Rule 14.--Other Procedures

    The Chair may establish procedures and take actions as may 
be necessary to carry out the rules of the Committee or to 
facilitate the effective administration of the Committee, in 
accordance with the rules of the Committee and the Rules of the 
House of Representatives.

                     Rule 15.--Deposition Authority

    The Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority as 
issued by the Committee on Rules pursuant to H. Res. 5 titled--
Adopting the Rules of the House of Representatives for the One 
Hundred Eighteenth Congress, and for other purposes--are 
incorporated by reference and shall be considered the rules of 
the Committee.

                    Rule 16.--Forums and Roundtables

    (a) Generally--At the beginning of each forum or roundtable 
hosted by the Committee, the Member convening the forum or 
roundtable shall make the following statement: ``This event is 
not an official hearing or meeting of the House Committee on 
Natural Resources. Documents produced to support this forum may 
not necessarily reflect the views of the Committee or its 
Members.''
    (b) Disclaimer--All documents generated for the purpose of 
a Committee forum or roundtable shall contain the following 
disclaimer on the cover of the document: ``This document has 
not been officially adopted by the (Committee on Natural 
Resources) (Subcommittee) and therefore may not necessarily 
reflect the views of its Members.''

                Rule 17.--Member Day Hearing Requirement

    To the extent required by House rules, the Committee or 
each Subcommittee thereof (other than the Subcommittee on 
Oversight and Investigations) shall hold a hearing at which it 
receives testimony from Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
Commissioner on proposed legislation within its jurisdiction.
               Committee on Oversight and Accountability

  JAMES COMER, Kentucky, Chairman

JAMIE RASKIN, Maryland               JIM JORDAN, Ohio
ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON, District of ColumbiaL R. TURNER, Ohio
STEPHEN F. LYNCH, Massachusetts      PAUL A. GOSAR, Arizona
GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia         VIRGINIA FOXX, North Carolina
RAJA KRISHNAMOORTHI, Illinois        GLENN GROTHMAN, Wisconsin
RO KHANNA, California                GARY J. PALMER, Alabama
KWEISI MFUME, Maryland               CLAY HIGGINS, Louisiana
ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ, New York   PETE SESSIONS, Texas
KATIE PORTER, California             ANDY BIGGS, Arizona
CORI BUSH, Missouri                  NANCY MACE, South Carolina
JIMMY GOMEZ, California              JAKE LATURNER, Kansas
SHONTEL M. BROWN, Ohio               PAT FALLON, Texas
MELANIE A. STANSBURY, New Mexico     BYRON DONALDS, Florida
ROBERT GARCIA, California            KELLY ARMSTRONG, North Dakota
MAXWELL FROST, Florida               SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania
SUMMER L. LEE, Pennsylvania          WILLIAM R. TIMMONS IV, South 
GREG CASAR, Texas                    Carolina
JASMINE CROCKETT, Texas              TIM BURCHETT, Tennessee
DANIEL S. GOLDMAN, New York          MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE, Georgia
JARED MOSKOWITZ, Florida             LISA C. McCLAIN, Michigan
RASHIDA TLAIB, Michigan              LAUREN BOEBERT, Colorado
                                     RUSSELL FRY, South Carolina
                                     ANNA PAULINA LUNA, Florida
                                     CHUCK EDWARDS, North Carolina
                                     NICHOLAS A. LANGWORTHY, New York
                                     ERIC BURLISON, Missouri

 RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT AND ACCOUNTABILITY FOR THE 118TH 
                                CONGRESS


                     (As adopted January 31, 2023)


                            Rule 1.--General

    (a) Rules of the House. The Rules of the House are the 
rules of the Committee on Oversight and Accountability (``the 
Committee'') and its subcommittees so far as applicable.
    (b) Application of the Rules. Except where the terms ``the 
Committee'' and ``subcommittee'' are specifically referred to, 
the following rules shall apply to the Committee and its 
subcommittees as well as to their respective chairs, ranking 
minority members, members, and staff.

                           Rule 2.--Meetings

    (a) Regular Meetings. The regular meetings of the Committee 
shall be held on the second Thursday of each month at 10 a.m., 
when the House is in session. The Chair of the Committee is 
authorized to dispense with a regular meeting or to change the 
date thereof when circumstances warrant.
    (b) Additional and Special Meetings. The Chair of the 
Committee may call and convene additional meetings, when 
circumstances warrant. A special meeting of the Committee may 
be requested by members of the Committee pursuant to the 
provisions of House rule XI, clause 2(c)(2).
    (c) Subcommittee Meetings. Each subcommittee shall meet at 
the call of its chair, subject to Rule 7.
    (d) Presiding Member. The Chair of the Committee or a 
subcommittee shall preside over each meeting and hearing 
thereof (``the presiding member''). If the Chair of the 
Committee or a subcommittee is not present during a meeting or 
hearing thereof, the Vice Chair of the Committee or 
subcommittee, designated pursuant to House rule XI, clause 
2(d), shall serve as the presiding member during the absence of 
the Chair. If the Chair and Vice Chair of the Committee or a 
subcommittee are not present during a meeting or hearing 
thereof, the ranking member of the majority party on the 
Committee or subcommittee who is present shall serve as the 
presiding member during the absence of the Chair and Vice 
Chair.
    (e) Notice. The Chair of the Committee or a subcommittee 
shall announce the date, place, and subject matter of a meeting 
or hearing pursuant to House rule XI, clause 2(g)(3)(A).
    (f) Agenda. Every member of the Committee, unless prevented 
by unusual circumstances, shall be provided with a memorandum 
at least three calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal holidays, unless the House is in session on such days) 
before each meeting or hearing explaining: (1) the purpose of 
the meeting or hearing; and (2) the names, titles, background 
and reasons for appearance of any witnesses. The Ranking 
Minority Member shall be responsible for providing the same 
information on witnesses whom the minority may request.
    (g) Availability of Text. To the maximum extent 
practicable, amendments to a measure or matter shall be 
submitted in writing or electronically to the designee of the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or a 
subcommittee at least 24 hours prior to its consideration of 
the measure or matter. The Chair may exercise discretion to 
give priority to amendments submitted pursuant to this process.

                            Rule 3.--Quorums

    (a) Generally. A majority of the members of the Committee 
or a subcommittee shall form a quorum for the Committee or 
subcommittee, respectively, except that two members shall 
constitute a quorum for taking testimony and receiving 
evidence, and one third of the members shall form a quorum for 
taking any action other than for which the presence of a 
majority of the Committee or subcommittee is otherwise 
required.
    (b) Subcommittee Field Hearings. The Chair of the Committee 
may, at the request of a subcommittee chair, make a temporary 
assignment of any member of the Committee to such subcommittee 
for the purpose of constituting a quorum at and participating 
in any public hearing by such subcommittee to be held outside 
of Washington, DC. A member appointed to such temporary 
positions shall not be a voting member. The Chair of the 
Committee shall give reasonable notice of such temporary 
assignment to the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee and 
of the respective subcommittee.

                       Rule 4.--Committee Reports

    (a) Bills and Resolutions. Each bill or resolution approved 
by the Committee shall be reported by the Chair of the 
Committee pursuant to House rule XIII, clauses 2-4.
    (b) Approval of Investigative and Oversight Reports. Only 
those investigative or oversight reports approved by a majority 
vote of the Committee at a meeting at which a quorum is present 
may be ordered printed, unless otherwise required by the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.
    (c) Notice of Investigative and Oversight Reports. A 
proposed investigative or oversight report shall not be 
considered in the Committee unless the proposed report has been 
available to the members of the Committee for at least three 
calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
holidays, unless the House is in session on such days) before 
consideration of such proposed report in the Committee. If a 
hearing has been held on the matter reported upon, every 
reasonable effort shall be made to have such hearing printed 
and available to the members of the Committee before the 
consideration of the proposed report in the Committee.
    (d) Additional Views. If at the time of approval of a 
report, a member of the Committee gives notice of intent to 
file supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
any member of the Committee shall be entitled to file such 
views following House rule XI, clause 2(l) and rule XIII, 
clause 3(a)(1).

                         Rule 5.--Record Votes

    (a) Request for Record Vote. A record vote of the members 
may be had upon the request of any member upon approval of a 
one-fifth vote of the members present.
    (b) Postponement of a Record Vote. Pursuant to House rule 
XI, clause 2(h)(4), the presiding member at a meeting is 
authorized to postpone further proceedings when a record vote 
is ordered on the question of approving a measure or matter or 
on adopting an amendment and to resume proceedings on a 
postponed question at any time after reasonable notice. When 
proceedings resume on a postponed question, notwithstanding any 
intervening order for the previous question, an underlying 
proposition shall remain subject to further debate or amendment 
to the same extent as when the question was postponed. After 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, the Chair shall 
take reasonable steps to notify members on the resumption of 
proceedings on any postponed record vote.

                   Rule 6.--Subcommittees; Referrals

    (a)(1) There shall be five subcommittees of the Committee, 
with appropriate party ratios, as follows:
          (A) Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Information 
        Technology, and Government Innovation, which shall have 
        legislative and oversight jurisdiction over issues 
        related to information security, including 
        cybersecurity and privacy; government-wide federal 
        information technology management and innovation; and 
        procurement.
          (B) Subcommittee on Economic Growth, Energy Policy, 
        and Regulatory Affairs, which shall have legislative 
        and oversight jurisdiction over regulatory affairs, 
        including federal paperwork reduction and information 
        collections; population and demographic studies; labor 
        policies; and impediments to economic growth and job 
        creation.
          (C) Subcommittee on Government Operations and the 
        Federal Workforce, which shall have legislative and 
        oversight jurisdiction over the federal civil service, 
        including compensation, classification, and benefits; 
        federal property disposal; public information and 
        records, including the Freedom of Information Act, the 
        National Archives and Records Administration, and the 
        Presidential Records Act; government reorganizations 
        and operations, including transparency, performance, 
        grants management, and accounting measures generally; 
        and the relationship between the federal government to 
        the states and municipalities, including unfunded 
        mandates.
          (D) Subcommittee on Health Care and Financial 
        Services, which shall have oversight jurisdiction over 
        federal health care policy, food and drug safety, 
        federal entitlement programs, monetary policy, banking, 
        infrastructure, tax policy, and oversight and 
        legislative jurisdiction over the Office of National 
        Drug Control Policy.
          (E) Subcommittee on National Security, the Border, 
        and Foreign Affairs, which shall have oversight 
        jurisdiction over the U.S. borders, national security, 
        homeland security, foreign operations, immigration, 
        emergency management, and criminal justice.
    (2) In addition, each subcommittee shall have specific 
responsibility for such other measures or matters as the Chair 
of the Committee refers to it.
    (3) Each subcommittee with legislative jurisdiction shall 
review and study, on a continuing basis, the application, 
administration, execution, and effectiveness of those laws, or 
parts of laws, the subject matter of which is within its 
general responsibility.
    (b) Referrals. Bills, resolutions, and other matters may be 
expeditiously referred by the Chair of the Committee to 
subcommittees, as appropriate in the determination of the Chair 
of the Committee, for consideration or investigation in 
accordance with subcommittees' jurisdictions. Bills, 
resolutions, and other matters referred to subcommittees may be 
re-referred or discharged by the Chair of the Committee when, 
in the judgment of the Chair, the subcommittee is not able to 
complete its work or cannot reach agreement therein.
    (c) Membership. The Chair of the Committee shall assign 
members to the subcommittees and shall designate the chair and 
vice-chair of each subcommittee. Minority party assignments, 
including designation of the ranking minority member of each 
subcommittee, shall be made only with the concurrence of the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee.
    (d) Ex Officio Membership. The Chair of the Committee and 
the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee shall be ex 
officio members of all subcommittees. They are authorized to 
vote on subcommittee matters; but, unless they are regular 
members of the subcommittee, they shall not be counted in 
determining a subcommittee quorum other than a quorum for 
taking testimony.

          Rule 7.--Subcommittee Hearing and Meeting Procedure

    (a) Generally. Each subcommittee is authorized to meet, 
hold hearings, receive testimony, markup legislation, and 
report to the Committee on any measure or matter referred to 
it.
    (b) During Committee Meetings and Hearings. No subcommittee 
may meet or hold a hearing at the same time as a meeting or 
hearing of the Committee.
    (c) Scheduling. Each subcommittee chair shall set hearing 
and meeting dates only with the approval of the Chair of the 
Committee with a view toward assuring the availability of 
meeting rooms and avoiding simultaneous scheduling of meetings 
or hearings.
    (d) Participation. At the discretion of the Chair of the 
Committee, members of the Committee may participate in 
subcommittee and select subcommittee hearings and other 
proceedings.

                             Rule 8.--Staff

    (a) Employment Authority. Except as otherwise provided by 
House rule X, clauses 6, 7 and 9, the Chair of the Committee 
shall have the authority to hire and discharge employees of the 
professional and clerical staff of the Committee and 
subcommittees.
    (b) Duties. Except as otherwise provided by House rule X, 
clauses 6, 7 and 9, the staff of the Committee and 
subcommittees shall be subject to the direction of the Chair of 
the Committee and shall perform such duties as the Chair of the 
Committee may assign.

                           Rule 9.--Hearings

    (a) Generally. Hearings shall be conducted according to the 
procedures in House rule XI, clause 2(k). The Chair of the 
Committee or subcommittee shall make an opening statement as 
set forth in House rule XI, clause 2(k)(1). In addition, the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or subcommittee may 
make an opening statement. All questions put to witnesses 
before the Committee or a subcommittee shall be relevant to the 
subject matter before the Committee or subcommittee for 
consideration, and the presiding member shall rule on the 
relevance of any question put to a witness.
    (b) Recognition and Order of Questioning. A member may 
question witnesses only when recognized by the presiding member 
for that purpose. In accordance with House rule XI, clause 
2(j)(2), the five-minute rule shall apply during the 
questioning of witnesses in a hearing. The presiding member 
shall, so far as practicable, recognize alternately based on 
seniority of those majority and minority members present at the 
conclusion of the members' opening statements as determined by 
the Chair for the majority members and the Ranking Minority 
Member for the minority members. Other members will be 
recognized based on their arrival at the hearing. Additional 
time may be extended at the direction of the presiding member.
    (c) Extended Questioning. The Chair, or the Committee or 
subcommittee by motion, may permit a specified number of 
majority and minority members to question a witness for a 
specified, total period that is equal for each side and not 
longer than thirty minutes for each side.
    (d) Staff Questioning. The Chair, or the Committee or 
subcommittee by motion, may permit Committee or subcommittee 
staff of the majority and minority to question a witness for a 
specified, total period that is equal for each side and not 
longer than thirty minutes for each side.
    (e) Time for Questioning. Nothing in paragraph (c) or (d) 
affects the rights of a member (other than a member designated 
under paragraph c to question a witness for 5 minutes in 
accordance with paragraph (b). In any extended questioning 
permitted under paragraph (c) or (d), the presiding member 
shall determine how to allocate the time permitted for extended 
questioning by majority members or staff, and the Ranking 
Minority Member shall determine how to allocate the time 
permitted for extended questioning by minority members or 
staff.
    (f) Witness Statements. Witnesses appearing before the 
Committee or a subcommittee shall, so far as practicable, 
submit written statements at least 24 hours before their 
appearance.
    (g) Oaths. The presiding member may administer oaths to any 
witness before the Committee or subcommittee. All witnesses 
appearing in hearings may be administered the following oath by 
the presiding member prior to receiving the testimony: ``Do you 
solemnly swear or affirm that the testimony that you are about 
to give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the 
truth, so help you God?''

        Rule 10.--Committee Records, Open Meetings, Transparency

    (a) Generally. The Committee and subcommittee staff shall 
maintain in the Committee offices a complete record of 
Committee and subcommittee actions from the current Congress 
including a record of the roll call votes taken at business 
meetings. The original records, or true copies thereof, as 
appropriate, shall be available for public inspection whenever 
the Committee offices are open for public business. The staff 
shall assure that such original records are preserved with no 
unauthorized alteration, additions, or defacement.
    (b) Transcripts of Proceedings. A stenographic record of 
all testimony shall be kept of public hearings and shall be 
made available on such conditions as the Chair of the Committee 
may prescribe.
    (c) Open Meetings. Meetings and hearings shall be open to 
the public or closed in accordance with the Rules of the House 
of Representatives.
    (d) Committee Website. The Chair of the Committee shall 
maintain an official website on behalf of the Committee for the 
purpose of furthering the Committee's legislative and oversight 
responsibilities, including communicating information about the 
Committee's activities to Committee members and other members 
of the House. To the greatest extent practicable, the Chair of 
the Committee shall ensure that Committee records are made 
available on the Committee's official website in appropriate 
formats.
    (e) Minority Website. The Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee is authorized to maintain an official website on 
behalf of the minority members of the Committee for the same 
purpose as in paragraph (d), including communicating 
information about the activities of the minority to Committee 
members and other members of the House.
    (f) Archived Records. The records of the Committee at the 
National Archives and Records Administration shall be made 
available for public use in accordance with rule VII of the 
Rules of the House. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority 
Member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of the rule, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on written request of any member of the 
Committee.

      Rule 11.--Audio and Visual Coverage of Committee Proceedings

    (a) Generally. An open meeting or hearing may be covered, 
in whole or in part, by television broadcast, radio broadcast, 
internet broadcast, and still photography, unless closed 
subject to the provisions of House rules. Any such coverage 
shall conform to the provisions of House rule XI, clause 4.
    (b) Committee Broadcast System. Use of the Committee 
Broadcast System shall be fair and nonpartisan, and in 
accordance with House rule XI, clause 4(b), and all other 
applicable rules of the House and the Committee. Members of the 
Committee shall have prompt access to a copy of coverage by the 
Committee Broadcast System, to the extent that such coverage is 
maintained.
    (c) Other Coverage. Personnel providing coverage of an open 
meeting or hearing of the Committee by internet broadcast, 
other than through the Committee Broadcast System shall be 
currently accredited to the Radio and Television 
Correspondents' Galleries. If the Committee Broadcast System is 
not available, the Chair of the Committee may, with the 
concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, 
direct staff to provide coverage in a manner that is fair and 
nonpartisan and in accordance with House rule XI, clause 4.

       Rule 12.--Additional Duties of the Chair of the Committee

    The Chair of the Committee shall:
    (a) Make available to other committees the findings and 
recommendations resulting from the investigations of the 
Committee, as required by House rule X, clause 4(c)(2);
    (b) Direct such review and studies on--
          (1) the impact or probable impact of tax policies 
        affecting subjects within the Committee's jurisdiction, 
        as required by House rule X, clause 2(c);
          (2) the operation of Government activities at all 
        levels, including the Executive Office of the 
        President, as required by House rule X, clause 3(i);
          (3) the effect of laws enacted to reorganize the 
        legislative and executive branches of the Government, 
        as required by House rule X, clause 4(c)(1)(B); and
          (4) intergovernmental relationships between the 
        United States and the States and municipalities and 
        between the United States and international 
        organizations of which the United States is a member, 
        as required by House rule X, clause 4(c)(1)(C);
    (c) Submit to the Committee on House Administration the 
Committee's oversight plan as required by House rule X, clause 
2(d);
    (d) Report to the House by April 15 in the first session of 
Congress, after consultation with the Speaker, the Majority 
Leader, and the Minority Leader, the oversight plans submitted 
by committees together with any recommendations that the 
Committee, or the House leadership group described above, may 
make to ensure the most effective coordination of oversight 
plans and otherwise achieve the objectives of House rule X, 
clause 2;
    (e) Submit to the House such recommendations as the 
Committee considers necessary or desirable in connection with 
the reports of the Comptroller General, as required by House 
rule X, clause 4(c)(1)(A);
    (f) Submit to the Committee on the Budget views and 
estimates required by House rule X, clause 4(f), and to file 
reports with the House as required by the Congressional Budget 
Act;
    (g) Authorize and issue subpoenas as provided in House rule 
XI, clause 2(m), in the conduct of any investigation or 
activity or series of investigations or activities within the 
jurisdiction of the Committee;
    (h) Prepare, after consultation with the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee, a budget for the Committee;
    (i) Make any necessary technical and conforming changes to 
legislation reported by the Committee upon unanimous consent; 
and
    (j) Offer motions under clause 1 of rule XXII of the Rules 
of the House (motion to request or agree to a conference) 
whenever the Chair of the Committee considers it appropriate.

        Rule 13.--Consideration of Certain Bills and Resolutions

    (a) Commemorative Stamps. The determination of the subject 
matter of commemorative stamps and new semi-postal issues is 
properly for consideration by the Postmaster General, and the 
Committee will not give consideration to legislative proposals 
specifying the subject matter of commemorative stamps and new 
semi-postal issues. It is suggested that recommendations for 
the subject matter of stamps be submitted to the Postmaster 
General.
    (b) Postal Naming Bills. The consideration of bills 
designating facilities of the United States Postal Service 
shall be conducted so as to minimize the time spent on such 
matters by the Committee and the House.
    (c) Resolutions. The Chair of the Committee shall not 
request to have scheduled any resolution for consideration 
under suspension of the Rules, which expresses appreciation, 
commends, congratulates, celebrates, recognizes the 
accomplishments of, or celebrates the anniversary of, an 
entity, event, group, individual, institution, team or 
government program; or acknowledges or recognizes a period of 
time for such purposes.

                    Rule 14.--Panels and Task Forces

    (a) Generally. The Chair of the Committee is authorized to 
appoint panels or task forces to carry out the duties and 
functions of the Committee.
    (b) Ex Officio Membership. The Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee may serve as ex-officio members of each 
panel or task force established under this Rule.
    (c) Appointment of Leadership. The chair of any panel or 
task force shall be appointed by the Chair of the Committee. 
The Ranking Minority Member of the Committee shall select a 
ranking minority member for each panel or task force.
    (d) Application of Rules. The House and Committee rules 
applicable to subcommittee meetings, hearings, recommendations, 
and reports shall apply to the meetings, hearings, 
recommendations, and reports of panels and task forces.
    (e) Termination. No panel or task force appointed under 
this Rule shall continue in existence for more than six months. 
A panel or task force appointed under this Rule may, upon the 
expiration of six months, be reappointed by the chair.

                     Rule 15.--Deposition Authority

    (a) Generally. The Chair of the Committee, upon 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, 
may order the taking of depositions, under oath and pursuant to 
notice or subpoena.
    (b) Notices. Notices for the taking of depositions shall 
specify the date, time, and place of examination. Depositions 
may continue from day to day.
    (c) Oaths. Depositions shall be taken under oath 
administered by a member or a person otherwise authorized to 
administer oaths.
    (d) Consultation. Consultation with the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee shall include three calendar days' 
notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, 
unless the House is in session on such days), and a copy of a 
proposed deposition subpoena, if applicable, before any 
deposition is taken. All members shall receive three days 
written notice that a deposition will be taken, except in 
exigent circumstances.
    (e) Attendance. Witnesses may be accompanied at a 
deposition by two designated personal, nongovernmental 
attorneys to advise them of their rights. No one may be present 
at depositions except members, Committee staff designated by 
the Chair of the Committee or the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee, an official reporter, the witness, and the 
witness's two designated attorneys. Other persons, including 
government agency personnel, may not attend.
    (f) Joint Depositions. The Chair of the Committee may 
designate a deposition as part of a joint investigation between 
committees, and in that case, provide notice to members of both 
committees. If such a designation is made, the Chair and the 
Ranking Minority Member of the additional committee(s) may 
designate committee staff to attend. Members and designated 
staff of the committees may attend and ask questions as set 
forth below.
    (g) Who May Question. A deposition shall be conducted by 
any member or counsel designated by the Chair of the Committee 
or Ranking Minority Member of the Committee. When depositions 
are conducted by Committee counsel, there shall be no more than 
two Committee counsel permitted to question a witness per 
round. One of the Committee counsel shall be designated by the 
Chair of the Committee and the other by the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee. Other Committee staff members 
designated by the Chair of the Committee or Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee may attend, but may not pose questions 
to the witness.
    (h) Order of Questions. Questions in the deposition shall 
be propounded in rounds, alternating between the majority and 
minority. A single round shall not exceed 60 minutes per side, 
unless the members or counsel conducting the deposition agree 
to a different length of questioning. In each round, the 
member(s) or Committee counsel designated by the Chair of the 
Committee shall ask questions first, and the member(s) or 
Committee counsel designated by the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee shall ask questions second.
    (i) Objections. Any objection made during a deposition must 
be stated concisely and in a non-argumentative and non-
suggestive manner. The witness may refuse to answer a question 
only to preserve a privilege. When the witness has refused to 
answer a question to preserve a privilege, members or staff may 
(i) proceed with the deposition, or (ii) either at that time or 
at a subsequent time, seek a ruling from the Chair either by 
telephone or otherwise. If the Chair of the Committee overrules 
any such objection during the deposition, the witness shall be 
ordered to answer. If following the deposition's recess, the 
Chair of the Committee overrules any such objection and thereby 
orders a witness to answer any question to which a privilege 
objection was lodged, such ruling shall be filed with the clerk 
of the Committee and shall be provided to the members and the 
witness no less than three days before the reconvened 
deposition. If a member of the Committee appeals in writing the 
ruling of the Chair, the appeal shall be preserved for 
Committee consideration. A deponent who refuses to answer a 
question after being directed by the Chair in writing, or 
orally during the proceeding as reflected in the record, may be 
subject to sanction, except that no sanctions may be imposed if 
the ruling of the Chair is reversed by the Committee on appeal.
    (j) Record of Testimony. The Chair of the Committee shall 
ensure that the testimony is either transcribed or 
electronically recorded or both. If a witness's testimony is 
transcribed, the witness or the witness's counsel shall be 
afforded an opportunity to review a copy. No later than five 
days after the witness has been notified of the opportunity to 
review the transcript, the witness may submit suggested changes 
to the Chair of the Committee. Committee staff may make any 
typographical and technical changes. Substantive changes, 
modifications, clarifications, or amendments to the deposition 
transcript submitted by the witness must be accompanied by a 
letter signed by the witness requesting the changes and a 
statement of the witness's reasons for each proposed change. 
Any substantive changes, modifications, clarifications, or 
amendments shall be included as an appendix to the transcript 
conditioned upon the witness signing the transcript.
    (k) Transcription Requirements. The individual 
administering the oath, if other than a member, shall certify 
on the transcript that the witness was duly sworn. The 
transcriber shall certify that the transcript is a true record 
of the testimony, and the transcript shall be filed, together 
with any electronic recording, with the clerk of the Committee 
in Washington, D.C. Depositions shall be considered to have 
been taken in Washington, D.C., as well as the location 
actually taken once filed there with the clerk of the Committee 
for the Committee's use. The Chair of the Committee and the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee shall be provided with 
a copy of the transcripts of the deposition at the same time.
    (l) Release. The Chair of the Committee and Ranking 
Minority Member of the Committee shall consult in advance 
regarding the release of deposition testimony, transcripts, or 
recordings, and portions thereof. If either objects in writing 
to a proposed release of a deposition testimony, transcript or 
recording, or a portion thereof, the matter shall be promptly 
referred to the Committee for resolution.
    (m) Provision of Rules to Witnesses. A witness shall not be 
required to testify unless the witness has been provided with a 
copy of the Committee's rules.

               Rule 16.--Witness and Privilege Procedure

    (a) Witness Disclosures. Witnesses appearing at a hearing 
of the Committee or a subcommittee in a non-governmental 
capacity shall include a curriculum vitae and a disclosure of 
the amount and source (by agency and program) of each federal 
grant (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or subcontract 
thereof), as well as the amount and source of payments or 
contracts originating from foreign governments, insofar as they 
relate to the subject matter of the hearing, received during 
the current calendar year or either of the two previous 
calendar years, by the witness or by an entity represented by 
the witness.
    (b) Representation by Counsel. When representing a witness 
or entity before the Committee or a subcommittee in response to 
a request or subpoena from the Committee, or in connection with 
testimony before the Committee or a subcommittee, counsel for 
the witness or entity must promptly submit to the Committee a 
notice of appearance specifying the following: (1) counsel's 
name, firm or organization, bar membership, and contact 
information including email; and (2) each client or entity 
represented by the counsel in connection with the proceeding.
    (c) Privileges. The Chair of the Committee has the 
authority to rule on assertions of privilege.
          (1) For the Chair to consider assertions of privilege 
        over testimony or statements, witnesses or entities 
        must clearly state the specific privilege being 
        asserted and the reason for the assertion on or before 
        the scheduled date of testimony or appearance, or upon 
        a demand from the Chair of the Committee that provides 
        for a subsequent due date.
          (2) For the Chair to consider an assertion of 
        privilege over a document, on or before the scheduled 
        date of testimony or appearance, or upon a demand from 
        the Chair of the Committee that provides for a 
        subsequent due date, the assertion must be set forth in 
        a privilege log that includes the following information 
        for each document for which a privilege is asserted: 
        (a) every privilege asserted; (b) the type of document; 
        (c) the general subject matter; (d) the date, author, 
        addressee, and any other recipients; (e) the 
        relationship of the author and addressee to each other; 
        and (f) the basis for the privilege asserted.
    (3) The only assertions of executive privilege that the 
Chair of the Committee will consider are those made in writing 
by an executive branch official authorized to assert the 
privilege.
    (4) The Chair of the Committee may waive or modify any of 
the requirements of this rule in order to facilitate 
cooperation.
                           Committee on Rules

   TOM COLE, Oklahoma, Chairman

JAMES P. McGOVERN, Massachusetts, Ranking MemberBURGESS, Texas, Vice 
MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania       Chair
JOE NEGUSE, Colorado                 GUY RESCHENTHALER, Pennsylvania
TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ, New Mexico   MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota
                                     THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky
                                     RALPH NORMAN, South Carolina
                                     CHIP ROY, Texas
                                     ERIN HOUCHIN, Indiana
                                     NICHOLAS A. LANGWORTHY, New York

         RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON RULES FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted January 30, 2023)


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (a) The Rules of the House are the rules of the Committee 
and its subcommittees so far as applicable, except that a 
motion to recess from day to day, and a motion to dispense with 
the first reading (in full) of a bill or resolution, if printed 
copies are available, are non-debatable privileged motions in 
the Committee. A proposed investigative or oversight report 
shall be considered as read if it has been available to the 
members of the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such day).
    (b) Each subcommittee is a part of the Committee, and is 
subject to the authority and direction of the Committee and to 
its rules so far as applicable.
    (c) The provisions of clause 2 of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House are incorporated by reference as the rules of the 
Committee to the extent applicable.
    (d) The Committee's rules shall be published in the 
Congressional Record not later than 30 days after the Committee 
is elected in each odd-numbered year.

           Rule 2.--Regular, Additional, and Special Meetings


                            REGULAR MEETINGS

    (a)(1) The Committee shall regularly meet at 5:00 p.m. on 
the first day on which votes are scheduled of each week when 
the House is in session.
    (2) A regular meeting of the Committee may be dispensed 
with if, in the judgment of the Chair, there is no need for the 
meeting.
    (3) Additional regular meetings and hearings of the 
Committee may be called by the Chair.

                      NOTICE FOR REGULAR MEETINGS

    (b) The Chair shall notify in electronic or written form 
each member of the Committee of the agenda of each regular 
meeting of the Committee at least 48 hours before the time of 
the meeting and shall provide to each member of the Committee, 
at least 24 hours before the time of each regular meeting:
          (1) for each bill or resolution scheduled on the 
        agenda for consideration of a rule, a copy of--
                  (A) the text of the bill or resolution;
                  (B) the text of any committee reports 
                thereon; and
                  (C) any available letter requesting a rule 
                for the bill or resolution; and
          (2) for each other bill, resolution, report, or other 
        matter on the agenda a copy of--
                  (A) the bill, resolution, report, or 
                materials relating to the other matter in 
                question; and
                  (B) any report on the bill, resolution, 
                report, or any other matter made by any 
                subcommittee of the Committee.

                           EMERGENCY MEETINGS

    (c)(1) The Chair may call an emergency meeting of the 
Committee at any time on any measure or matter which the Chair 
determines to be of an emergency nature; provided, however, 
that the Chair has made an effort to consult the ranking 
minority member, or, in such member's absence, the next ranking 
minority party member of the Committee.
    (2) As soon as possible after calling an emergency meeting 
of the Committee, the Chair shall notify each member of the 
Committee of the time and location of the meeting.
    (3) To the extent feasible, the notice provided under 
paragraph (2) shall include the agenda for the emergency 
meeting and copies of available materials which would otherwise 
have been provided under subsection (b) if the emergency 
meeting was a regular meeting.

                            SPECIAL MEETINGS

    (d) Special meetings shall be called and convened as 
provided in clause 2(c)(2) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House.

                Rule 3.--Meeting and Hearing Procedures


                               IN GENERAL

    (a)(1) Meetings and hearings of the Committee shall be 
called to order and presided over by the Chair or, in the 
Chair's absence, by the member designated by the Chair as the 
Vice Chair of the Committee, or by the ranking majority member 
of the Committee present as Acting Chair.
    (2) Meetings and hearings of the Committee shall be open to 
the public unless closed in accordance with clause 2(g) of rule 
XI of the Rules of the House of Representatives.
    (3) Any meeting or hearing of the Committee that is open to 
the public shall be open to coverage by television, radio, and 
still photography in accordance with the provisions of clause 4 
of rule XI of the Rules of the House (which are incorporated by 
reference as part of these rules).
    (4) Before a motion to report a rule is offered, a copy of 
the language recommended shall be furnished to each member of 
the Committee.

                                 QUORUM

    (b)(1) For the purpose of hearing testimony on requests for 
rules, five members of the Committee shall constitute a quorum.
    (2) For the purpose of taking testimony and receiving 
evidence on measures or matters of original jurisdiction before 
the Committee, three members of the Committee shall constitute 
a quorum.
    (3) A majority of the members of the Committee shall 
constitute a quorum for the purposes of: reporting any measure 
or matter; authorizing a subpoena; closing a meeting or hearing 
pursuant to clause 2(g) of rule XI of the Rules of the House 
(except as provided in clause 2(g)(2)(A) and (B)); or taking 
any other action.

                                 VOTING

    (c)(1) No vote may be conducted on any measure or motion 
pending before the Committee unless a majority of the members 
of the Committee is actually present for such
    (2) A record vote of the Committee shall be provided on any 
question before the Committee upon the request of any member.
    (3) No vote by any member of the Committee on any measure 
or matter may be cast by proxy.
    (4) A record of the vote of each member of the Committee on 
each record vote on any measure or matter before the Committee 
shall be made publicly available in electronic form within 48 
hours, and with respect to any record vote on any motion to 
amend or report, shall be included in the report of the 
Committee showing the total number of votes cast for and 
against and the names of those members voting for and against.

                           HEARING PROCEDURES

    (d)(1) With regard to hearings on matters of original 
jurisdiction, to the greatest extent practicable:
          (A) each witness who is to appear before the 
        Committee shall file with the Committee at least 24 
        hours in advance of the appearance a statement of 
        proposed testimony in written and electronic form and 
        shall limit the oral presentation to the Committee to a 
        brief summary thereof; and
          (B) In the case of a witness appearing in a 
        nongovernmental capacity, a written statement of 
        proposed testimony shall include--
                  (i) a curriculum vitae;
                  (ii) a disclosure of any Federal grants or 
                contracts, or contracts, or grants, or payments 
                originating with a foreign government, received 
                during the past 36 months by the witness or by 
                an entity represented by the witness and 
                related to the subject matter of the hearing;
                  (iii) a disclosure of whether the witness is 
                a fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a 
                director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) 
                of any organization or entity that has an 
                interest in the subject matter of a hearing.
          (C) The disclosure referred to in subdivision (B)(ii) 
        shall include--
                  (i) the amount and country of origin of any 
                payment or contract related to the subject 
                matter of the hearing originating with a 
                foreign government.
                  (ii) the amount and country of origin of any 
                payment or contract related to the subject 
                matter of the hearing originating with a 
                foreign government.
          (D) Such statements, with appropriate redactions to 
        protect the privacy or security of the witness, shall 
        be made publicly available in electronic form 24 hours 
        before the witness appears to the extent practicable, 
        but not later than one day after the witness appears.
    (2) The five-minute rule shall be observed in the 
interrogation of each witness before the Committee until each 
member of the Committee has had an opportunity to question the 
witness.
    (3) The provisions of clause 2(k) of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House shall apply to any hearing conducted by the 
Committee.

                          SUBPOENAS AND OATHS

    (e)(1) Pursuant to clause 2(m) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, a subpoena may be authorized and 
issued by the Committee or a subcommittee in the conduct of any 
investigation or series of investigations or activities, only 
when authorized by a majority of the members voting, a majority 
being present.
    (2) The Chair may authorize and issue subpoenas under such 
clause during any period in which the House has adjourned for a 
period of longer than three days.
    (3) Authorized subpoenas shall be signed by the Chair or by 
any member designated by the Committee, and may be served by 
any person designated by the Chair or such member.
    (4) The Chair, or any member of the Committee designated by 
the Chair, may administer oaths to witnesses before the 
Committee.

              Rule 4.--General Oversight Responsibilities

    The Committee shall review and study, on a continuing 
basis, the application, administration, execution, and 
effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, the subject 
matter of which is within its jurisdiction.

                         Rule 5.--Subcommittees


          ESTABLISHMENT AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF SUBCOMMITTEES

    (a)(1) There shall be two subcommittees of the Committee as 
follows:
          (A) Subcommittee on Legislative and Budget Process, 
        which shall have general responsibility for measures or 
        matters related to relations between the Congress and 
        the Executive Branch.
          (B) Subcommittee on Rules and Organization of the 
        House, which shall have general responsibility for 
        measures or matters related to process and procedures 
        of the House, relations between the two Houses of 
        Congress, relations between the Congress and the 
        Judiciary, and internal operations of the House.
    (2) In addition, each such subcommittee shall have specific 
responsibility for such other measures or matters as the Chair 
refers to it.
    (3) Each subcommittee of the Committee shall review and 
study, on a continuing basis, the application, administration, 
execution, and effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, 
the subject matter of which is within its general 
responsibility.

           REFERRAL OF MEASURES AND MATTERS TO SUBCOMMITTEES

    (b)(1) No special order providing for the consideration of 
any bill or resolution shall be referred to a subcommittee of 
the Committee.
    (2) The Chair shall refer to a subcommittee such measures 
or matters of original jurisdiction as the Chair deems 
appropriate given its jurisdiction and responsibilities.
    (3) All other measures or matters of original jurisdiction 
shall be subject to consideration by the full Committee.
    (4) In referring any measure or matter of original 
jurisdiction to a subcommittee, the Chair may specify a date by 
which the subcommittee shall report thereon to the Committee.
    (5) The Committee by motion may discharge a subcommittee 
from consideration of any measure or matter referred to a 
subcommittee of the Committee.

                      COMPOSITION OF SUBCOMMITTEES

    (c) The size and ratio of each subcommittee shall be 
determined by the Committee and members shall be elected to 
each subcommittee, and to the positions of chair and ranking 
minority member thereof, in accordance with the rules of the 
respective party caucuses. The Chair of the full committee may 
designate a member of the majority party on each subcommittee 
as its vice chair.

                   SUBCOMMITTEE MEETINGS AND HEARINGS

    (d)(1) Each subcommittee of the Committee is authorized to 
meet, hold hearings, receive testimony, mark up legislation, 
and report to the full Committee on any measure or matter 
referred to it.
    (2) No subcommittee of the Committee may meet or hold a 
hearing at the same time as a meeting or hearing of the full 
Committee is being held.
    (3) The chair of each subcommittee shall schedule meetings 
and hearings of the subcommittee only after consultation with 
the Chair.

                                 QUORUM

    (e)(1) For the purpose of taking testimony, two members of 
the subcommittee shall constitute a quorum.
    (2) For all other purposes, a quorum shall consist of a 
majority of the members of a subcommittee.

                          EFFECT OF A VACANCY

    (f) Any vacancy in the membership of a subcommittee shall 
not affect the power of the remaining members to execute the 
functions of the subcommittee.

                                RECORDS

    (g) Each subcommittee of the Committee shall provide the 
full Committee with copies of such records of votes taken in 
the subcommittee and such other records with respect to the 
subcommittee necessary for the Committee to comply with all 
rules and regulations of the House.

                             Rule 6.--Staff


                               IN GENERAL

    (a)(1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), the 
professional and other staff of the Committee shall be 
appointed, by the Chair, and shall work under the general 
supervision and direction of the Chair.
    (2) All professional, and other staff provided to the 
minority party members of the Committee shall be appointed, by 
the ranking minority member of the Committee, and shall work 
under the general supervision and direction of such member.
    (3) The appointment of all professional staff shall be 
subject to the approval of the Committee as provided by, and 
subject to the provisions of, clause 9 of rule X of the Rules 
of the House.

                            ASSOCIATE STAFF

    (b) Associate staff for members of the Committee may be 
appointed only at the discretion of the Chair (in consultation 
with the ranking minority member regarding any minority party 
associate staff), after taking into account any staff ceilings 
and budgetary constraints in effect at the time, and any terms, 
limits, or conditions established by the Committee on House 
Administration under clause 9 of rule X of the Rules of the 
House.

                           SUBCOMMITTEE STAFF

    (c) From funds made available for the appointment of staff, 
the Chair of the Committee shall, pursuant to clause 6(d) of 
rule X of the Rules of the House, ensure that sufficient staff 
is made available to each subcommittee to carry out its 
responsibilities under the rules of the Committee, and, after 
consultation with the ranking minority member of the Committee, 
that the minority party of the Committee is treated fairly in 
the appointment of such staff.

                         COMPENSATION OF STAFF

    (d) The Chair shall fix the compensation of all 
professional and other staff of the Committee, after 
consultation with the ranking minority member regarding any 
minority party staff.

                         CERTIFICATION OF STAFF

    (e)(1) To the extent any staff member of the Committee or 
any of its subcommittees does not work under the direct 
supervision and direction of the Chair, the member of the 
Committee who supervises and directs the staff member's work 
shall file with the Chief of Staff of the Committee (not later 
than the tenth day of each month) a certification regarding the 
staff member's work for that member for the preceding calendar 
month.
    (2) The certification required by paragraph (1) shall be in 
such form as the Chair may prescribe, shall identify each staff 
member by name, and shall state that the work engaged in by the 
staff member and the duties assigned to the staff member for 
the member of the Committee with respect to the month in 
question met the requirements of clause 9 of rule X of the 
rules of the House.
    (3) Any certification of staff of the Committee, or any of 
its subcommittees, made by the Chair in compliance with any 
provision of law or regulation shall be made--
          (A) on the basis of the certifications filed under 
        paragraph (1) to the extent the staff is not under the 
        Chair's supervision and direction, and
          (B) on his own responsibility to the extent the staff 
        is under the Chair's direct supervision and direction.

               Rule 7.--Budget, Travel, Pay of Witnesses


                                 BUDGET

    (a) The Chair, in consultation with other members of the 
Committee, shall prepare for each Congress a budget providing 
amounts for staff, necessary travel, investigation, and other 
expenses of the Committee and its subcommittees.

                                 TRAVEL

    (b)(1) The Chair may authorize travel for any member and 
any staff member of the Committee in connection with activities 
or subject matters under the general jurisdiction of the 
Committee. Before such authorization is granted, there shall be 
submitted to the Chair in writing the following:
          (A) The purpose of the travel.
          (B) The dates during which the travel is to occur.
          (C) The names of the States or countries to be 
        visited and the length of time to be spent in each.
          (D) The names of members and staff of the Committee 
        for whom the authorization is sought.
    (2) Members and staff of the Committee shall make a written 
report to the Chair on any travel they have conducted under 
this subsection, including a description of their itinerary, 
expenses, and activities, and of pertinent information gained 
as a result of such travel.
    (3) Members and staff of the Committee performing 
authorized travel on official business shall be governed by 
applicable laws, resolutions, and regulations of the House and 
of the Committee on House Administration.

                            PAY OF WITNESSES

    (c) Witnesses may be paid from funds made available to the 
Committee in its expense resolution subject to the provisions 
of clause 5 of rule XI of the Rules of the House.

              Rule 8.--Committee Administration Reporting

    (a) Whenever the Committee authorizes the favorable 
reporting of a bill or resolution from the Committee--
          (1) The Chair or acting Chair shall report it to the 
        House or designate a member of the Committee to do so.
          (2) In the case of a bill or resolution in which the 
        Committee has original jurisdiction, the Chair shall 
        allow, to the extent that the anticipated floor 
        schedule permits, any member of the Committee a 
        reasonable amount of time to submit views for inclusion 
        in the Committee report on the bill or resolution. Any 
        such report shall contain all matters required by the 
        Rules of the House of Representatives (or by any 
        provision of law enacted as an exercise of the 
        rulemaking power of the House) and such other 
        information as the Chair deems appropriate.
          (3) In the case of a resolution providing for 
        consideration of a measure, the Committee report 
        accompanying such resolution shall include an accurate 
        explanation of any waivers of points of order, 
        including a detailed explanation of all points of 
        order.

                                RECORDS

    (b)(1) There shall be a transcript made of each regular 
meeting and hearing of the Committee, and the transcript may be 
printed if the Chair decides it is appropriate or if a majority 
of the members of the Committee requests such printing. Any 
such transcripts shall be a substantially verbatim account of 
remarks actually made during the proceedings, subject only to 
technical, grammatical, and typographical corrections 
authorized by the person making the remarks. Nothing in this 
paragraph shall be construed to require that all such 
transcripts be subject to correction and publication.
    (2) The Committee shall keep a record of all actions of the 
Committee and of its subcommittees. The record shall contain 
all information required by clause 2(e)(1) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House of Representatives and shall be available 
for public inspection at reasonable times in the offices of the 
Committee.
    (3) All Committee hearings, records, data, charts, and 
files shall be kept separate and distinct from the 
congressional office records of the Chair, shall be the 
property of the House, and all Members of the House shall have 
access thereto as provided in clause 2(e)(2) of rule XI of the 
Rules of the House.
    (4) The records of the Committee at the National Archives 
and Records Administration shall be made available for public 
use in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House. The 
Chair shall notify the ranking minority member of any decision, 
pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 4(b) of the rule, to 
withhold a record otherwise available, and the matter shall be 
presented to the Committee for a determination on written 
request of any member of the Committee.

                        AUDIO AND VIDEO COVERAGE

    (c) The Chair shall provide, to the maximum extent 
practicable--
          (1) complete and unedited audio and video broadcasts 
        of all committee hearings and meetings; and
          (2) for distribution of such broadcasts and unedited 
        recordings thereof to the public and for the storage of 
        audio and video recordings of the proceedings. 
        Proceedings shall be broadcast live on the Majority 
        Committee website and recordings shall be made 
        available on such website within one calendar day of 
        the proceeding.

                 COMMITTEE PUBLICATIONS ON THE INTERNET

    (d) To the maximum extent feasible, the Committee shall 
make its publications available in electronic form.

                                JOURNAL

    (e)(1) The Committee shall maintain a Committee Journal, 
which shall include all bills, resolutions, and other matters 
referred to or reported by the Committee and all bills, 
resolutions, and other matters reported by any other committee 
on which a rule has been granted or formally requested, and 
such other matters as the Chair shall direct. The Journal shall 
be published periodically, but in no case less often than once 
in each session of Congress.
    (2) A rule is considered as formally requested when the 
Chairman of a committee of primary jurisdiction which has 
reported a bill or resolution (or a member of such committee 
authorized to act on the Chairman's behalf):
          (A) has requested, in writing to the Chair, that a 
        hearing be scheduled on a rule for the consideration of 
        the bill or resolution; and
          (B) has supplied the Committee with the bill or 
        resolution, as reported, together with the final 
        committee report thereon.

                    SURVEY OF ACTIVITIES REQUIREMENT

    (f) The Committee's Survey of Activities, filed pursuant to 
clause 1(d) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, shall include 
a compilation of all known waivers of points of order 
previously disclosed in reports from the Committee on Rules 
pursuant to paragraph (a)(3) of this rule or included in the 
Congressional Record.

                            OTHER PROCEDURES

    (g) The Chair may establish such other Committee procedures 
and take such actions as may be necessary to carry out these 
rules or to facilitate the effective operation of the Committee 
and its subcommittees in a manner consistent with these rules.

                 Rule 9.--Amendments to Committee Rules

    The rules of the Committee may be modified, amended or 
repealed, in the same manner and method as prescribed for the 
adoption of committee rules in clause 2 of rule XI of the Rules 
of the House, but only if written notice of the proposed change 
has been provided to each Member at least 48 hours before the 
time of the meeting at which the vote on the change occurs. Any 
such change in the rules of the Committee shall be published in 
the Congressional Record within 30 calendar days after their 
approval.
              Committee on Science, Space, and Technology

FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma, Chairman
                  

ZOE LOFGREN, California, Ranking MemberLL POSEY, Florida
SUZANNE BONAMICI, Oregon             RANDY K. WEBER, Sr., Texas
HALEY M. STEVENS, Michigan           BRIAN BABIN, Texas
JAMAAL BOWMAN, New York              JAMES R. BAIRD, Indiana
DEBORAH K. ROSS, North Carolina      DANIEL WEBSTER, Florida
ERIC SORENSEN, Illinois              MIKE GARCIA, California
ANDREA SALINAS, Oregon               STEPHANIE I. BICE, Oklahoma
VALERIE P. FOUSHEE, North Carolina   JAY OBERNOLTE, California
KEVIN MULLIN, California             CHALES J. ``CHUCK'' FLEISCHMANN, 
JEFF JACKSON, North Carolina         Tennessee
EMILIA STRONG SYKES, Ohio            DARRELL ISSA, California
MAXWELL FROST, Florida               ERIC A. ``RICK'' CRAWFORD, 
YADIRA CARAVEO, Colorado             Arkansas
SUMMER L. LEE, Pennsylvania          CLAUDIA TENNEY, New York
JENNIFER L. McCLELLAN, Virginia      RYAN K. ZINKE, Montana
TED LIEU, California                 C. SCOTT FRANKLIN, Florida
SEAN CASTEN, Illinois                DALE W. STRONG, Alabama
PAUL TONKO, New York                 MAX L. MILLER, Ohio
                                     RICHARD McCORMICK, Georgia
                                     MIKE COLLINS, Georgia
                                     BRANDON WILLIAMS, New York
                                     THOMAS H. KEAN, Jr., New Jersey

RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE, SPACE, AND TECHNOLOGY FOR THE 118TH 
                                CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)


                            Rule I.--General

    (a) Application of Rules.--
          (1) The Rules of the House of Representatives 
        (``House rules'') are the rules of the Committee on 
        Science, Space, and Technology and its Subcommittees 
        with the specific additions thereto contained in these 
        rules.
          (2) Except where the term ``Subcommittee'' is 
        specifically referred to, the following rules shall 
        apply to the Committee and its Subcommittees as well as 
        to the respective Chairs and Ranking Minority Members.
    (b) Other Procedures.--The Chair of the Committee, after 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, 
may establish such other procedures and take such actions as 
may be necessary to carry out these rules or to facilitate the 
effective operation of the Committee.
    (c) Use of Hearing Rooms.--In consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, the Chair of the Committee shall establish 
guidelines for the use of Committee hearing rooms.

          Rule II.--Regular, Additional, and Special Meetings

    (a) Regular Meetings.--The regular meeting day of the 
Committee for the conduct of its business shall be on the first 
Wednesday of each month, if the House is in session. If the 
House is not in session on that day, then the Committee shall 
meet on the next Wednesday of such month on which the House is 
in session, or at another practicable time as determined by the 
Chair.
          (1) A regular meeting of the Committee may be 
        dispensed with if, in the judgment of the Chair, there 
        is no need for the meeting.
          (2) The Chair may call and convene, when the Chair 
        considers it necessary and in accordance with the 
        notice requirements contained in these rules, 
        additional meetings of the Committee for the 
        consideration of any bill or resolution pending before 
        the Committee or for the conduct of other Committee 
        business.
    (b) Bills and Subjects to be Considered.--
          (1) The Chair shall announce the date, place, and 
        subject matter of any Committee meeting, which may not 
        commence earlier than the third calendar day (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day) on which Members 
        have notice thereof, unless the Chair, with the 
        concurrence of the Ranking Minority Member, or the 
        Committee by majority vote with a quorum present for 
        the transaction of business, determines there is good 
        cause to begin the meeting sooner, in which case the 
        Chair shall make the announcement at the earliest 
        possible date.
          (2) At least 48 hours prior to the commencement of a 
        meeting for the markup of legislation (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day), the Chair shall 
        cause the text of such legislation to be made publicly 
        available in electronic form.
          (3) To the maximum extent practicable, amendments to 
        a measure or matter shall be submitted in writing or 
        electronically to the designee of both the Chair and 
        Ranking Minority Member at least 24 hours prior to the 
        consideration of the measure or matter, and the Chair 
        may oppose any amendment not so submitted.
    (c) Open Meetings.--Meetings for the transaction of 
business and hearings of the Committee shall be open to the 
public or closed in accordance with the House rules.
    (d) Quorums.--
          (1) Majority Quorum.--A majority of the Members of 
        the Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum 
        for:
                  i. The reporting of a bill, resolution or 
                other measure (See clause 2(h)(1) of House rule 
                XI);
                  ii. The closing of a meeting or hearing to 
                the public pursuant to clause 2(g), 2(k)(5), 
                and 2(k)(7) of House rule XI; and
                  iii. As where required by a Rule of the 
                House.
          (2) Quorum for Taking Testimony.--Two Members of the 
        Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for 
        the purpose of taking testimony and receiving evidence.
          (d) Working Quorum.--One-third of the Members of the 
        Committee or Subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for 
        taking any action, other than as noted in paragraphs 
        (1) and (2) of this subsection.
    (e) Absence of the Chair.--If the Chair is not present at 
any meeting of the Committee or Subcommittee, the Vice Chair on 
the Committee who is present shall preside at the meeting, 
unless another Member of the Committee is designated by the 
Chair.
    (f) Postponement of Proceedings.--
    (1) Pursuant to clause 2(h)(4) of House rule XI, the Chair 
may postpone further proceedings when a record vote is ordered 
on the question of approving a measure or matter or on adopting 
an amendment. The Chair may resume proceedings on a postponed 
vote at any time after reasonable notice.
    (2) When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.
    (g) Time for Statements and Debate.--
          (1) Insofar as is practicable, the Chair, after 
        consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, shall 
        limit the total time of opening statements by Members 
        at a Committee meeting to no more than ten minutes, the 
        time to be divided equally between the Chair and 
        Ranking Minority Member, except in the case of joint 
        Subcommittee hearings, in which case the total time of 
        opening statements by Members at such joint hearing 
        shall be no more than twenty minutes, the time to be 
        divided equally between the Chairs and Ranking Minority 
        Members. When requested, ex officio Members of any 
        Subcommittee shall also be recognized at a Subcommittee 
        hearing for five minutes each to present an opening 
        statement.
          (2) The time any one Member may address the Committee 
        on any bill, amendment, motion, or other matter under 
        consideration by the Committee will be limited to five 
        minutes, and then only when the Member has been 
        recognized by the Chair. This time limit may be waived 
        by the Chair pursuant to unanimous consent.
    (h) Requests for Recorded Vote.--A record vote of the 
Committee shall be provided on any question before the 
Committee upon the request of three or more Members or, in the 
apparent absence of a quorum, by any one Member.
    (i) Transcripts. Transcripts of markups shall be recorded 
and may be published in the same manner as hearings before the 
Committee and shall be included as part of the legislative 
report, unless waived by the Chair of the Committee.
    (j) Motion to Go to Conference.--Without further action of 
the Committee, the Chair is authorized to offer a motion under 
clause 1 of House rule XXII whenever the Chair considers it 
appropriate.

                          Rule III.--Hearings

    (a) Notice of Hearings.--
          (1) The Chair shall publicly announce the date, 
        place, and subject matter of any hearing to be 
        conducted by the Committee on any measure or matter at 
        least one week before the commencement of that hearing. 
        If the Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking 
        Minority Member, determines there is good cause to 
        begin the hearing sooner, or if the Committee so 
        determines by majority vote, a quorum being present for 
        the transaction of business, the Chair shall make the 
        announcement at the earliest possible date.
          (2) The Chair shall publicly announce a list of 
        witnesses to testify at a hearing as soon as a complete 
        list of witnesses, including those to be called by the 
        minority, is compiled. When practicable, the Chair and 
        the Ranking Minority Member will seek to have a 
        complete list of witnesses compiled at or as soon as 
        practicable after the time that the hearing is publicly 
        announced.
    (b) Witnesses.--
          (1) Insofar as is practicable, no later than 48 hours 
        in advance of his or her appearance, each witness who 
        is to appear before the Committee shall file, in 
        printed copy and in electronic form, a written 
        statement of his or her proposed testimony and a 
        curriculum vitae.
          (2) Each witness shall limit his or her presentation 
        to a five minute summary, however additional time may 
        be granted by the Chair when appropriate.
          (3) The Chair, or any Member of the Committee 
        designated by the Chair, may administer oaths to 
        witnesses before the Committee.
          (4) Whenever any hearing is conducted by the 
        Committee on any measure or matter, the Minority 
        Members of the Committee shall be entitled, upon 
        request to the Chair by a majority of them and before 
        the completion of the 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.
          (5) In the case of a witness appearing in a 
        nongovernmental capacity, a written statement of 
        proposed testimony shall include:
                  i. A curriculum vitae;
                  ii. A disclosure of any Federal grants or 
                contracts, or contracts, grants, or payments 
                originating with a foreign government, received 
                during the past 36 months by the witness or by 
                an entity represented by the witness and 
                related to the subject matter of the hearing; 
                and
                  iii. A disclosure of whether the witness is a 
                fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a 
                director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) 
                of any organization or entity that has an 
                interest in the subject matter of the hearing.
                  Such statements, with appropriate redactions 
                to protect the privacy or security of the 
                witness, shall be made publicly available in 
                electronic form 24 hours before the witness 
                appears to the extent practicable, but not 
                later than one day after the witness appears.
    (c) Questioning of Witnesses.--
          (1) The right to interrogate a witness before the 
        Committee shall alternate between Majority and Minority 
        Members of the Committee. Each Member shall be limited 
        to five minutes in the interrogation of witnesses. No 
        Member may be recognized for a second period of 
        interrogation until each Member present, who wishes to 
        be recognized, has been recognized at least once.
          (2) Notwithstanding clause 1, upon a motion the 
        Chair, in consultation with the Ranking Minority 
        Member, may:
                  (1) Designate a specified number of Members 
                of the Committee from each party to question a 
                witness for a period of time equally divided 
                between the majority party and the minority 
                party, not to exceed one hour in the aggregate; 
                or
                  (2) Designate staff from each party to 
                question a witness for a period of time equally 
                divided between the majority party and the 
                minority party, not to exceed one hour in the 
                aggregate.
          (3) Members of the Committee have 10 days from the 
        date of a hearing to submit additional questions in 
        writing for the record to be answered by witnesses who 
        have appeared before the Committee. The letters of 
        transmittal and any responses thereto shall be included 
        in the hearing record.
    (d) Claims of Privilege.--Claims of common-law privileges 
made by witnesses in hearings, or by interviewees or deponents 
in investigations or inquiries, are applicable only at the 
discretion of the Chair, subject to appeal to the Committee.
    (e) Publication of Transcripts.--The transcripts of those 
hearings conducted by the Committee, when it is decided they 
will be printed, shall be published in substantially verbatim 
form, with the material requested for the record inserted at 
that place requested, or at the end of the record, as 
appropriate. Individuals, including Members, whose comments are 
to be published as part of a Committee document shall be given 
the opportunity to verify the accuracy of the transcription in 
advance of publication. Any requests by those Members, staff, 
or witnesses to correct any errors other than errors in the 
transcript, or disputed errors in transcription, shall be 
appended to the record, and the appropriate place where the 
change is requested will be footnoted. Prior to approval by the 
Chair of hearings conducted jointly with another Congressional 
Committee, a memorandum of understanding shall be prepared 
which incorporates an agreement for the publication of the 
transcript.
    (f) Items for the Record.--Committee Members have 10 days 
from the date of a hearing to submit brief and pertinent 
statements or materials in writing for inclusion in the record. 
The Committee is the sole judge of the pertinence of testimony 
and evidence adduced at its hearing.

                           Rule IV.--Reports

    (a) Bills and resolutions approved by the Committee shall 
be reported by the Chair pursuant to clauses 2-4 of House rule 
XIII.
    (b) A proposed investigative or oversight report shall be 
considered as read if it has been available to the Members of 
the Committee for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such days).
    (c) Every investigative or oversight report shall be 
approved by a majority vote of the Committee at a meeting at 
which a quorum is present. If at the time of approval of such a 
report a Member of the Committee gives notice of intent to file 
supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views that 
Member shall be entitled to file such views.
    (d) Only those investigative or oversight reports approved 
by a majority vote of the Committee may be ordered printed, 
unless otherwise required by House rules.

                         Rule V.--Broadcasting

    (a) Whenever a meeting for the transaction of business, 
including the markup of legislation or a hearing is open to the 
public, that meeting or hearing shall be open to coverage by 
television, radio, and still photography in accordance with 
clause 4 of House rule XI.
    (b) To the maximum extent practicable, the Committee shall 
provide audio and visual coverage of each hearing or meeting 
for the transaction of business in a manner that allows the 
public to easily listen to and view the proceedings, and 
maintain the recordings of such coverage in a manner that is 
easily accessible to the public. Operation and use of any 
Committee internet broadcast system shall be fair and 
nonpartisan, and in accordance with clauses 4 (b) and (f) of 
House rule XI and all other applicable rules of the Committee 
and the House.

                        Rule VI.--Subcommittees

    (a) Committee Jurisdiction.--The Full Committee shall 
retain jurisdiction over such matters as determined by the 
Chair.
    (b) Subcommittees and Jurisdiction.--There shall be five 
standing Subcommittees of the Committee on Science, Space, and 
Technology, with jurisdictions as follows:
          (1) Subcommittee on Energy.--Shall have jurisdiction 
        over the following subject matters: all matters 
        relating to energy research, development, and 
        demonstration projects therefor; commercial application 
        of energy technology; Department of Energy research, 
        development, and demonstration programs; Department of 
        Energy laboratories; Department of Energy science 
        activities; Department of Energy cybersecurity 
        activities; Department of Energy international 
        research, development, and demonstration projects; 
        energy supply activities; nuclear, solar, and renewable 
        energy, and other advanced energy technologies; uranium 
        supply and enrichment, and Department of Energy waste 
        management; Department of Energy environmental 
        management research, development, and demonstration; 
        fossil energy research and development; clean coal 
        technology; energy conservation research and 
        development, including building performance, alternate 
        fuels, distributed power systems, and industrial 
        process improvements; pipeline research, development, 
        and demonstration projects; energy standards; other 
        appropriate matters as referred by the Chair; and 
        relevant oversight.
          (2) Subcommittee on Environment.--Shall have 
        jurisdiction over the following subject matters: all 
        matters relating to environmental research; 
        Environmental Protection Agency research and 
        development; environmental standards; climate change 
        research and development; the National Oceanic and 
        Atmospheric Administration, including all activities 
        related to weather, weather services, climate, the 
        atmosphere, marine fisheries, and oceanic research; 
        risk assessment activities; scientific issues related 
        to environmental policy, including climate change; 
        other appropriate matters as referred by the Chair; and 
        relevant oversight.
          (3) Subcommittee on Research and Technology.--Shall 
        have jurisdiction over the following subject matters: 
        all matters relating to science policy and science 
        education; the Office of Science and Technology Policy; 
        all scientific research, and scientific and engineering 
        resources (including human resources); all matters 
        relating to science, technology, engineering and 
        mathematics education; intergovernmental mechanisms for 
        research, development, and demonstration and cross-
        cutting programs; international scientific cooperation; 
        National Science Foundation; university research 
        policy, including infrastructure and overhead; 
        university research partnerships, including those with 
        industry; science scholarships; computing, 
        communications, networking, and information technology; 
        research and development relating to health, 
        biomedical, and nutritional programs; research, 
        development, and demonstration relating to nanoscience, 
        nanoengineering, and nanotechnology; research, 
        development, and demonstration relating to 
        semiconductors, semiconductor manufacturing, and 
        microelectronics; quantum information science; 
        agricultural, geological, biological and life sciences 
        research; materials research, development, 
        demonstration, and policy; all matters relating to 
        competitiveness, technology, standards, and innovation; 
        standardization of weights and measures, including 
        technical standards, standardization, and conformity 
        assessment; measurement, including the metric system of 
        measurement; cybersecurity standards; the Technology 
        Administration of the Department of Commerce; the 
        National Institute of Standards and Technology; the 
        National Technical Information Service; 
        competitiveness, including small business 
        competitiveness; tax, antitrust, regulatory and other 
        legal and governmental policies related to 
        technological development and commercialization; 
        technology transfer, including civilian use of defense 
        technologies; patent and intellectual property policy; 
        international technology trade; research, development, 
        and demonstration activities of the Department of 
        Transportation; surface and water transportation 
        research, development, and demonstration programs; 
        earthquake programs and fire research programs, 
        including those related to wildfire proliferation 
        research and prevention; biotechnology policy; 
        research, development, demonstration, and standards-
        related activities of the Department of Homeland 
        Security; Small Business Innovation Research and 
        Technology Transfer; voting technologies and standards; 
        other appropriate matters as referred by the Chair; and 
        relevant oversight.
          (4) Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics.--Shall 
        have jurisdiction over the following subject matters: 
        all matters relating to astronautical and aeronautical 
        research and development; national space policy, 
        including access to space; sub-orbital access and 
        applications; National Aeronautics and Space 
        Administration and its contractor and government-
        operated labs; space commercialization, including 
        commercial space activities relating to the Department 
        of Transportation and the Department of Commerce; 
        exploration and use of outer space; international space 
        cooperation; the National Space Council; space 
        applications, space communications and related matters; 
        Earth remote sensing policy; civil aviation including 
        unmanned aerial systems, research, development, and 
        demonstration; research, development, and demonstration 
        programs of the Federal Aviation Administration; space 
        law; other appropriate matters as referred by the 
        Chair; and relevant oversight.
          (5) Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight.--
        Shall have general and special investigative authority 
        on all matters within the jurisdiction of the 
        Committee.
    (c) Composition of Subcommittees.--
          (1) The Chair shall assign Members to the 
        Subcommittees. Minority party assignments shall be made 
        only with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
        Member. The Chair shall determine the ratio of Majority 
        Members to Minority Members of each Subcommittee; 
        provided that the ratio of Majority Members to Minority 
        Members on each Subcommittee (excluding any ex officio 
        Member) shall be no less favorable to the Majority 
        party than the ratio for the Committee.
          (2) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
        Committee shall be ex officio Members of each 
        Subcommittee and shall have the right to vote and be 
        counted as part of the quorum and ratios on all matters 
        before the Subcommittee.
    (d) Referral to Subcommittees.--The Chair shall 
expeditiously refer all legislation and other matters referred 
to the Committee to the Subcommittee or Subcommittees of 
appropriate jurisdiction, unless the Chair deems consideration 
is to be by the Committee. Subcommittee Chairs may make 
requests for referral of specific matters to their Subcommittee 
if they believe Subcommittee jurisdictions so warrants.
    (e) Subcommittee Procedures and Reports.
          (1) Subcommittee Chairs shall set meeting dates with 
        the concurrence of the Chair and after consultation 
        with the other Subcommittee Chairs with a view toward 
        avoiding simultaneous scheduling of Subcommittee 
        meetings or hearings wherever possible. No Subcommittee 
        may meet or hold a hearing at the same time as a 
        meeting or hearing of the Committee without 
        authorization from the Chair.
          (2) Each Subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold 
        hearings, receive testimony or evidence, mark up 
        legislation, and report to the Committee on all matters 
        referred to it. For matters within its jurisdiction, 
        each Subcommittee is authorized to conduct legislative, 
        investigative, forecasting, and general oversight 
        hearings; to conduct inquiries into the future; and to 
        undertake budget impact studies.
          (3) Each Subcommittee shall provide the Committee 
        with copies of such records of votes taken in the 
        Subcommittee and such other records with respect to the 
        Subcommittee as the Chair of the Committee deems 
        necessary to ensure compliance with the House rules.
          (4) After ordering a measure or matter reported, a 
        Subcommittee shall issue a report in such form as the 
        Chair shall specify. To the maximum extent practicable, 
        reports and recommendations of a Subcommittee shall not 
        be considered by the Committee until after the 
        intervention of 48 hours (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, 
        and legal holidays except when the House is in session 
        on such a day) from the time the report is submitted 
        and made available to the Committee. Printed hearings 
        thereon shall be made available, if feasible, to the 
        Committee, except that this Rule may be waived at the 
        discretion of the Chair after consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member.
          (5) Any Member of the Committee may have the 
        privilege of sitting with any Subcommittee during its 
        hearings or deliberations and may participate in such 
        hearings or deliberations, but no Member who is not a 
        Member of the Subcommittee shall vote on any matter 
        before such Subcommittee, except as provided in rule 
        VI(c)(2).

                         Rule VII.--Vice Chairs

    (a) The Chair of the Committee shall designate a Member of 
the majority party to serve as Vice Chair of the Committee and 
shall designate a Majority Member of each Subcommittee to serve 
as Vice Chair of the Subcommittee. Vice Chairs of the Committee 
and each Subcommittee serve at the pleasure of the Chair, who 
may at any time terminate his designation of a Member as Vice 
Chair and designate a different Member of the majority party to 
serve as Vice Chair of the Committee or relevant Subcommittee.
    (b) The Chair may assign duties, privileges, and 
responsibilities to the Vice Chairs of the Committee or the 
various Subcommittees.

                Rule VIII.--Oversight and Investigations

    (a) The Committee shall review and study, on a continuing 
basis, the application, administration, execution, and 
effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, the subject 
matter of which is within its jurisdiction, including all laws, 
programs, and Government activities relating to nonmilitary 
research and development in accordance with House rule X.
    (b) Not later than March 1st of the first session of the 
118th Congress, the Chair, after consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, shall adopt and submit the Committee's 
oversight and authorization plan to the Committee on Oversight 
and Accountability and the Committee on House Administration in 
accordance with the provisions of clause 2(d) of House rule X.
    (c) Any investigation undertaken in the name of the 
Committee shall be approved by the Chair. Nothing in this 
subsection shall be interpreted to infringe on a Subcommittee's 
authority to conduct general oversight of matters within its 
jurisdiction, short of undertaking an investigation.

                          Rule IX.--Subpoenas

    The power to authorize and issue subpoenas is delegated to 
the Chair as provided for under clause 2(m)(3)(A)(i) of House 
rule XI. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority Member 
prior to issuing any subpoena under such authority. To the 
extent practicable, the Chair shall consult with the Ranking 
Minority Member at least 24 hours in advance of a subpoena 
being issued under such authority.

                     Rule X.--Deposition Authority

    The Chair, after consultation with the Ranking Member, may 
authorize a member or counsel of the Committee to conduct 
depositions pursuant to subsection 3(k) of House Resolution 5, 
118th Congress, and subject to any regulations issued pursuant 
thereto.

                      Rule XI.--Committee Records

    (a) The records of the Committee at the National Archives 
and Records Administration shall be made available for public 
use in accordance with House rule VII.
    (b) The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee of any decision, pursuant to clauses 3(b)(3) or 
4(b) of House rule VII, to withhold a record otherwise 
available, and the matter shall be presented to the Committee 
for a determination on the written request of any Member of the 
Committee.

                 Rule XII.--Official Committee Website

    The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purpose of furthering the Committee's legislative and 
oversight responsibilities, including communicating information 
about the Committee's activities to Committee Members and other 
Members of the House. The Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee may maintain a similar website for the same purpose, 
including communicating information about the activities of the 
minority to Committee Members and other Members of the House.

                      Rule XIII.--Committee Budget

    From the amount provided to the Committee in the primary 
expense resolution adopted by the House of Representatives in 
the 118th Congress, the Chair shall designate one-third of the 
budget, after adjustment for the salaries of the shared 
administrative functions for the Clerk, Printer and Financial 
Administrator, under the direction of the Ranking Minority 
Member for the purposes of minority staff, travel expenses of 
minority staff and Members, and all other minority office 
expenses.

                Rule XIV. Amendments to Committee Rules

    The rules of the Committee may be modified, amended, or 
repealed, in the same manner and method as prescribed for the 
adoption of committee rules in clause 2 of House rule XI, but 
only if written notice of the proposed change has been provided 
to each such Member at least 3 days before the time of the 
meeting at which the vote on the change occurs. Any such change 
in the rules of the Committee shall be published in the 
Congressional Record within 30 calendar days after their 
approval.
                      Committee on Small Business

  ROGER WILLIAMS, Texas, Chairman

NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York,        BLAINE LUETKEMEYER, Missouri
  Ranking Member                     PETE STAUBER, Minnesota
JARED F. GOLDEN, Maine               DANIEL MEUSER, Pennsylvania
KWEISI MFUME, Maryland               BETH VAN DUYNE, Texas
DEAN PHILLIPS, Minnesota             MARIA ELVIRA SALAZAR, Florida
GREG LANDSMAN, Ohio                  TRACEY MANN, Kansas
MARIE GLUESENKAMP PEREZ, Washington  JAKE ELLZEY, Texas
SHRI THANEDAR, Michigan              MARCUS J. MOLINARO, New York
MORGAN McGARVEY, Kentucky            MARK ALFORD, Missouri
HILLARY J. SCHOLTEN, Michigan        ELIJAH CRANE, Arizona
JUDY CHU, California                 AARON BEAN, Florida
SHARICE DAVIDS, Kansas               WESLEY HUNT, Texas
CHRIS PAPPAS, New Hampshire          NICK LaLOTA, New York

              RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON SMALL BUSINESS FOR
                           THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)


                         1.--General Provisions

    (A) Applicability of House rules.--
          (1) The Rules of the House of Representatives, so far 
        as they are applicable, are the rules of the Committee 
        on Small Business (``the Committee'') and its 
        Subcommittees.
          (2) Each subcommittee is part of the Committee and is 
        subject to the authority and direction of the Committee 
        and its rules so far as applicable.
          (3) Except where the term ``the Committee'' and 
        ``subcommittee'' are specifically referred to, the 
        following rules shall apply to the Committee and its 
        subcommittees as well as the to their respective 
        chairs, ranking minority members, and members.
          (4) Rule XI of the Rules of the House, which pertains 
        entirely to Committee procedure, is incorporated and 
        made a part of the rules of the Committee to the extent 
        applicable.
    (B) Appointments by the Chair.--Pursuant to the Rules of 
the House, the Chair shall designate a Member of the Committee 
Majority to serve as Vice Chair of the Committee. The Vice 
Chair shall preside at any meeting or hearing during the 
temporary absence of the Chair. The Chair also reserves the 
right to designate a Member of the Committee Majority to serve 
as the Chair at a hearing or meeting.
    (C) Authority to Conduct Investigations.--The Committee and 
its subcommittees, after consultation with the Chairman of the 
Committee, may conduct such investigations and studies as they 
may consider necessary or appropriate in the exercise of their 
responsibilities under rule X of the Rules of the House and in 
accordance with clause 2(m) of House rule XI.

                        2.--Meetings in General

    (A) Regular Meetings.--The regular meeting day of the 
Committee shall be the second Wednesday of every month when the 
House is in session. The Chair is authorized to dispense with a 
regular meeting or to change the date thereof when 
circumstances warrant as determined by the sole discretion of 
the Chair.
    (B) Additional Meetings.--Additional meetings may be called 
as deemed necessary by the Chair or at the request of the 
majority Members of the Committee pursuant to rule XI, cl. 2(c) 
of the rules of the House. At least 3 calendar days' notice, 
pursuant to rule XI, cl. 2(g)(3)(A), of such an additional 
meeting shall be given unless the Chair, with the concurrence 
of the Ranking Minority Member, determines that there is good 
cause to call the meeting on less notice or upon a vote by a 
majority of the Committee (a quorum being present). 
Announcements of the meeting shall be published promptly in the 
Daily Digest and made publicly available in electronic form.
    (C) Business to be Considered.--The determination of the 
business to be considered at each meeting shall be made by the 
Chair subject to limitations set forth in House rule XI, cl. 
2(c).
    (D) Meeting Materials.--The Chair shall provide to each 
Member of the Committee, to the extent practicable, at least 48 
hours in advance of a meeting, a copy of the bill, resolution, 
report, or other item to be considered at the meeting, but no 
later than 24 hours before the meeting. Such material also 
shall be made available to the public at least 24 hours in 
advance in electronic form.
    (E) Special and Emergency Meetings.--The rules for notice 
and meetings as set forth in rule 5 of these Rules shall not 
apply to special and emergency meetings. Clause 2(c)(2) of rule 
XI and clause 2(g)(3)(A) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, 
as applicable, shall apply to such meetings.
    (F) Open Meetings.--Each meeting of the Committee or its 
Subcommittees for the transaction of business, including the 
markup of legislation, shall be open to the public, including 
to radio, television, streaming, and still photography 
coverage, except as provided by House rule XI, cl. 4. If the 
majority of Members of the Committee or Subcommittee present at 
the meeting determine by a recorded vote in open session that 
all or part of the remainder of the meeting on that day shall 
be closed to the public because the disclosure of matters to be 
considered would endanger national security, would compromise 
sensitive law enforcement information, or would tend to defame, 
degrade, or incriminate any person or otherwise would violate 
any law or rule of the House; provided however, that no person 
other than Members of the Committee, and such congressional 
staff and such executive branch representatives they may 
authorize, shall be present in any meeting which has been 
closed to the public.
    (G) Open Hearings.--Each hearing conducted by the Committee 
or its Subcommittees shall be open to the public, including 
radio, television, and still photography coverage. If the 
majority of Members of the Committee or Subcommittee present at 
the hearing determine by a recorded vote in open session that 
all or part of the remainder of the hearing on that day shall 
be closed to the public because the disclosure of matters to be 
considered would endanger national security, would compromise 
sensitive law enforcement information, or would tend to defame, 
degrade, or incriminate any person or otherwise would violate 
any law or rule of the House; provided however, that the 
Committee or Subcommittee may by the same procedure also vote 
to close one subsequent day of hearings. Notwithstanding the 
requirements of the preceding sentence, a majority of those 
present (if the requisite number of Members are present under 
Committee rules for the purpose of taking testimony) may vote: 
(i) to close the hearing for the sole purpose of discussing 
whether the testimony or evidence to be received would endanger 
the national security, would compromise sensitive law 
enforcement information, or violate rule XI, cl. 2(k)(5) of the 
House or (ii) to close the hearing, as provided clause 2(k)(5) 
of rule XI of the House.
    (H) Participation in Subcommittee Hearings.--The Chair and 
Ranking Minority Member are ex officio Members of all 
Subcommittees for any hearing conducted by a Subcommittee. 
Members of the Committee who wish to participate in a hearing 
of the Subcommittee to which they are not Members shall make 
such request to the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Subcommittee at the commencement of the hearing. The Chair, 
after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Subcommittee, shall grant such request.
    (I) Non-Participatory Attendance by Other Members of the 
House.--No Member of the House may be excluded from non-
participatory attendance at any hearing of the Committee or any 
Subcommittee, unless the House of Representatives shall by 
majority vote authorize the Committee or Subcommittees, for 
purposes of a particular subject of investigation, to close its 
hearing to Members by the same procedures designated to close 
hearings to the public.
    (J) Procedure to Participate.--Members of Congress who are 
not Members of the Committee but would like to participate in a 
hearing shall notify the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member 
and submit a formal request no later than 24 hours before the 
commencement of the meeting or hearing. Such Member may not 
vote on any matter; be counted for the purpose of establishing 
a quorum; participate in questioning a witness under the 5-
Minute rule, unless permitted to do so by the Chair in 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member; raise points of 
order; or offer amendments or motions.
    (K) Audio and Video Coverage.--To the maximum extent 
practicable, the Committee shall provide audio and video 
coverage of each hearing or meeting for the transaction of 
business in a manner that allows the public to easily listen 
and view the proceedings and shall maintain the recordings of 
such coverage in a manner easily accessible to the public. 
Operation and use of any Committee internet broadcast system 
shall be fair and nonpartisan, and in accordance with clauses 4 
(b) and (f) of House rule XI and all other applicable rules of 
the Committee and the House.

             3.--Meeting and Hearing Procedures in General

    (A) Notice and Information for Members and the Public.--
          (1) Public announcement of the date, place, and 
        subject matter of any hearing to be conducted by the 
        Committee shall be made no later than seven (7) 
        calendar days before the commencement of the hearing. 
        To the extent possible, the seven days shall be counted 
        from 168 hours before the time of the Committee's 
        hearing.
          (2) The Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking 
        Minority Member, or upon a vote by the majority of the 
        Committee (a quorum being present), may authorize a 
        hearing to commence on less than 7 days' notice.
          (3) A list of witnesses shall be made available as 
        soon as practicable after the hearing is noticed to the 
        public. A final witness list shall be issued by the 
        Committee no later than 48 hours prior to the 
        commencement of the hearing.
          (4) The Chair shall provide to all Members of the 
        Committee, as soon as practicable after the 
        announcement of the hearing, a memorandum explaining 
        the subject matter of the hearing and any official 
        reports from departments and agencies on the subject 
        matter of the hearing. Such material shall be made 
        available to all Members of the Committee no later than 
        48 hours before the commencement of the hearing, unless 
        the Chair, after consultation with the Ranking Minority 
        Member, determines that certain reports from 
        departments or agencies should not be made available 
        prior to the commencement of the hearing. Material 
        provided by the Chair to all Members, whether provided 
        prior to or at the hearing, shall be placed on the 
        Committee website no later than 48 hours after the 
        commencement of the hearing, unless such material 
        contains sensitive or classified information, in which 
        case such material shall be handled pursuant to rule 16 
        of the Committee's rules.
    (B) Questioning of Witnesses.--Except when the Committee 
adopts a motion pursuant to subdivisions (B) and (C) of clause 
2(j)(2) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, Committee Members 
may question witnesses only when they have been recognized by 
the Chair for that purpose. Members shall have the opportunity, 
as set forth in rule XI, cl. 2 (j) of the Rules of the House, 
to question each witness on the panel for a period not to 
exceed five minutes. For any hearing, the Chair of the 
Committee or Subcommittee may offer a motion to extend the 
questioning of a witness or witnesses by the Member identified 
in the motion for more than five minutes as set forth in rule 
XI, cl. 2(j)(B). No Member may be recognized for a second 
period of interrogation, subject to the 5-minute rule, until 
each Member present, who wishes to be recognized, has been 
recognized at least once.
    (C) Order of Questioning.--
          (1) Full Committee Hearings.--The Chair of the 
        Committee shall commence questioning followed by the 
        Ranking Minority Member. Thereafter, questioning shall 
        alternate between the Majority and Minority Members. 
        Before the gavel has been struck, or in the case of 
        Members arriving simultaneously, the order of 
        questioning shall be based on seniority among Members 
        of his or her own party. After the gavel has been 
        struck, Members first to arrive shall have priority 
        over Members of his or her own party. Members of 
        Congress who are not Members of the Committee, if 
        allowed by the Chair, may be recognized for questioning 
        of witnesses but only after all Committee Members have 
        first been recognized.
          (2) Subcommittee Hearings.--The Chair of the 
        Subcommittee shall commence questioning followed by the 
        Ranking Minority Member of the Subcommittee. If 
        present, the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
        Committee shall then be recognized for questioning, 
        respectively. Thereafter, questioning shall alternate 
        between the Majority and Minority Members of the 
        Subcommittee. Before the gavel has been struck, or in 
        the case of Subcommittee Members arriving 
        simultaneously, the order of questioning shall be based 
        on seniority among Members of his or her own party. 
        After the gavel has been struck, Subcommittee Members 
        first to arrive shall have priority over Subcommittee 
        Members of his or her own party. Members of the Full 
        Committee who are not members of the Subcommittee and 
        are granted permission to participate pursuant to 
        committee rule 7(C), may be recognized for questioning 
        only after all Subcommittee Members have first been 
        recognized. The order of questioning for Members of the 
        Full Committee who are not members of the Subcommittee 
        shall be based on full committee seniority. Members of 
        Congress who are not Members of the Subcommittee, if 
        allowed by the Chair, may be recognized for questioning 
        of witnesses but only after all Subcommittee Members 
        and Full Committee Members have first been recognized.
    (D) Consideration of Ratio.--In recognizing Members to 
question witnesses, the Chair may take into consideration the 
ratio of Majority and Minority Members present in such a manner 
as to not disadvantage the Members of either party.
    (E) Remote Participation.--Except as provided by section 
3(j) of H. Res. 5, 118th Congress and these regulations, 
witnesses shall testify before a committee in person. No remote 
testimony will be accepted from witnesses testifying in a 
government capacity. In the event the chair of a committee 
determines that testimony of a witness appearing in a non-
governmental capacity is necessary and such a witness is only 
available to participate remotely due to extreme hardship or 
other exceptional circumstances, the chair may allow the 
witness to participate remotely, with written approval from the 
Majority Leader.
          (1) The official record of the committee proceeding 
        shall include a letter from the chair detailing the 
        necessity of allowing the witness to participate 
        remotely, a description of why the witness could not 
        participate in person, why such testimony was necessary 
        for purposes of fulfilling Congress's Article I 
        responsibility, and a letter from the Majority Leader 
        approving of such remote participation.
          (2) The witness must agree to remain on the platform 
        until excused by the chair. The witness should conduct 
        a pre-hearing technology test with staff designated by 
        the chair, to ensure the witness will have sufficient 
        internet connection during the hearing, and to minimize 
        the possibility of any technical issues.
          (3) No witness appearing in a governmental capacity 
        may participate remotely. No witness testifying before 
        a committee in response to a subpoena is permitted to 
        testify remotely, unless both the chair of the 
        committee and the Majority Leader authorize such 
        testimony in writing and printed in the Congressional 
        Record.
          (4) Any text based or private messaging function in 
        the software platform used to facilitate the 
        participation of a remote witness must be disabled 
        unless it is used to provide technical support to the 
        witness, which may be excluded from the public video 
        stream and will not be considered a committee record.
          (5) Only witnesses approved for remote participation 
        may have participatory access on the software platform.
          (6) Committees may only utilize a software platform 
        certified by the Chief Administrative Officer. The 
        Chief Administrative Officer should inform committees, 
        including the ranking minority members, each time a 
        software platform is certified.
          (7) Witnesses participating remotely should appear 
        before a nonpolitical, professional appropriate 
        background that is minimally distracting to other 
        members and witnesses, to the greatest extent possible. 
        It remains within the full discretion of the chair to 
        enforce rules of decorum for committee proceedings.
          (8) Any committee report of activities submitted 
        pursuant to clause 1(d)(1) of rule XI should include a 
        list of hearings conducted with remote participation.
          (9) A witness participating remotely in a committee 
        proceeding shall be visible onscreen within the 
        software platform until excused by the chair. The 
        witness shall disclose to the chair and ranking member 
        any additional individual(s) present off screen.
          (10) Witness counsel shall be allowed access on the 
        remote proceeding software platform if they are not in 
        the physical presence of the witness. It is recommended 
        that counsel facilitate a separate secure line of 
        communication with the witness. A witness may not be 
        unmuted by any other individual and should be allowed 
        to use such secure line of communication while 
        testifying to confer with counsel.
          (11) A witness may not allow an individual not 
        invited to testify to speak on the platform. The 
        committee chair may only provide an exception when the 
        other individual is necessary to facilitate the 
        witness's participation in the hearing (e.g. 
        translators).
          (12) A chair may not authorize remote participation 
        for more than one witness at a committee hearing 
        without the approval of the Majority Leader in writing 
        and printed in the Congressional Record.
    (F) Transcripts of proceedings.--A stenographic record of 
all testimony shall be kept of public meetings and hearings and 
shall be made available on such conditions as the Chair may 
prescribe.

                   4.--Referral of Bills by the Chair

    The Chair will retain consideration of all legislation 
referred to the Committee by the Speaker. No action will be 
required of a Subcommittee before legislation is considered for 
report by the Committee. Subcommittee chairs, pursuant to the 
rules set out herein, may hold hearings on any bill referred to 
the Committee.

                           5.--Subcommittees

    (A) Generally.--Each Subcommittee of the Committee is part 
of the Committee and is subject to the authority and direction 
of the Committee, and to the Rules of the House and the rules 
adopted herein, to the extent applicable. The Chair and Ranking 
Member of the Committee are ex officio Members of all 
Subcommittees for the purpose of any meeting conducted by a 
Subcommittee.
    (B) The Committee shall be organized into the following 
five subcommittees:
          (1) Subcommittee on Rural Development, Energy, and 
        Supply Chains This Subcommittee (which will consist of 
        six (6) Republican Members and five (5) Democratic 
        Members) will address issues to enhance rural economic 
        and business growth, increase America's energy 
        independence, and ensure America's small businesses can 
        compete effectively in a global marketplace. This 
        Subcommittee will review supply chain disruptions 
        impacts on small businesses and the importance of 
        having products made in America.
                   Oversight of the Small Business 
                Administration's outreach and structure as it 
                pertains to increasing assistance to rural 
                businesses and entrepreneurs.
                   Oversight of agricultural policies, 
                including those related to the Farm bill to 
                enhance small business interests.
                   Oversight of trade policies and 
                issues affecting small firms related to trade 
                agreements.
                   Oversight of energy issues.
                   Oversight of international trade 
                policy with particular emphasis on agencies 
                that provide direct assistance to small 
                businesses, such as: the Small Business 
                Administration's (SBA) Office of International 
                Trade, the Department of Commerce's United 
                States Export Assistance Centers, the 
                Department of Agriculture's Foreign 
                Agricultural Service, and the Export-Import 
                Bank.
                   Oversight of infringement of 
                intellectual property rights by foreign 
                competition.
                   Examine the implementation and 
                effectiveness of government programs designed 
                to assist rural and agricultural businesses 
                impacted by the pandemic.
                   Examine the impact of supply chain 
                disruptions on small businesses.
          (2) Subcommittee on Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and 
        Workforce Development.--
          This Subcommittee (which will consist of six (6) 
        Republican Members and five (5) Democratic Members) 
        will address how innovation promotes economic growth 
        and job creation by small businesses. In addition, the 
        Subcommittee will examine small business job growth 
        through the creation and adoption of advanced 
        technologies. The Subcommittee will review the broad 
        scope of workforce issues that affect the ability of 
        small businesses to obtain and maintain qualified 
        employees.
                   Oversight of SBA entrepreneurial 
                development programs.
                   Oversight of all federal policies 
                that affect the workforce including, but not 
                limited to, the roles of the Department of 
                Labor, the Occupational Safety and Health 
                Administration, and the National Labor 
                Relations Board.
                   Analyze workforce issues, including 
                but not limited to health care, retirement, and 
                labor challenges facing small businesses.
                   Examination of general technology 
                issues, including cyber security issues 
                confronting small businesses and intellectual 
                property policy in the United States.
                   Oversight of United States 
                telecommunications policies including, but not 
                limited to, the National Broadband Plan and 
                allocation of electromagnetic spectrum.
                   Oversight of the Small Business 
                Innovation Research Program.
                   Oversight of the Small Business 
                Technology Transfer Program.
                   Investigate the state of the 
                nation's entrepreneurship, the challenges they 
                face, and steps to strengthen entrepreneurship, 
                including startups, solopreneurs, self-
                employed, and microbusinesses.
                   Examine programs and efforts 
                designed to assist both small employers and 
                their workers throughout the Covid-19 pandemic.
          (3) Subcommittee on Economic Growth, Tax, and Capital 
        Access.--
          This Subcommittee (which will consist of six (6) 
        Republican Members and five (5) Democratic Members) 
        will evaluate the operation of the financial markets in 
        the United States and their ability to provide needed 
        capital to small businesses. In addition, the 
        Subcommittee will review federal programs, especially 
        those overseen by the SBA, aimed at assisting 
        entrepreneurs in obtaining needed capital. Since the 
        tax policy plays an integral role in access to capital, 
        this Committee also will examine the impact of federal 
        tax policies on small businesses.
                   Oversight of capital access and 
                financial markets including FinTech and digital 
                asset companies.
                   SBA financial assistance programs, 
                including guaranteed loans, microloans, 
                certified development company loans, and small 
                business investment companies.
                   Implementation of the Dodd-Frank 
                Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
                   Oversight of the Consumer Financial 
                Protection Bureau.
                   Oversight of the Department of 
                Agriculture business and industry guaranteed 
                loan program.
                   Oversight of general tax policy 
                affecting small businesses.
                   Oversight of the Internal Revenue 
                Service.
                   The management of the SBA's COVID 
                Relief programs and the agency's disaster loan 
                program.
                   Analyze efforts to address 
                challenges for the unbanked and underbanked 
                business community and steps to increase 
                capital access.
                   Review the challenges and 
                opportunities presented by Fintech companies as 
                it relates to small business capitalization.
                   Investigate the implementation and 
                efficacy of programs related to supporting the 
                business community and nonprofits throughout 
                the Covid-19 pandemic, including but not 
                limited to the Paycheck Protection Program, the 
                Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, and 
                other SBA programs.
          (4) Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and 
        Regulations.--
          This Subcommittee (which will consist of six (6) 
        Republican Members and five (5) Democratic Members) 
        will review the regulatory burdens imposed on small 
        businesses by federal agencies and how those burdens 
        may be alleviated. This Subcommittee will also probe 
        the efficient operation of government programs that 
        affect small businesses, including the SBA, and develop 
        proposals to make them operate in a more efficient 
        manner.
                   Oversight of general issues 
                affecting small businesses and federal 
                agencies.
                   Oversight of the management of the 
                SBA.
                   Oversight of the SBA Inspector 
                General.
                   Oversight of the SBA's Office of 
                Advocacy.
                   Implementation and effectiveness of 
                the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
                   Oversight of the Office of 
                Information and Regulatory Affairs at the 
                Office of Management and Budget.
                   Use of the Congressional Review Act.
                   Transparency of the federal 
                rulemaking process as required by the 
                Administrative Procedure and Data Quality Acts.
                   Evaluating the Paperwork Reduction 
                Act.
                   Investigate all programs relating to 
                the Covid-19 pandemic, SBA's anti-fraud 
                framework, and their impact on the business and 
                nonprofit community and their employees.
          (5) Subcommittee on Contracting and Infrastructure.--
          This Subcommittee (which will consist of six (6) 
        Republican Members and five (5) Democratic Members) 
        will assess the federal procurement system, including 
        those programs designed specifically to enhance 
        participation by small businesses in providing goods 
        and services to the federal government. The 
        Subcommittee will review the broad scope of 
        opportunities available to small businesses for 
        rebuilding and modernizing the nations' infrastructure.
                   Oversight of government-wide 
                procurement practices and programs affecting 
                small businesses.
                   Oversight of federal procurement 
                policies that inhibit or expand participation 
                by small businesses in the federal contracting 
                marketplace.
                   Oversight of all contracting 
                programs established by the Small Business Act 
                or those relying on or modeled after programs 
                in the Small Business Act.
                   Review technical assistance provided 
                to federal contractors and prospective 
                contractors through SBA personnel, Offices of 
                Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, 
                and Procurement Technical Assistance Centers.
                   Review the SBA Surety Bond guarantee 
                program.
                   General oversight of programs 
                available to small businesses in modernizing 
                and strengthening the nation's infrastructure.
                   Address steps the federal government 
                has taken or can take to strengthen the supply 
                chain and create more federal procurement 
                opportunities for small business concerns.
                   Analyze implementation of the 
                infrastructure law to ensure the participation 
                of small businesses and review steps needed to 
                strengthen their competitiveness in 
                infrastructure projects.
    (C) Powers and Duties of Subcommittees.--Each Subcommittee 
is authorized to meet, hold hearings, receive evidence, and 
report to the Committee on any matters referred to it. Prior to 
the scheduling of any meeting or hearing of a Subcommittee, the 
Chair of the Subcommittee shall obtain the approval of the 
Chair of the Committee.
    (D) Hearing Time and Date.--No hearing or meeting of a 
Subcommittee shall take place at the same time as the meeting 
or hearing of the Full Committee or another Subcommittee, 
provided however, that the Subcommittee Chairs may hold field 
hearings that conflict with those held by other Subcommittees 
of the Committee.

                             6.--Witnesses

    (A) Number of Witnesses.--For any hearing conducted by the 
Committee or Subcommittee there shall be no more than four non-
governmental witnesses of which the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee or Subcommittee (as appropriate) is entitled to 
select one witness for the hearing.
    (B) Witnesses Selected by the Minority.--Witnesses selected 
by the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or Subcommittee 
shall be invited to testify by the Chair of the Committee or 
Subcommittee (as appropriate). Rule 6(A) shall apply with equal 
force to witnesses selected by the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee or Subcommittee.
    (C) Small Business Week Exception.--The limitations set 
forth in the preceding paragraph shall not apply if the 
Committee holds a hearing to honor the work of the small 
business community in conjunction with the annual celebration 
of Small Business Week. Witness limitations for such a hearing 
shall be determined by the Chair in consultation with the 
Ranking Minority Member.
    (D) Statement of Witnesses.--
          (1) Insofar as is practicable, each witness who is to 
        appear before the Committee or Subcommittee shall file 
        an electronic copy of the written testimony with the 
        Committee and the Ranking Minority Member no later than 
        48 hours before the commencement of the hearing.
          (2) Each witness shall limit his or her oral 
        presentation to a five-minute summary of the written 
        testimony, unless the Chair, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member, extends this time period.
          (3) Insofar as is practicable, each non-governmental 
        witness shall provide to the Committee and the Ranking 
        Minority Member, no later than 48 hours before the 
        commencement of the hearing, a curriculum vitae or 
        other statement describing their education, employment, 
        professional affiliation, or other background 
        information pertinent to their testimony.
    (E) Witness Disclosure.--As required by rule XI, cl. 2(g) 
of the Rules of the House, each non-governmental witness before 
the commencement of the hearing shall file with the Chair a 
disclosure form detailing any contracts or grants that the 
witness has with the federal government, as well as the amount 
and country of origin of any payment or contract related to the 
subject of the hearing originating with a foreign government. 
Such information shall be posted on the Committee website 
within 24 hours after the witness appeared at the hearing.
    (F) Failure to Comply.--The failure to provide the 
materials set forth by the deadlines set forth in these rules 
may be grounds for excluding both the oral and written 
testimony of the witness unless waived by the Chair of the 
Committee or Subcommittee.
    (G) Public Access to Witness Materials.--The Committee will 
provide public access to printed materials, including the 
testimony of witnesses in electronic form on the Committee's 
website no later than 24 hours after the hearing is adjourned. 
Supplemental material provided after the hearing adjourns shall 
be placed on the Committee website no later than 24 hours after 
receipt of such material.

                               7.--Quorum

    (A) Generally.--A majority of the members of the Committee 
or a subcommittee shall form a quorum for the Committee or 
subcommittee, respectively, except that two members, one Member 
from the Majority and one Member from the Minority, shall 
constitute a quorum for taking testimony and receiving 
evidence.
    (B) Quorum for a Hearing.--For purposes of taking testimony 
or receiving evidence, a quorum shall be one Member from the 
Majority and one Member from the Minority.
    The Chair of the Committee or Subcommittee shall exercise 
reasonable comity by waiting for the Ranking Minority Member 
even if a quorum is present before striking the gavel to 
commence the hearing.
    (C) Field Hearings.--For hearings held by the Committee or 
a Subcommittee in a location other than the Committee's hearing 
room or the assigned hearing room in Washington, DC, a quorum 
shall be deemed to be present if the Chair of the Committee or 
Subcommittee is present.

                            8.--Record Votes

    (A) When Provided.--A record vote of the Committee shall be 
provided on any question before the Committee upon the request 
of any Member of the Committee. A record of the vote of each 
Member of the Committee on a matter before the Committee shall 
be available in electronic form within 48 hours of such record 
vote, and, with respect to any roll call vote on any motion to 
amend or report, shall be included in the report of the 
Committee showing the total number of votes cast for and 
against and the names of those Members voting for and against.
    (B) Proxy Voting.--No vote by any Member of the Committee 
with respect to any measure or matter may be cast by proxy.
    (C) Public Access to Record Votes.--The Chair of the 
Committee shall, not later than 24 hours after consideration of 
a bill, resolution, report or other item, cause the text of the 
reported item and any amendment adopted thereto to be made 
publicly available in electronic form.

                 9.--Subpoenas, Oaths, and Depositions

    (A) Issuance of Subpoena.--A subpoena may be authorized and 
issued by the Chairman, in accordance with clause 2(m) of rule 
XI of the House of Representatives with 24-hour notice and 
consultation with the Ranking Member.
          (1) The Committee may authorize and issue a subpoena 
        under clause 2(m) of House rule XI if authorized by a 
        majority of the Members voting.
    (B) Oaths.--The Chairman of the Committee, or any member of 
the Committee designated by the Chairman, may administer oaths 
to any witness.
    (C) Deposition Authority.--Pursuant to section 3(k) of 
House Resolution 5 of the 118th Congress, the Chair upon 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member may order the 
taking of depositions, including pursuant to subpoena, by a 
member or counsel of the Committee. Depositions taken by a 
member or counsel of the Committee shall be subject to 
regulations issued by the Committee on Rules and printed in the 
Congressional Record. A witness shall not be required to 
testify unless the witness has been provided with a copy of 
section 3(k) of H. Res. 5, 118th Congress, and these 
regulations.

                     10.--Amendments During Markup

    (A) Availability of Amendments.--Any amendment offered to 
any pending legislation before the Committee must be made 
available in written form by any Member of the Committee. If 
such amendment is not available in written form when requested, 
the markup may be recessed subject to the call of the Chair to 
provide sufficient time for the provision of such written 
amendment. Such recess shall not prejudice the offering of such 
amendment.
    (B) Drafting and Filing of Amendments.--For amendments to 
be accepted during markup, there is no requirement that the 
amendments be filed prior to commencement of the markup or 
prepared with the assistance of the Office of Legislative 
Counsel. Even though it is not necessary, Members seeking to 
amend legislation during markup should draft amendments with 
the assistance of the Office of Legislative Counsel and consult 
with the Chair or Ranking Minority Member's staff (as 
appropriate) in the preparation of such amendments.

                    11.--Postponement of Proceedings

    (A) When Postponement is Permissible.--The Chair, in 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, may postpone 
further proceedings when a record vote is ordered on the 
question of approving any measure or matter or adopting an 
amendment. The Chair may resume postponed proceedings, but no 
later than 24 hours after such postponement, unless the House 
is not in session or there are conflicts with Member schedules 
that make it unlikely a quorum will be present to conduct 
business on the postponed proceeding. In such cases, the Chair 
will consult with Members to set a time as early as possible to 
resume proceedings but in no event later than the next meeting 
date as set forth in rule 2 of these Rules.
    (B) Resumption of Proceedings.--When proceedings resume on 
a postponed question, notwithstanding any intervening order for 
the previous question, an underlying proposition shall remain 
subject to further debate or amendment to the same extent as 
when the question was postponed.

                         12.--Committee Records

    (A) The Committee shall maintain a complete record of all 
actions, which shall include a record of the votes on any 
question on which a recorded vote is demanded. The result of 
any vote by the Committee, or if applicable by a Subcommittee, 
including a voice vote shall be posted on the Committee's 
website within 24 hours after the vote has been taken. Such 
record shall include a description of the amendment, motion, 
order, or other proposition, the name of the Member voting for 
and against such amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition, and the names of Members present but not voting. 
For any amendment, motion, order, or other proposition decided 
by voice vote, the record shall include a description and 
whether the voice vote was in favor or against.
    (B) Transcripts.--The Committee shall maintain a complete 
record of all Committee and Subcommittee activity which, in the 
case of a meeting or hearing transcript, shall include a 
substantially verbatim account of the remarks actually made 
during the proceedings subject only to technical, grammatical, 
and typographical corrections authorized by the person making 
the remarks.
    (C) Availability of Records.--The records of the Committee 
at the National Archives and Records Administration shall be 
made available in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the 
House. The Chair of the Committee shall notify the Ranking 
Member of the Committee of any decision, pursuant to rule VII, 
cl. 3(b)(3) or cl. 4 (b), to withhold a record otherwise 
available, and the matter shall be presented to the Committee 
for a determination of the written request of any Member of the 
Committee.
    (D) Publishing and Posting of Records.--The Committee rules 
shall be made publicly available in electronic form and 
published in the Congressional Record not later than 60 days 
after the Chair of the Committee is elected in each odd-
numbered year.

                         13.--Committee Website

    The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purpose of furthering the Committee's legislative and 
oversight responsibilities, including communicating information 
about Committee's activities to Committee Members and other 
Members of the House. The Ranking Minority Member may maintain 
a similar website for the same purpose, including communicating 
information about the activities of the Minority to Committee 
Members and other Members of the House.

           14.--Access to Classified or Sensitive Information

    (A) Access to classified or sensitive information supplied 
to the Committee or Subcommittees and attendance at closed 
sessions of the Committee or a Subcommittee shall be limited to 
Members and necessary Committee staff and stenographic 
reporters who have appropriate security clearance when the 
Chair determines that such access or attendance is essential to 
the functioning of the Committee or one of its Subcommittees.
    (B) Procedures Governing Availability.--The procedures to 
be followed in granting access to those hearings, records, 
data, charts, and files of the Committee which involve 
classified information or information deemed to be sensitive 
shall be as follows:
          (1) Only Members of the House of Representatives and 
        specifically designated Committee staff of the 
        Committee on Small Business may have access to such 
        information.
          (2) Members who desire to read materials that are in 
        possession of the Committee shall notify the Clerk of 
        the Committee in writing.
          (3) The Clerk of the Committee will maintain an 
        accurate access log, which identifies the circumstances 
        surrounding access to the information, without 
        revealing the material examined.
          (4) If the material desired to be reviewed is 
        material which the Committee or Subcommittee deems to 
        be sensitive enough to require special handling, before 
        receiving access to such information, individuals will 
        be required to sign an access information sheet 
        acknowledging such access and that the individual has 
        read and understands the procedures under which access 
        is being granted.
          (5) Material provided for review under this rule 
        shall not be removed from a specified room within the 
        Committee offices.
          (6) Individuals reviewing materials under this rule 
        shall make certain that the materials are returned to 
        the proper custodian.
          (7) No reproductions or recordings may be made of any 
        portion of such materials.
          (8) The contents of such information shall not be 
        divulged to any person in any way, form, shape, or 
        manner and shall not be discussed with any person who 
        has not received the information in the manner 
        authorized by the rules of the Committee.
          (9) When not being examined in the manner described 
        herein, such information will be kept in secure safes 
        or locked file cabinets within the Committee offices.
          (10) These procedures only address access to 
        information the Committee or Subcommittee deems to be 
        sensitive enough to require special treatment.
          (11) If a Member of the House of Representatives 
        believes that certain sensitive information should not 
        be restricted as to dissemination or use, the Member 
        may petition the Committee or Subcommittee to so rule.
          (12) With respect to classified information and 
        materials provided to the Committee by the Executive 
        Branch or an independent agency as that term is defined 
        in 44 U.S.C. Sec. 3502, the classification of 
        information and materials as determined by the 
        Executive Branch or independent agency shall prevail 
        unless affirmatively changed by the Committee or 
        Subcommittee involved, after consultation with the 
        Executive Branch or independent agency.
          (13) Other materials in the possession of the 
        Committee are to be handled in accordance with House 
        rules.

                         15.--Other Procedures

    The Chair of the Committee may establish such other 
procedures and take such actions as may be necessary to carry 
out the foregoing rules or to facilitate the effective 
operation of the Committee.

                   16.--Amendments to Committee Rules

    The rules of the Committee may be modified, amended, or 
repealed by a majority vote of the Members, at a meeting 
specifically called for such purpose, but only if written 
notice of the proposed change or changes has been provided to 
each Member of the Committee at least 72 hours prior to the 
time of the meeting of the Committee to consider such change or 
changes.

                          17.--Committee Staff

    (A) Majority Staff.--The employees of the Committee, except 
those assigned to the Minority as provided below, shall be 
appointed and assigned, and may be removed by the Chair of the 
Committee. The Chair shall fix their remuneration and they 
shall be under the general supervision and direction of the 
Chair.
    (B) Minority Staff.--The employees of the Committee 
assigned to the Minority shall be appointed and assigned, and 
their remuneration determined, as the Ranking Minority Member 
of the Committee shall decide.
    (C) Subcommittee Staff.--There shall be no separate staff 
assigned to Subcommittees. The Chair and Ranking Minority 
Member shall endeavor to ensure that sufficient Committee staff 
is made available in order that each Subcommittee may carry out 
the responsibilities set forth in rule 3, supra.

                         18.--Budget and Travel

    (A) Allocation of Budget.--From the amount provided to the 
Committee in the primary expense resolution adopted by the 
House of Representatives in the 118th Congress, the Chair, 
after consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, shall 
designate one-third of the budget under the direction of the 
Ranking Minority Member for the purposes of Minority staff, 
travel expenses of Minority staff and Members, and Minority 
office expenses.
    (B) Authorization of Travel.--The Chair may authorize 
travel in connection with activities or subject matters under 
the legislative or oversight jurisdiction of the Committee as 
set forth in rule X of the Rules of the House. The Ranking 
Minority Member may authorize travel for any Minority Member or 
staff of the Minority in connection with activities or subject 
matters under the Committee's jurisdiction as set forth in rule 
X of the Rules of the House. Before such travel, there shall be 
submitted to the Chair of the Committee in writing the 
following at least seven (7) calendar days prior specifying: 
(a) the purpose of the travel; (b) the dates during which the 
travel is to occur; (c) the names of the states or countries to 
be visited and the length of time spent in each; and (d) the 
names of Members and staff of the Committee participating in 
such travel.
             Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure

  SAM GRAVES, Missouri, Chairman

RICK LARSEN, Washington, Ranking MemberIC A. ``RICK'' CRAWFORD, 
ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON, District of Columbiaas
GRACE F. NAPOLITANO, California      DANIEL WEBSTER, Florida
STEVE COHEN, Tennessee               THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky
JOHN GARAMENDI, California           SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania
HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., GeorgiaIAN BABIN, Texas
ANDRE CARSON, Indiana                GARRET GRAVES, Louisiana
DINA TITUS, Nevada                   DAVID ROUZER, North Carolina
JARED HUFFMAN, California            MIKE BOST, Illinois
JULIA BROWNLEY, California           DOUG LaMALFA, California
FREDERICA S. WILSON, Florida         BRUCE WESTERMAN, Arkansas
DONALD M. PAYNE, Jr., New Jersey     BRIAN J. MAST, Florida
MARK DeSAULNIER, California          JENNIFFER GONZALEZ-COLON, Puerto 
SALUD O. CARBAJAL, California        Rico
GREG STANTON, Arizona                PETE STAUBER, Minnesota
COLIN Z. ALLRED, Texas               TIM BURCHETT, Tennessee
SHARICE DAVIDS, Kansas               DUSTY JOHNSON, South Dakota
JESUS G. ``CHUY'' GARCIA, Illinois   JEFFERSON VAN DREW, New Jersey
CHRIS PAPPAS, New Hampshire          TROY E. NEHLS, Texas
SETH MOULTON, Massachusetts          LANCE GOODEN, Texas
JAKE AUCHINCLOSS, Massachusetts      TRACEY MANN, Kansas
MARILYN STRICKLAND, Washington       BURGESS OWENS, Utah
TROY A. CARTER, Louisiana            RUDY YAKYM III, Indiana
PATRICK RYAN, New York               LORI CHAVEZ-DEREMER, Oregon
MARY SATTLER PELTOLA, Alaska         CHUCK EDWARDS, North Carolina
ROBERT MENENDEZ, New Jersey          THOMAS H. KEAN, Jr., New Jersey
VAL T. HOYLE, Oregon                 ANTHONY D'ESPOSITO, New York
EMILIA STRONG SYKES, Ohio            ERIC BURLISON, Missouri
HILLARY J. SCHOLTEN, Michigan        JOHN JAMES, Michigan
VALERIE P. FOUSHEE, North Carolina   DERRICK VAN ORDEN, Wisconsin
                                     BRANDON WILLIAMS, New York
                                     MARCUS J. MOLINARO, New York
                                     MIKE COLLINS, Georgia
                                     MIKE EZELL, Mississippi
                                     JOHN S. DUARTE, California
                                     AARON BEAN, Florida

  RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE 
                             118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 1, 2023)


                      Rule I.--General Provisions

    (a) Applicability of House Rules.--
          (1) In General.--The Rules of the House are the rules 
        of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure 
        (hereinafter referred to in these as rules the 
        ``Committee'') and its subcommittees so far as 
        applicable, except that a motion to recess from day to 
        day, and a motion to dispense with the first reading 
        (in full) of a bill or resolution, if printed copies 
        are available, are non-debatable privileged motions in 
        the Committee and its subcommittees.
          (2) Subcommittees.--Each subcommittee is part of the 
        Committee, and is subject to the authority and 
        direction of the Committee and its rules so far as 
        applicable.
          (3) Incorporation of House Rule on Committee 
        Procedure.--Rule XI of the Rules of the House, which 
        pertains entirely to Committee procedure, is 
        incorporated and made a part of the rules of the 
        Committee to the extent applicable. Pursuant to clause 
        2(a)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the 
        Chairman of the Committee is authorized to offer a 
        motion under clause 1 of rule XXII of the Rules of the 
        House whenever the Chairman considers it appropriate.
    (b) Publication of Rules.--Pursuant to clause 2(a) of rule 
XI of the Rules of the House, the Committee's rules shall be 
publicly available in electronic form and published in the 
Congressional Record not later than 60 days after the Chairman 
is elected in each odd-numbered year.
    (c) Vice Chair.--The Chairman shall appoint a Vice Chair of 
the Committee and of each subcommittee. If the Chairman of the 
Committee or subcommittee is not present at any meeting of the 
Committee or subcommittee, as the case may be, the Vice Chair 
shall preside. If the Vice Chair is not present, the ranking 
majority member who is present shall preside at that meeting.

          Rule II.--Regular, Additional, and Special Meetings

    (a) Regular Meetings.--Regular meetings of the Committee 
shall be held on the last Wednesday of every month to transact 
its business unless such day is a holiday, or the House is in 
recess or is adjourned, in which case the Chairman shall 
determine the regular meeting day of the Committee for that 
month. A regular meeting of the Committee may be dispensed with 
if, in the judgment of the Chairman, there is no need for the 
meeting. This paragraph shall not apply to meetings of any 
subcommittee.
    (b) Additional Meetings.--The Chairman may call and 
convene, if the Chairman considers necessary, additional 
meetings of the Committee for the consideration of any bill or 
resolution pending before the Committee or for the conduct of 
other Committee business. The Committee shall meet for such 
purpose pursuant to the call of the Chairman.
    (c) Special Meetings.--If at least three members of the 
Committee desire that a special meeting of the Committee be 
called by the Chairman, those members may file with the Clerk 
of the Committee their written request to the Chairman for that 
special meeting. Such request shall specify the measure or 
matter to be considered. Immediately upon the filing of the 
request, the Clerk of the Committee shall notify the Chairman 
of the filing of the request. If, within three calendar days 
after the filing of the request, the Chairman does not call the 
requested special meeting, to be held within seven calendar 
days after the filing of the request, a majority of the members 
of the Committee may file with the Clerk their written notice 
that a special meeting of the Committee will be held, 
specifying the date and hour thereof, and the measure or matter 
to be considered at that special meeting. The Committee shall 
meet on that date and hour. Immediately upon the filing of the 
notice, the Clerk of the Committee shall notify all members of 
the Committee that such meeting will be held and inform them of 
its date and hour and the measure or matter to be considered; 
and only the measure or matter specified in that notice may be 
considered at that special meeting. Such notice shall also be 
made publicly available in electronic form and shall be deemed 
to satisfy paragraph (d)(1).
    (d) Notice.--
          (1) Minimum Notice Period.--Pursuant to clause 
        2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the 
        Chairman shall make a public announcement of the date, 
        place, and subject matter of a Committee or 
        subcommittee meeting, which may not commence earlier 
        than the third calendar day (excluding Saturdays, 
        Sundays, or legal holidays except when the House is in 
        session on such a day) on which members have notice 
        thereof.
          (2) Changes in Meeting Times.--A meeting may commence 
        sooner than announced if the Chairman, with concurrence 
        of the ranking minority member, determines there is 
        good cause to begin the meeting sooner or the Committee 
        or subcommittee so determines by majority vote, a 
        quorum being present for the transaction of business. 
        The Chairman shall make a public announcement of the 
        meeting time change at the earliest possible 
        opportunity.
          (3) Notification of Daily Digest Clerk.--The Clerk of 
        the Committee shall notify the Daily Digest Clerk of 
        the Congressional Record promptly and make publicly 
        available in electronic form a time change for a 
        Committee or subcommittee meeting made under this 
        paragraph.
    (e) Prohibition on Sitting During Joint Session.--The 
Committee may not sit during a joint session of the House and 
Senate or during a recess when a joint meeting of the House and 
Senate is in progress.

               Rule III.--Meetings and Hearings Generally

    (a) Minimum Period for Availability of Committee Markup 
Text.--Pursuant to clause 2(g)(4) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House, the Chairman shall make publicly available, in 
electronic form, the text of any legislation to be marked up at 
least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a meeting for the 
markup of legislation, or at the time of a meeting announcement 
under paragraph (d)(2) of Committee rule II if made within 24 
hours before such meeting.
    (b) Open Meetings.--Each meeting for the transaction of 
business, including the markup of legislation, and each hearing 
of the Committee or a subcommittee shall be open to the public, 
except as provided by clause 2(g) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House or clause 2(k) of rule XI of the Rules of the House.
    (c) Meetings to Begin Promptly.--Each meeting or hearing of 
the Committee shall begin promptly at the time so stipulated in 
the public announcement of the meeting or hearing.
    (d) Addressing the Committee.--Except as provided under 
paragraph (e) of Committee rule IV, a Committee member may 
address the Committee or a subcommittee on any bill, motion, or 
other matter under consideration--
          (1) only when recognized by the Chairman for that 
        purpose; and
          (2) only for five minutes until such time as each 
        member of the Committee or subcommittee who so desires 
        has had an opportunity to address the Committee or 
        subcommittee.
A member's remarks shall be limited to the subject matter under 
consideration. The Chairman shall enforce this paragraph.
    (e) Participation of Members in Subcommittee Meetings and 
Hearings.--All members of the Committee who are not members of 
a particular subcommittee may, by unanimous consent of the 
members of such subcommittee, participate in any subcommittee 
meeting or hearing. However, a member who is not a member of 
the subcommittee may not vote on any matter before the 
subcommittee, be counted for purposes of establishing a quorum, 
or raise points of order.
    (f) Member Day Hearing.--Pursuant to section 3(h) of House 
Resolution 5, the Committee shall hold a hearing at which it 
receives testimony from Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
Commissioner on proposed legislation within the Committee's 
jurisdiction during the first session of the 118th Congress.
    (g) Broadcasting.--Whenever a meeting for the transaction 
of business, including the markup of legislation, or a hearing 
is open to the public, that meeting or hearing shall be open to 
coverage by television, radio, and still photography in 
accordance with clause 4 of rule XI of the Rules of the House. 
Operation and use of any Committee internet broadcast system 
shall be fair and nonpartisan and in accordance with clause 
4(b) of rule XI of the Rules of the House and all other 
applicable rules of the Committee and the House. Further, 
pursuant to clause 2(e)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House, the Committee shall provide audio and video coverage of 
each hearing or meeting for the transaction of business in a 
manner that allows the public to easily listen to and view the 
proceedings. The Committee shall also maintain the recordings 
of such coverage in a manner that is easily accessible to the 
public.
    (h) Access to the Dais and Lounges.--Access to the hearing 
rooms' daises and to the lounges adjacent to the Committee 
hearing rooms shall be limited to Members of Congress and 
employees of Congress during a meeting or hearing of the 
Committee unless specifically permitted by the Chairman or 
ranking minority member.
    (i) Use of Electronic Devices.--During a hearing, mark-up, 
or other meeting of the Committee, audible sounds or vocal use 
of cellular telephones or other electronic devices is 
prohibited in the Committee room.
    (j) Availability of Text of Amendments in Electronic 
Form.--Pursuant to clause 2(e) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House, not later than 24 hours after the adoption of any 
amendment, or 48 hours after the disposition or withdrawal of 
any other amendment, to a measure or matter considered by the 
Committee, the Chairman shall cause the text of the amendment 
to be made publicly available in electronic form.

                      Rule IV.--Hearing Procedures

    (a) Announcement of Hearing.--
          (1) Minimum Notice Period.--Pursuant to clause 
        2(g)(3) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the 
        Chairman shall make a public announcement of the date, 
        place, and subject matter of a Committee or 
        subcommittee hearing, which may not commence earlier 
        than the one week after such notice.
          (2) Changes in Hearing Times.--A hearing may commence 
        sooner than announced if the Chairman, with concurrence 
        of the ranking minority member, determines there is 
        good cause to begin the hearing sooner or the Committee 
        so determines by majority vote, a quorum being present 
        for the transaction of business. The Chairman shall 
        make a public announcement of the hearing time change 
        at the earliest possible opportunity.
          (3) Notification of Daily Digest Clerk.--The Clerk of 
        the Committee shall notify the Daily Digest Clerk of 
        the Congressional Record promptly and make publicly 
        available in electronic form a time change for a 
        Committee or subcommittee hearing made under this 
        paragraph.
    (b) Written Statement of Proposed Testimony; Oral 
Statement.--
          (1) Filing of Statement.--So far as practicable, each 
        witness who is to appear before the Committee or a 
        Subcommittee shall file with the Clerk of the Committee 
        or subcommittee, at least two calendar days (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day) before the day of 
        the witness' appearance, a written statement of 
        proposed testimony. The Chairman, with the concurrence 
        of the ranking minority member, may take the following 
        actions for failure to comply with this requirement: 
        (A) exclude such witness' written testimony from the 
        hearing record; (B) bar such witness' oral presentation 
        of the testimony; or (C) both (A) and (B). Each 
        witness' oral presentation shall be limited to a 
        summary of the written statement.
          (2) Truth in Testimony Information.--Pursuant to 
        clause 2(g)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, in 
        the case of a witness appearing in a nongovernmental 
        capacity, a written statement of proposed testimony 
        shall include a curriculum vitae, a disclosure of any 
        Federal grants or contracts, or payments originating 
        with a foreign government, received during the past 36 
        months by the witness or by an entity represented by 
        the witness and related to the subject matter of the 
        hearing, and a disclosure of whether the witness is a 
        fiduciary (including but not limited to, a director, 
        officer, advisor, or resident agent) of any 
        organization or entity that has an interest in the 
        subject matter of the hearing.
          (3) Availability of Information in Electronic Form.--
        Statements filed under this paragraph, with appropriate 
        redactions to protect the privacy of the witness, shall 
        be made publicly available in electronic form 24 hours 
        before the witness appears, to the extent practicable, 
        but not later than one day after the witness appears.
    (c) Minority Witnesses.--When any hearing is conducted by 
the Committee or any subcommittee upon any measure or matter, 
the minority party members on the Committee or subcommittee 
shall be entitled, upon request to the Chairman by a majority 
of those minority members before the completion of such 
hearing, to call witnesses selected by the minority to testify 
with respect to that measure or matter during at least one day 
of hearing thereon.
    (d) Summary of Subject Matter.--Upon announcement of a 
hearing, to the extent practicable, the Committee shall make 
available to all members of the Committee a concise summary of 
the subject matter (including legislative reports and other 
materials) under consideration. In addition, upon announcement 
of a hearing and subsequently as they are received, the 
Chairman shall make available to the members of the Committee 
any official reports from departments and agencies on such 
matter.
    (e) Opening Statements; Questioning of Witnesses.--
          (1) Opening Statements.--
                  (A) Chairman and Ranking Member.--At a 
                hearing of the Full Committee, the Chairman and 
                ranking minority member of the Committee shall 
                each be entitled to present an oral opening 
                statement of five minutes. At a hearing of a 
                subcommittee, the Chairman and ranking minority 
                member of the Committee and the Chairman and 
                ranking minority member of the subcommittee 
                shall each be entitled to present an opening 
                statement for five minutes.
                  (B) Other Members.--At a hearing of the Full 
                Committee or a subcommittee, other members of 
                the Committee or subcommittee, as appropriate, 
                may submit written opening statements for the 
                record. The Chairman presiding over the hearing 
                may permit oral opening statements by other 
                members of the Committee or subcommittee, as 
                appropriate, with the concurrence of the 
                ranking minority member.
          (2) Questioning of Witnesses.--The questioning of 
        witnesses in Committee and subcommittee hearings shall 
        be initiated by the Chairman, followed by the ranking 
        minority member and all other members alternating 
        between the majority and minority parties. In 
        recognizing members to question witnesses in this 
        fashion, the Chairman shall take into consideration the 
        ratio of the majority to minority members present and 
        shall establish the order of recognition for 
        questioning in such a manner as not to disadvantage the 
        members of the majority nor the members of the 
        minority. The Chairman may accomplish this by 
        recognizing two majority members for each minority 
        member recognized.
    (f) Procedures for Questions.--
          (1) In General.--A Committee member may question a 
        witness at a hearing--
                  (A) only when recognized by the Chairman for 
                that purpose; and
                  (B) subject to subparagraphs (2) and (3), 
                only for five minutes until such time as each 
                member of the Committee or subcommittee who so 
                desires has had an opportunity to question the 
                witness.
A member's remarks shall be limited to the subject matter under 
consideration. The Chairman shall enforce this subparagraph.
          (2) Extended Questioning of Witnesses by Members.--
        The Chairman of the Committee or a subcommittee, with 
        the concurrence of the ranking minority member, or the 
        Committee or subcommittee by motion, may permit a 
        specified number of its members to question a witness 
        for longer than five minutes. The time for extended 
        questioning of a witness under this subdivision shall 
        be equal for the majority party and minority party and 
        may not exceed one hour in the aggregate.
          (3) Extended Questioning of Witnesses by Staff.--The 
        Chairman of the Committee or a subcommittee, with the 
        concurrence of the ranking minority member, or the 
        Committee or subcommittee by motion, may permit 
        Committee staff for its majority and minority party 
        members to question a witness for equal specified 
        periods. The time for extended questioning of a witness 
        under this subdivision shall be equal for the majority 
        party and minority party and may not exceed one hour in 
        the aggregate.
          (4) Right To Question Witnesses Following Extended 
        Questioning.--Nothing in subparagraph (2) or (3) 
        affects the right of a member (other than a member 
        designated under subparagraph (2)) to question a 
        witness for five minutes in accordance with 
        subparagraph (1)(B) after the questioning permitted 
        under subparagraph (2) or (3).
    (g) Additional Hearing Procedures.--
          (1) In General.--Clause 2(k) of rule XI of the Rules 
        of the House (relating to additional rules for 
        hearings) applies to hearings of the Committee and its 
        subcommittees.
          (2) Non-Governmental Witness.--Pursuant to section 
        3(j) of House Resolution 5 and subject to the 
        regulations issued by the Chairman of the Committee on 
        Rules and printed in the Congressional Record, the 
        Chairman of the Committee may allow for the remote 
        appearance of witnesses appearing in a non-governmental 
        capacity.

    Rule V. Procedures for Reporting Bills, Resolutions, and Reports

    (a) Filing of Reports.--
          (1) In General.--The Chairman of the Committee shall 
        report promptly to the House any measure or matter 
        approved by the Committee and take necessary steps to 
        bring the measure or matter to a vote.
          (2) Requests for Reporting.--The report of the 
        Committee on a measure or matter which has been 
        approved by the Committee shall be filed within seven 
        calendar days (exclusive of days on which the House is 
        not in session) after the day on which there has been 
        filed with the Clerk of the Committee a written 
        request, signed by a majority of the members of the 
        Committee, for the reporting of that measure or matter. 
        Upon the filing of any such request, the Clerk of the 
        Committee shall transmit immediately to the Chairman of 
        the Committee notice of the filing of that request.
    (b) Quorum; Record Votes.--
          (1) Quorum.--Pursuant to clause 2(h)(1) of rule XI of 
        the Rules of the House, a measure or recommendation may 
        not be reported from the Committee unless a majority of 
        the Committee is actually present.
          (2) Record Votes.--Pursuant to clause 3(b) of rule 
        XIII of the Rules of the House, with respect to each 
        record vote on a motion to report a measure or matter 
        of a public nature, and on any amendment offered to the 
        measure or matter, the total number of votes cast for 
        and against, and the names of members voting for and 
        against, shall be included in the Committee report on 
        the measure or matter.
    (c) Required Matters.--The report of the Committee on a 
measure or matter which has been approved by the Committee 
shall include the items required to be included by the rules 
and orders of the House applicable in the One Hundred 
Eighteenth Congress.
    (d) Additional Views.--If, at the time of approval of any 
measure or matter by the Committee, any member of the Committee 
gives notice of intention to file supplemental, minority, 
additional, or dissenting views, all members shall be entitled 
to not less than two additional calendar days after the day of 
such notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, 
except when the House is in session on such a day) in which to 
file such written and signed views in accordance with clause 
2(l) of rule XI of the Rules of the House.
    (e) Activities Report.--
          (1) In General.--Not later than January 2nd of each 
        odd numbered year, the Committee shall submit to the 
        House a report on the activities of the Committee.
          (2) Contents.--The report shall include--
                  (A) separate sections summarizing the 
                legislative and oversight activities of the 
                Committee under rules X and XI of the Rules of 
                the House during the Congress;
                  (B) a summary of the oversight plan submitted 
                by the Committee under clause 2(d) of rule X of 
                the Rules of the House;
                  (C) a summary of the actions taken and 
                recommendations made with respect to the 
                oversight plan specified in subdivision (B);
                  (D) a summary of any additional oversight 
                activities undertaken by the Committee and any 
                recommendations made or actions taken thereon; 
                and
                  (E) a delineation of any hearings held 
                pursuant to clauses 2(n), (o), or (p) of rule 
                XI of the Rules of the House.
          (3) Filing.--After an adjournment sine die of the 
        last regular session of a Congress, or after December 
        15 of an even numbered year, whichever occurs first, 
        the Chairman may file the report described in 
        subparagraph (1) with the Clerk of the House at any 
        time and without approval of the Committee, provided 
        that--
                  (A) a copy of the report has been available 
                to each member of the Committee for at least 
                seven calendar days; and
                  (B) the report includes any supplemental, 
                minority, additional, or dissenting views 
                submitted by a member of the Committee.
    (f) Other Committee Materials.--
          (1) In General.--All Committee and subcommittee 
        prints, reports, documents, or other materials, not 
        otherwise provided for under this rule, that purport to 
        express publicly the views of the Committee or any of 
        its subcommittees or members of the Committee or its 
        subcommittees shall be approved by the Committee or the 
        subcommittee prior to printing and distribution and any 
        member shall be given an opportunity to have views 
        included as part of such material prior to printing, 
        release, and distribution in accordance with paragraph 
        (d) of this rule.
          (2) Documents Containing Views Other Than Member 
        Views.--A Committee or subcommittee document containing 
        views other than those of members of the Committee or 
        subcommittee shall not be published without approval of 
        the Committee or subcommittee.
          (3) Disclaimer.--All Committee or subcommittee 
        reports printed pursuant to legislative study or 
        investigation and not approved by a majority vote of 
        the Committee or subcommittee, as appropriate, shall 
        contain the following disclaimer on the cover of such 
        report: ``This report has not been officially adopted 
        by the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure 
        (or pertinent subcommittee thereof) and may not 
        therefore necessarily reflect the views of its 
        members.''.
    (g) Availability of Publications.--Pursuant to clause 
2(e)(4) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the Committee 
shall make its publications available in electronic form to the 
maximum extent feasible.

        Rule VI. Quorums and Record Votes; Postponement of Votes

    (a) Working Quorum.--One-third of the members of the 
Committee or a subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for 
taking any action other than the closing of a meeting pursuant 
to clauses 2(g) and 2(k)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House, the authorizing of a subpoena pursuant to paragraph (d) 
of Committee rule XII, the reporting of a measure or 
recommendation pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of Committee rule 
V, and the actions described in paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) of 
this rule.
    (b) Quorum for Reporting.--A majority of the members of the 
Committee or a subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for the 
reporting of a measure or recommendation.
    (c) Approval of Certain Matters.--A majority of the members 
of the Committee or a subcommittee shall constitute a quorum 
for approval of a resolution concerning any of the following 
actions:
          (1) A prospectus for construction, alteration, 
        purchase or acquisition of a public building or the 
        lease of space as required by section 3307 of title 40, 
        United States Code.
          (2) Survey investigation of a proposed project for 
        navigation, flood control, and other purposes by the 
        Corps of Engineers (section 4 of the Rivers and Harbors 
        Act of March 4, 1913, 33 U.S.C. 542).
          (3) Construction of a water resources development 
        project by the Corps of Engineers with an estimated 
        Federal cost not exceeding $15,000,000 (section 201 of 
        the Flood Control Act of 1965).
          (4) Deletion of water quality storage in a Federal 
        reservoir project where the benefits attributable to 
        water quality are 15 percent or more but not greater 
        than 25 percent of the total project benefits (section 
        65 of the Water Resources Development Act of 1974).
          (5) Authorization of a Natural Resources Conservation 
        Service watershed project involving any single 
        structure of more than 4,000 acre feet of total 
        capacity (section 2 of P.L. 566, 83rd Congress).
    (d) Quorum for Taking Testimony.--Two members of the 
Committee or subcommittee shall constitute a quorum for the 
purpose of taking testimony and receiving evidence.
    (e) Record Votes.--A record vote may be demanded by one-
fifth of the members present.
    (f) Postponement of Votes.--
          (1) In General.--In accordance with clause 2(h)(4) of 
        rule XI of the Rules of the House, the Chairman of the 
        Committee or a subcommittee, after consultation with 
        the ranking minority member of the Committee or 
        subcommittee, may--
                  (A) postpone further proceedings when a 
                record vote is ordered on the question of 
                approving a measure or matter or on adopting an 
                amendment; and
                  (B) resume proceedings on a postponed 
                question at any time after reasonable notice.
          (2) Resumption of Proceedings.--When proceedings 
        resume on a postponed question, notwithstanding any 
        intervening order for the previous question, an 
        underlying proposition shall remain subject to further 
        debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
        question was postponed.
    (g) Availability of Record Votes in Electronic Form.--
Pursuant to clause 2(e)(1)(B)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House, the Chairman shall make the result of any record vote 
publicly available in electronic form within 48 hours of such 
record vote.

    Rule VII. Establishment of Subcommittees; Size and Party Ratios

    (a) Establishment.--There shall be six standing 
subcommittees. These subcommittees, with the following sizes 
(including delegates) and majority/minority ratios, are:
          (1) Subcommittee on Aviation (41 Members: 22 Majority 
        and 19 Minority).
          (2) Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime 
        Transportation (15 Members: 8 Majority and 7 Minority).
          (3) Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public 
        Buildings, and Emergency Management (17 Members: 9 
        Majority and 8 Minority).
          (4) Subcommittee on Highways and Transit (49 Members: 
        26 Majority and 23 Minority).
          (5) Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and 
        Hazardous Materials (33 Members: 18 Majority and 15 
        Minority).
          (6) Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment 
        (35 Members: 19 Majority and 16 Minority).
    (b) Ex Officio Members.--The Chairman and ranking minority 
member of the Committee shall serve as ex officio voting 
members on each subcommittee.
    (c) Ratios.--On each subcommittee there shall be a ratio of 
majority party members to minority party members which shall be 
no less favorable to the majority party than the ratio for the 
Full Committee. In calculating the ratio of majority party 
members to minority party members, there shall be included the 
ex officio members of the subcommittees.

             Rule VIII. Powers and Duties of Subcommittees

    (a) Authority to Sit.--Each subcommittee is authorized to 
meet, hold hearings, receive evidence, and report to the Full 
Committee on all matters referred to it or under its 
jurisdiction. Subcommittee Chair shall set dates for hearings 
and meetings of their respective subcommittees after 
consultation with the Chairman and other subcommittee chairs 
with a view toward avoiding simultaneous scheduling of Full 
Committee and subcommittee meetings or hearings whenever 
possible.
    (b) Consideration by Committee.--Each bill, resolution, or 
other matter favorably reported by a subcommittee shall 
automatically be placed upon the agenda of the Committee. Any 
such matter reported by a subcommittee shall not be considered 
by the Committee unless it has been delivered to the offices of 
all members of the Committee at least 48 hours before the 
meeting, unless the Chairman determines that the matter is of 
such urgency that it should be given early consideration.

           Rule IX. Referral of Legislation to Subcommittees

    (a) General Requirement.--Except where the Chairman of the 
Committee determines, in consultation with the majority members 
of the Committee, that consideration is to be by the Full 
Committee, each bill, resolution, investigation, or other 
matter which relates to a subject listed under the jurisdiction 
of any subcommittee established in Committee rule VII referred 
to or initiated by the Full Committee shall be referred by the 
Chairman to all subcommittees of appropriate jurisdiction 
within two weeks. All bills shall be referred to the 
subcommittee of proper jurisdiction without regard to whether 
the author is or is not a member of the subcommittee.
    (b) Recall From Subcommittee.--A bill, resolution, or other 
matter referred to a subcommittee in accordance with this rule 
may be recalled therefrom at any time by a vote of a majority 
of the members of the Committee voting, a quorum being present, 
for the Committee's direct consideration or for reference to 
another subcommittee.
    (c) Multiple Referrals.--In carrying out this rule with 
respect to any matter, the Chairman may refer the matter 
simultaneously to two or more subcommittees for concurrent 
consideration or for consideration in sequence (subject to 
appropriate time limitations in the case of any subcommittee 
after the first), or divide the matter into two or more parts 
(reflecting different subjects and jurisdictions) and refer 
each such part to a different subcommittee, or make such other 
provisions as he or she considers appropriate.

                  Rule X. Recommendation of Conferees

    The Chairman of the Committee shall recommend to the 
Speaker as conferees the names of those members (1) of the 
majority party selected by the Chairman, and (2) of the 
minority party selected by the ranking minority member of the 
Committee. Recommendations of conferees to the Speaker shall 
provide a ratio of majority party members to minority party 
members which shall be no less favorable to the majority party 
than the ratio for the Committee.

                           Rule XI. Oversight

    (a) Purpose.--The Committee shall carry out oversight 
responsibilities as provided in this rule in order to assist 
the House in--
          (1) its analysis, appraisal, and evaluation of--
                  (A) the application, administration, 
                execution, and effectiveness of the laws 
                enacted by the Congress; or
                  (B) conditions and circumstances which may 
                indicate the necessity or desirability of 
                enacting new or additional legislation; and
          (2) its formulation, consideration, and enactment of 
        such modifications or changes in those laws, and of 
        such additional legislation, as may be necessary or 
        appropriate.
    (b) Authorization and Oversight Plan.--Not later than March 
1st of the first session of each Congress, the Chairman shall 
submit to the Committee on Oversight and Accountability and the 
Committee on House Administration its authorization and 
oversight plan for that Congress in accordance with clause 2(d) 
of rule X of the Rules of the House.
    (c) Review of Laws and Programs.--The Committee and the 
appropriate subcommittees shall cooperatively review and study, 
on a continuing basis, the application, administration, 
execution, and effectiveness of those laws, or parts of laws, 
the subject matter of which is within the jurisdiction of the 
Committee, and the organization and operation of the Federal 
agencies and entities having responsibilities in or for the 
administration and execution thereof, in order to determine 
whether such laws and the programs thereunder are being 
implemented and carried out in accordance with the intent of 
the Congress and whether such programs should be continued, 
curtailed, or eliminated. In addition, the Committee and the 
appropriate subcommittees shall cooperatively review and study 
any conditions or circumstances which may indicate the 
necessity or desirability of enacting new or additional 
legislation within the jurisdiction of the Committee (whether 
or not any bill or resolution has been introduced with respect 
thereto), and shall on a continuing basis undertake future 
research and forecasting on matters within the jurisdiction of 
the Committee.
    (d) Review of Tax Policies.--The Committee and the 
appropriate subcommittees shall cooperatively review and study 
on a continuing basis the impact or probable impact of tax 
policies affecting subjects within the jurisdiction of the 
Committee.

Rule XII. Power To Sit and Act; Power To Conduct Investigations; Oaths; 
                             Subpoena Power

    (a) Authority To Sit and Act.--For the purpose of carrying 
out any of its functions and duties under rules X and XI of the 
Rules of the House, the Committee and each of its 
subcommittees, is authorized (subject to paragraph (d)(1))--
          (1) to sit and act at such times and places within 
        the United States whether the House is in session, has 
        recessed, or has adjourned and to hold such hearings; 
        and
          (2) to require, by subpoena or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of such witnesses and the 
        production of such books, records, correspondence, 
        memorandums, papers, and documents, as it deems 
        necessary.
    (b) Authority To Conduct Investigations.--
          (1) In General.--The Committee is authorized at any 
        time to conduct such investigations and studies as it 
        may consider necessary or appropriate in the exercise 
        of its responsibilities under rule X of the Rules of 
        the House and (subject to the adoption of expense 
        resolutions as required by rule X, clause 6 of the 
        Rules of the House) to incur expenses (including travel 
        expenses) in connection therewith.
    (c) Oaths.--The Chairman, or any member designated by the 
Chairman, may administer oaths to any witness.
    (d) Issuance of Subpoenas.--
          (1) In General.--A subpoena may be issued by the 
        Committee or subcommittee under paragraph (a)(2) in the 
        conduct of any investigation or activity or series of 
        investigations or activities, only when authorized by a 
        majority of the members voting, a majority being 
        present. Such authorized subpoenas shall be signed by 
        the Chairman of the Committee or by any member 
        designated by the Committee. If a specific request for 
        a subpoena has not been previously rejected by either 
        the Committee or subcommittee, the Chairman of the 
        Committee, after consultation with the ranking minority 
        member of the Committee, may authorize and issue a 
        subpoena under paragraph (a)(2) in the conduct of any 
        investigation or activity or series of investigations 
        or activities, and such subpoena shall for all purposes 
        be deemed a subpoena issued by the Committee. As soon 
        as practicable after a subpoena is issued under this 
        rule, the Chairman shall notify all members of the 
        Committee of such action.
          (2) Enforcement.--Compliance with any subpoena issued 
        by the Committee or subcommittee under paragraph (a)(2) 
        may be enforced only as authorized or directed by the 
        House.
    (e) Expenses of Subpoenaed Witnesses.--Each witness who has 
been subpoenaed, upon the completion of the witness' testimony 
before the Committee or any subcommittee, may report to the 
offices of the Committee, and there sign appropriate vouchers 
for travel allowances and attendance fees. If hearings are held 
in cities other than Washington, D.C., the witness or the 
witness' representative may contact the counsel of the 
Committee, before leaving the hearing room.
    (f) Deposition Authority.--Pursuant to section 3(k) of 
House Resolution 5 and subject to the regulations issued by the 
Chairman of the Committee on Rules and printed in the 
Congressional Record, the Chairman of the Committee, upon 
consultation with the ranking minority member, may order the 
taking of depositions, including pursuant to a subpoena, by a 
member or counsel of such committee.

    Rule XIII. Review of Continuing Programs; Budget Act Provisions

    (a) Ensuring Annual Appropriations.--The Committee shall, 
in its consideration of all bills and joint resolutions of a 
public character within its jurisdiction, ensure that 
appropriations for continuing programs and activities of the 
Federal government and the District of Columbia government will 
be made annually to the maximum extent feasible and consistent 
with the nature, requirements, and objectives of the programs 
and activities involved.
    (b) Review of Multi-Year Appropriations.--The Committee 
shall review, from time to time, each continuing program within 
its jurisdiction for which appropriations are not made annually 
in order to ascertain whether such program could be modified so 
that appropriations therefore would be made annually.
    (c) Views and Estimates.--In accordance with clause 4(f)(1) 
of rule X of the Rules of the House, the Committee shall submit 
to the Committee on the Budget--
          (1) its views and estimates with respect to all 
        matters to be set forth in the concurrent resolution on 
        the budget for the ensuing fiscal year which are within 
        its jurisdiction or functions; and
          (2) an estimate of the total amount of new budget 
        authority, and budget outlays resulting therefrom, to 
        be provided or authorized in all bills and resolutions 
        within its jurisdiction which it intends to be 
        effective during that fiscal year.
    (d) Budget Allocations.--As soon as practicable after a 
concurrent resolution on the budget for any fiscal year is 
agreed to, the Committee (after consulting with the appropriate 
committee or committees of the Senate) shall subdivide any 
allocations made to it in the joint explanatory statement 
accompanying the conference report on such resolution, and 
promptly report such subdivisions to the House, in the manner 
provided by section 302 of the Congressional Budget Act of 
1974.
    (e) Reconciliation.--Whenever the Committee is directed in 
a concurrent resolution on the budget to determine and 
recommend changes in laws, bills, or resolutions under the 
reconciliation process, it shall promptly make such 
determination and recommendations, and report a reconciliation 
bill or resolution (or both) to the House or submit such 
recommendations to the Committee on the Budget, in accordance 
with the Congressional Budget Act of 1974.

                           Rule XIV. Records

    (a) Keeping of Records.--The Committee shall keep a 
complete record of all Committee action which shall include--
          (1) in the case of any meeting or hearing 
        transcripts, a substantially verbatim account of 
        remarks actually made during the proceedings, subject 
        only to technical, grammatical, and typographical 
        corrections authorized by the person making the remarks 
        involved; and
          (2) a record of the votes on any question on which a 
        record vote is taken.
    (b) Public Inspection.--Pursuant to clause 2(e) of rule XI 
of the Rules of the House, the result of each such record vote 
shall be made publicly available by the Committee in electronic 
form within 48 hours of such record vote. Information so 
available shall include a description of the amendment, motion, 
order, or other proposition and the name of each member voting 
for and each member voting against such amendment, motion, 
order, or proposition, and the names of those members present 
but not voting.
    (c) Property of the House.--All Committee records 
(including hearings, data, charts, and files) shall be kept 
separate and distinct from the congressional office records of 
the member serving as Chairman of the Committee; and such 
records shall be the property of the House and all members of 
the House shall have access thereto.
    (d) Availability of Archived Records.--The records of the 
Committee at the National Archives and Records Administration 
shall be made available for public use in accordance with rule 
VII of the Rules of the House. The Chairman shall notify the 
ranking minority member of the Committee of any decision, 
pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 4(b) of such rule, to 
withhold a record otherwise available, and the matter shall be 
presented to the Committee for a determination on written 
request of any member of the Committee.
    (e) Authority to Print.--The Committee is authorized to 
have printed and bound testimony and other data presented at 
hearings held by the Committee. All costs of stenographic 
services and transcripts in connection with any meeting or 
hearing of the Committee shall be paid as provided in clause 
1(c) of rule XI of the Rules of the House.

                       Rule XV. Committee Budgets

    (a) Biennial Budget.--The Chairman, in consultation with 
the Chairman of each subcommittee, the majority members of the 
Committee, and the minority members of the Committee, shall, 
for each Congress, prepare a consolidated Committee budget. 
Such budget shall include necessary amounts for staff 
personnel, necessary travel, investigation, and other expenses 
of the Committee.
    (b) Additional Expenses.--Authorization for the payment of 
additional or unforeseen Committee expenses may be procured by 
one or more additional expense resolutions processed in the 
same manner as set out herein.
    (c) Travel Requests.--The Chairman or any Chairman of a 
subcommittee may initiate necessary travel requests as provided 
in Committee rule XVII within the limits of the consolidated 
Committee budget as approved by the House and the Chairman may 
execute necessary vouchers thereof.
    (d) Monthly Reports.--Once monthly, the Chairman shall 
submit to the Committee on House Administration, in writing, a 
full and detailed accounting of all expenditures made during 
the period since the last such accounting from the amount 
budgeted to the Committee. Such report shall show the amount 
and purpose of such expenditure and the budget to which such 
expenditure is attributed. A copy of such monthly report shall 
be available in the Committee office for review by members of 
the Committee.

                       Rule XVI. Committee Staff

    (a) Appointment by Chairman.--The Chairman shall appoint 
and determine the remuneration of, and may remove, the 
employees of the Committee not assigned to the minority. The 
staff of the Committee not assigned to the minority shall be 
under the general supervision and direction of the Chairman, 
who shall establish and assign the duties and responsibilities 
of such staff members and delegate such authority as he or she 
determines appropriate.
    (b) Appointment by Ranking Minority Member.--The ranking 
minority member of the Committee shall appoint and determine 
the remuneration of, and may remove, the staff assigned to the 
minority within the budget approved for such purposes. The 
staff assigned to the minority shall be under the general 
supervision and direction of the ranking minority member of the 
Committee who may delegate such authority as he or she 
determines appropriate.
    (c) Intention Regarding Staff.--It is intended that the 
skills and experience of all members of the Committee staff 
shall be available to all members of the Committee.

                 Rule XVII. Travel of Members and Staff

    (a) Approval.--Consistent with the primary expense 
resolution and such additional expense resolutions as may have 
been approved, the provisions of this rule shall govern travel 
of Committee members and staff. Travel to be reimbursed from 
funds set aside for the Committee for any member or any staff 
member shall be paid only upon the prior authorization of the 
Chairman. Travel shall be authorized by the Chairman for any 
member and any staff member in connection with the attendance 
of hearings conducted by the Committee or any subcommittee and 
meetings, conferences, and investigations which involve 
activities or subject matter under the general jurisdiction of 
the Committee. Before such authorization is given there shall 
be submitted to the Chairman in writing the following:
          (1) The purpose of the travel;
          (2) The dates during which the travel is to be made 
        and the date or dates of the event for which the travel 
        is being made;
          (3) The location of the event for which the travel is 
        to be made; and
          (4) The names of members and staff seeking 
        authorization.
    (b) Subcommittee Travel.--In the case of travel of members 
and staff of a subcommittee to hearings, meetings, conferences, 
and investigations involving activities or subject matter under 
the legislative assignment of such subcommittee, prior 
authorization must be obtained from the subcommittee Chairman 
and the Chairman. Such prior authorization shall be given by 
the Chairman only upon the representation by the Chairman of 
such subcommittee in writing setting forth those items 
enumerated in subparagraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of paragraph 
(a) and that there has been compliance where applicable with 
Committee rule IV.
    (c) Travel Outside the United States.--
          (1) In General.--In the case of travel outside the 
        United States of members and staff of the Committee or 
        subcommittee for the purpose of conducting hearings, 
        investigations, studies, or attending meetings and 
        conferences involving activities or subject matter 
        under the legislative assignment of the Committee or 
        pertinent subcommittee, prior authorization must be 
        obtained from the Chairman, or, in the case of a 
        subcommittee from the subcommittee Chairman and the 
        Chairman. Before such authorization is given there 
        shall be submitted to the Chairman, in writing, a 
        request for such authorization. Each request, which 
        shall be filed in a manner that allows for a reasonable 
        period of time for review before such travel is 
        scheduled to begin, shall include the following:
                  (A) The purpose of the travel;
                  (B) The dates during which the travel will 
                occur;
                  (C) The names of the countries to be visited 
                and the length of time to be spent in each;
                  (D) An agenda of anticipated activities for 
                each country for which travel is authorized 
                together with a description of the purpose to 
                be served and the areas of Committee 
                jurisdiction involved; and
                  (E) The names of members and staff for whom 
                authorization is sought.
          (2) Initiation of Requests.--Requests for travel 
        outside the United States may be initiated by the 
        Chairman or a subcommittee Chairman (except that 
        individuals may submit a request to the Chairman for 
        the purpose of attending a conference or meeting) and 
        shall be limited to members and permanent employees of 
        the Committee.
    (d) Reports by Members and Staff.--Within 15 legislative 
days from the conclusion of any hearing, investigation, study, 
meeting, or conference for which travel has been authorized 
pursuant to this rule, each member and staff member involved in 
such travel shall submit a written report to the Chairman 
covering the activities and other pertinent observations or 
information gained as a result of such travel.
    (e) Applicability of Laws, Rules, Policies.--Members and 
staff of the Committee performing authorized travel on official 
business shall be governed by applicable laws, resolutions, or 
regulations of the House and of the Committees on House 
Administration and Ethics pertaining to such travel, and by the 
travel policy of the Committee.

                      Rule XVIII. Committee Panels

    (a) Designation.--In accordance with clause 5(b)(2)(C) of 
rule X of the Rules of the House, the Chairman of the 
Committee, with the concurrence of the ranking minority member, 
may designate a panel of the Committee consisting of members of 
the Committee to inquire into and take testimony on a matter or 
matters that fall within the jurisdiction of more than one 
subcommittee and to report to the Committee.
    (b) Duration.--No panel designated under paragraph (a) 
shall continue in existence for more than six months after the 
date of the designation.
    (c) Party Ratios and Appointment.--The ratio of majority 
members to minority members on a panel designated under 
paragraph (a) shall be as close as practicable to the ratio of 
the Full Committee. All majority members of the panels shall be 
appointed by the Chairman of the Committee, and all minority 
members shall be appointed by the ranking minority member of 
the Committee. The Chairman of the Committee shall choose one 
of the majority members so appointed to serve as Chairman of 
the panel. The ranking minority member of the Committee shall 
similarly choose the ranking minority member of the panel.
    (d) Ex Officio Members.--The Chairman and ranking minority 
member of the Committee may serve as ex officio members of a 
panel designated under paragraph (a). The Chairman and minority 
member are authorized to vote on matters that arise before the 
panel and shall be counted to satisfy the quorum requirement 
for any purpose.
    (e) Jurisdiction.--No panel designated under paragraph (a) 
shall have legislative jurisdiction.
    (f) Applicability of Committee Rules.--A panel designated 
under paragraph (a) shall be subject to all Committee rules 
herein.
                     Committee on Veterans' Affairs

   MIKE BOST, Illinois, Chairman

MARK TAKANO, California, Ranking MemberMUA AMATA COLEMAN RADEWAGEN,
JULIA BROWNLEY, California             American Samoa,
MIKE LEVIN, California                 Vice Chair
CHRIS PAPPAS, New Hampshire          JACK BERGMAN, Michigan
FRANK J. MRVAN, Indiana              NANCY MACE, South Carolina
SHEILA CHERFILUS-McCORMICK, Florida  MATTHEW M. ROSENDALE, Sr., Montana
CHRISTOPHER R. DELUZIO, Pennsylvania MARIANNETTE MILLER-MEEKS, Iowa
MORGAN McGARVEY, Kentucky            GREGORY F. MURPHY, North Carolina
DELIA C. RAMIREZ, Illinois           C. SCOTT FRANKLIN, Florida
GREG LANDSMAN, Ohio                  DERRICK VAN ORDEN, Wisconsin
NIKKI BUDZINSKI, Illinois            MORGAN LUTTRELL, Texas
                                     JUAN CISCOMANI, Arizona
                                     ELIJAH CRANE, Arizona
                                     KEITH SELF, Texas
                                     JENNIFER A. KIGGANS, Virginia

   RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON VETERANS' AFFAIRS FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 8, 2023)


                       Rule 1--General Provisions

    (a) Applicability of the Rules of the U.S. House of 
Representatives.--
          In General.--The rules of the U.S. House of 
        Representatives (the House) are the rules of the 
        Committee on Veterans' Affairs (Committee) and its 
        subcommittees so far as applicable.
    (b) Rules of the Subcommittees.--Each subcommittee of the 
Committee is a part of the Committee and is subject to the 
authority and direction of the Committee and to its rules so 
far as applicable. Written rules of the Committee, not 
inconsistent with the Rules of the House, shall be binding on 
each subcommittee of the Committee.
    (c) Incorporation of House Rule on Committee Procedure.--
Clause 2 of House rule XI, which pertains entirely to Committee 
procedure, is incorporated, and made part of the rules of the 
Committee so far as applicable.
    (d) Privileged Motions.--In the Committee, a motion to 
recess from day to day, a motion to recess subject to the call 
of the Chair (within 1 day), and a motion to dispense with the 
first reading (in full) of a bill or resolution if printed 
copies are available, shall be privileged and decided without 
debate.
    (e) Conferences.--Pursuant to clause 2(a)(3) of House rule 
XI, the Chair is authorized to offer a motion under clause 1 of 
House rule XXII whenever the Chair considers it appropriate.
    (f) Vice Chair.--Pursuant to clause 2(d) of House rule XI, 
the Chair of the Committee shall designate the Vice Chair of 
the Committee.
    (g) Taking of Depositions.--Pursuant to section 3(k) of 
House Resolution 5 of the 118th Congress, the Chair upon 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member may order the 
taking of depositions, including pursuant to subpoena, by a 
member or counsel of the Committee. Depositions taken by a 
member or counsel of the Committee shall be subject to 
regulations issued by the Committee on Rules and printed in the 
Congressional Record.
    (h) Subpoenas.--Pursuant to clause 2(m) of House rule XI, 
subpoenas may be authorized and issued by the Chairman in the 
conduct of any investigation or series of investigations or 
activities, only when authorized by a majority of the members 
voting, a majority being present.
    (i) Open Meetings and Hearings.--Meetings and hearings of 
the Committee shall be open to the public unless closed in 
accordance with clause 2(g) of House rule XI.
    (j) Motions, Reduced to Writing.--Every motion made to the 
Committee and entertained by the Chair shall be reduced to 
writing upon demand of any member, and a copy made available to 
each member present.
    (k) Decorum.--The Chair shall enforce decorum including 
with regard to actions that impact the health and safety of 
Members, staff, and anyone else present, or impedes the 
business of the Committee.

                       Rule 2--Committee Meetings

    (a) Notice Requirements for Meetings.--The Chair shall 
furnish each member of the Committee with the date, place, and 
a list of measures and subjects to be considered at a Committee 
meeting, which may not commence earlier than the third calendar 
day on which members have notice thereof (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays and legal holidays except when the House is in session 
on such a day).
    (b) Availability of Texts.--At least two days (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when the House is 
in session on such a day) prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, including any amendment 
in the nature of a substitute to such bills or resolutions that 
shall first be recognized by the Chair, the text of such 
legislation shall be made publicly available in electronic 
form.
    (c) In an emergency that does not reasonably allow for the 
notice as required in paragraph (a), the Chair may waive the 
notice requirement with the concurrence of the Ranking Minority 
Member; or if the Committee so determines by majority vote of 
the quorum required under Committee rule 4(a). An announcement 
made under this subparagraph shall be published promptly in the 
Daily Digest and made publicly available in electronic form.
    (d) Amendments.--To the maximum extent practicable, 
amendments to a measure or matter noticed under paragraph (b) 
shall be submitted in writing or electronically to the designee 
of both the Chair and Ranking Member and made available 
electronically to each member of the Committee at least 1 day 
prior to the consideration of the measure or matter. The Chair 
may use his or her discretion to give priority to amendments 
submitted in advance.
    (e) Transcripts.--Transcripts of markups shall be recorded 
and may be published in the same manner as hearings before the 
Committee.
    (f) Additional Meetings.--The Chair of the Committee may 
call and convene, as the Chair considers necessary, additional 
meetings of the Committee for the consideration of any bill or 
resolution pending before the Committee or for the conduct of 
other Committee business. The Committee shall meet for such 
purpose pursuant to the call of the Chair.
    (g) Congressional Budget Office Scoring.--The Committee 
shall not include any bill or resolution for consideration 
during a Committee markup which is not accompanied by an 
accounting from the Congressional Budget Office of the 
mandatory and discretionary costs or savings associated with 
such bill or resolution.
    The accounting from the Congressional Budget Office need 
not be official and may be a preliminary score but is expected 
to provide Committee members with an approximation of the 
budgetary impact a bill or resolution may have prior to any 
vote to favorably forward or report such bill or resolution. A 
majority of Committee members may waive the requirements of 
this paragraph with a quorum present.
    (h) Notice and Approval of Committee Investigative Reports 
or Studies.--A proposed investigative or oversight report shall 
be considered as read in committee if it has been available to 
the members for at least one day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, 
or legal holidays except when the House is in session on such a 
day).
    A proposed investigative report or study shall not be 
considered in the Committee unless the report has been 
available to the members of the Committee for at least seven 
calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays 
except when the House is in session on such a day) before 
consideration of such proposed report or study in the 
Committee. Only those investigative reports or studies approved 
by a majority vote of the committee at a meeting which a quorum 
is present may be ordered reported.

                            Rule 3--Hearings

    (a) Notice.--(1) The Chair, in the case of a hearing to be 
conducted by the Committee, shall publicly announce the date, 
place, and subject matter of any hearing to be conducted on any 
measure or matter at least one week before the commencement of 
that hearing, unless in accordance with clause 2(g)(3)(B) of 
House rule XI--
          (A) the Chair, with the concurrence of the Ranking 
        Minority Member, determines that there is good cause to 
        begin the hearing at an earlier date, or
          (B) the Committee determines by majority vote of the 
        quorum required under Committee rule 4(a) that a 
        hearing may begin earlier than one week after 
        announcement of the hearing as required under this 
        subsection. An announcement made under this 
        subparagraph shall be published promptly in the Daily 
        Digest and made publicly available in electronic form.
    (b) Requirements for Testimony.--
          (1) Pursuant to clause 2(g)(5) of House rule XI, each 
        witness who is to appear before the Committee shall 
        file with the clerk of the Committee, at least 2 days 
        (exclusive of weekends and holidays) in advance of his 
        or her appearance, or at such other time as designated 
        by the Chair after consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member, a written statement of his or her 
        proposed testimony. Each witness shall, to the greatest 
        extent practicable, provide a copy of such written 
        testimony in an electronic format prescribed by the 
        Chair. Each witness shall limit initial presentations 
        to a brief summary of the written statement.
          (2)(A) Truth in Testimony Disclosure: In accordance 
        with rule XI, clause 2(g)(5) of the Rules of the House 
        of Representatives, in the case of a witness appearing 
        in a non-governmental capacity, a written statement of 
        proposed testimony shall include a curriculum vitae and 
        a disclosure of any Federal grants or contracts, or 
        contracts, grants, or payments originating with a 
        foreign government, received during the past 36 months 
        by the witness or by an entity represented by the 
        witness and related to the subject matter of the 
        hearing, and a disclosure of whether the witnesses is a 
        fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a director, 
        officer, advisor, or resident agent) of any 
        organization or entity that has an interest in the 
        subject matter of the hearing.
          (B) Pursuant to rule XI, clause 2(g)(5), the witness 
        is required to the amount and source of each Federal 
        grant (or subgrant thereof) or contract (or subcontract 
        thereof) related to the subject matter of the hearing 
        and the amount and country of origin of any payment, or 
        contract related to the subject matter of the hearing 
        originating with a foreign government.
    (c) Calling and Questioning Witnesses.--
          (1) Committee members may question witnesses only 
        when they have been recognized by the Chair of the 
        Committee for that purpose, and only for a 5-minute 
        period until all members present have had an 
        opportunity to question a witness. The questioning of 
        witnesses in Committee hearings shall be initiated by 
        the Chair, followed by the Ranking Minority Member and 
        all other members alternating between the majority and 
        minority. Except as otherwise announced by the Chair at 
        the beginning of a hearing, members who are present at 
        the start of the hearing will be recognized before 
        other members who arrive after the hearing has begun. 
        In recognizing members to question witnesses in this 
        fashion, the Chair shall take into consideration the 
        ratio of the majority to minority members present and 
        shall establish the order of recognition for 
        questioning in such a manner as not to disadvantage the 
        members of the majority.
          (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (1) 
        regarding the 5-minute rule, and pursuant to clause 
        2(j) of House rule XI, the Chair after consultation 
        with the Ranking Minority Member, may permit a 
        specified number of Committee members to question a 
        witness for longer than 5 minutes. The time for 
        extended questioning of a witness under this paragraph 
        shall be equal for the majority party and the minority 
        party and may not exceed one hour in the aggregate. In 
        no event shall the Chair allow a member to question a 
        witness for an extended period under this rule until 
        all members present have had the opportunity to ask 
        questions under the 5-minute rule. The Chair after 
        consultation with the Ranking Minority Member may 
        permit Committee staff for its majority and minority 
        party members to question a witness for equal specified 
        periods. The time for extended questioning of witnesses 
        by staff shall be equal for the majority party and the 
        minority party and may not exceed one hour in the 
        aggregate.
          (3) Pursuant to clause 2(k) of House rule XI, the 
        Chair at a hearing shall announce in an opening 
        statement the subject of the hearing, and a copy of the 
        committee rules and of clause 2 of House rule XI shall 
        be made available to each witness on request.
                  (A) Witnesses at hearings may be accompanied 
                by their own counsel for the purpose of 
                advising them concerning their constitutional 
                rights. The Chair may punish breaches of order 
                and decorum, and of professional ethics on the 
                part of counsel, by censure and exclusion from 
                the hearings; and the Committee may cite the 
                offender to the House for contempt.
                  (B) Whenever it is asserted by a member of 
                the Committee that the evidence or testimony at 
                a hearing may tend to defame, degrade, or 
                incriminate any person, or it is asserted by a 
                witness that the evidence or testimony that the 
                witness would give at a hearing may tend to 
                defame, degrade, or incriminate the witness--
                          (i) notwithstanding clause 2(g)(2) of 
                        House rule XI, such testimony or 
                        evidence shall be presented in 
                        executive session if, in the presence 
                        of the number of members required under 
                        Committee rule 4(a), the Committee 
                        determines by vote of a majority of 
                        those present that such evidence or 
                        testimony may tend to defame, degrade, 
                        or incriminate any person; and
                          (ii) the Committee shall proceed to 
                        receive such testimony in open session 
                        only if the Committee, a majority being 
                        present, determines that such evidence 
                        or testimony will not tend to defame, 
                        degrade, or incriminate any person.
In either case the Committee shall afford such person an 
opportunity voluntarily to appear as a witness and receive and 
dispose of requests from such person to subpoena additional 
witnesses.
                  (C) Except as provided in subparagraph (B), 
                the Chair shall receive, and the Committee 
                shall dispose of requests to subpoena 
                additional witnesses.
                  (D) Evidence or testimony taken in executive 
                session, and proceedings conducted in executive 
                session, may be released or used in public 
                sessions only when authorized by the Committee, 
                a majority being present.
                  (E) In the discretion of the Committee, 
                witnesses may submit brief and pertinent sworn 
                statements in writing for inclusion in the 
                record. The Committee is the sole judge of the 
                pertinence of testimony and evidence adduced at 
                its hearing.
                  (F) A witness may obtain a transcript copy of 
                the testimony of such witness given at a public 
                session or, if given at an executive session, 
                when authorized by the Committee.
          (4) Any witness appearing before the Committee shall 
        remain available for questioning by the Committee 
        unless excused by the Chair.
          (5) Non-Committee members may be invited to sit at 
        the dais for and participate in Committee hearings with 
        the unanimous consent of the members present. Further, 
        non-Committee members may be recognized for questioning 
        of witnesses but only after all Committee members have 
        first been recognized.
          (6) Pursuant to House rule XI clause 2(j)(1), when a 
        hearing is conducted by the Committee on any measure or 
        matter, the minority members of the Committee shall be 
        entitled, upon request to the Chair of a majority of 
        those minority members before the completion of the 
        hearing, to call witnesses selected by the minority to 
        testify with respect to that measure or matter during 
        at least one day of the hearing thereon.
          (7) At the discretion of the chair and in accordance 
        with regulations submitted for printing in the 
        Congressional Record by the chair of the Committee on 
        Rules--
                  (A) witnesses at committee or subcommittee 
                proceedings may appear remotely;
                  (B) counsel shall be permitted to accompany 
                witnesses appearing remotely; and
                  (C) an oath may be administered to a witness 
                remotely for purposes of clause 2(m)(2) of rule 
                XI.
          (8) Member Day Hearing: During the first session of 
        the 118th Congress, the Chair shall hold a hearing at 
        which it receives testimony from Members, Delegates, 
        and the Resident Commissioner on proposed legislation 
        within its jurisdiction.

      Rule 4--Quorum and Record Votes; Postponement of Proceedings

    (a) Working Quorum.--A majority of the members of the 
Committee shall constitute a quorum for business, except that 
two members shall constitute a quorum for the purpose of taking 
testimony and receiving evidence.
    (b) Quorum for Reporting.--No measure, or recommendation 
shall be reported unless a majority of the members of the 
Committee or Subcommittee are present.
    (c) Record Votes.--A record vote may be demanded by one-
fifth of the members present or, in the apparent absence of a 
quorum, by any one member. With respect to any record vote on 
any motion to amend or report, the total number of votes cast 
for and against, and the names of those members voting for and 
against, shall be included in the report of the Committee on 
the bill or resolution.
    (d) Prohibition Against Proxy Voting.--No vote by any 
member of the Committee with respect to any measure or matter 
may be cast by proxy.
    (e) Postponing Proceedings.--The Chair may postpone further 
proceedings when a record vote is ordered on the question of 
approving a measure or matter or on adopting an amendment; and 
may resume proceedings on a postponed question after reasonable 
notice. When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.

                         Rule 5--Subcommittees

    (a) Establishment and Jurisdiction--
          (1) There shall be five subcommittees of the 
        Committee with jurisdictions as follows:
                  (A) Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and 
                Memorial Affairs, which shall have legislative, 
                oversight, and investigative jurisdiction over 
                compensation; general and special pensions of 
                all the wars of the United States; life 
                insurance issued by the Government on account 
                of service in the Armed Forces; cemeteries of 
                the United States in which veterans of any war 
                or conflict are or may be buried, whether in 
                the United States or abroad, except cemeteries 
                administered by the Secretary of the Interior; 
                burial benefits; the Board of Veterans' 
                Appeals; and the United States Court of Appeals 
                for Veterans Claims.
                  (B) Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity, 
                which shall have legislative, oversight, and 
                investigative jurisdiction over education of 
                veterans, employment and training of veterans, 
                vocational rehabilitation, veterans' housing 
                programs (including homeless veterans housing), 
                transition of servicemembers to civilian life, 
                veteran-owned business concerns, and 
                servicemembers civil relief.
                  (C) Subcommittee on Health, which shall have 
                legislative, oversight, and investigative 
                jurisdiction over the Veterans Health 
                Administration including medical care, medical 
                services, community care, medical support and 
                compliance, medical and prosthetic research, 
                health care for homeless veterans, medical 
                education, major and minor construction, 
                medical facilities including leases and 
                recurring and non-recurring maintenance, and 
                the Fourth Mission of the Department of 
                Veterans Affairs.
                  (D) Subcommittee on Oversight and 
                Investigations, which shall have oversight and 
                investigative jurisdiction over veterans' 
                matters generally. The subcommittee shall have 
                legislative jurisdiction over VA Central Office 
                organizations, enterprise human capital 
                management, information technology, 
                cybersecurity, data management, financial 
                management, supply chain and procurement, 
                whistleblower matters, the Office of Inspector 
                General, and over such matters as may be 
                referred to the Subcommittee by the Chair of 
                the full Committee.
                  (E)  Subcommittee on Technology 
                Modernization, which shall have oversight and 
                investigative jurisdiction over the Department 
                of Veterans Affairs' enterprise technology 
                modernization programs and projects, including 
                the Electronic Health Record Modernization 
                program, the Office of Information and 
                Technology, information technology, enterprise 
                information technology governance, 
                cybersecurity, and data management.
          (2) Each subcommittee shall have responsibility for 
        such other measures or matters as the Chair refers to 
        it.
    (b) Vacancies.--Any vacancy in the membership of a 
subcommittee shall not affect the power of the remaining 
members to execute the functions of that subcommittee.
    (c) Ratios.--On each subcommittee, there shall be a ratio 
of majority party members to minority party members, which 
shall be consistent with the ratio on the full Committee.
    (d) Referral to Subcommittees.--The Chair of the Committee 
may refer a measure or matter, which is within the general 
responsibility of more than one of the subcommittees of the 
Committee, as the Chair deems appropriate. In referring any 
measure or matter to a subcommittee, the Chair of the Committee 
may specify a date by which the subcommittee shall report 
thereon to the Committee.
    (e) Powers and Duties--
          (1) Each subcommittee is authorized to meet, hold 
        hearings, receive evidence, and report to the full 
        Committee on all matters referred to it or under its 
        jurisdiction. Subcommittee Chairs shall set dates for 
        hearings and meetings of their respective subcommittees 
        after consultation with the Chair of the Committee and 
        other subcommittee chairs with a view toward avoiding 
        simultaneous scheduling of Committee and subcommittee 
        meetings or hearings whenever possible.
          (2) Whenever a subcommittee has ordered a bill, 
        resolution, or other matter to be reported to the 
        Committee, the Chair of the subcommittee reporting the 
        bill, resolution, or matter to the full Committee, or 
        any member authorized by the subcommittee to do so, 
        shall notify the Chair and the Ranking Minority Member 
        of the Committee of the subcommittee's action.
          (3) A member of the Committee who is not a member of 
        a subcommittee may sit with the subcommittee during any 
        of its meetings and hearings, but shall not have 
        authority to vote, cannot be counted for a quorum, and 
        cannot raise a point of order at the meeting or 
        hearing.
          (4) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the 
        Committee shall be ex-officio members of each standing 
        subcommittee to which the Chair or Ranking Minority 
        Member have not been assigned. Ex-officio members shall 
        have the right to fully participate in subcommittee 
        activities but may not vote and may not be counted in 
        establishing a quorum.
          (5) Non-Committee members may be invited to sit at 
        the dais for and participate in subcommittee hearings 
        with the unanimous consent of all Members present. 
        Further, non-Committee members may be recognized for 
        questioning of witnesses but only after all 
        subcommittee members have first been recognized for 
        questioning.
          (6) Each subcommittee shall provide the full 
        Committee with copies of such record votes taken in 
        subcommittee and such other records with respect to the 
        subcommittee as the Chair of the Committee deems 
        necessary for the Committee to comply with the House 
        rules.

                           Rule 6--Task Force

    (a) Establishment.--The Committee may establish a task 
force to perform specific oversight functions for time limited 
purposes. A task force does not have legislative or hearing 
jurisdiction.
    (b) Authorization.--The Committee shall adopt a resolution 
authorizing a task force. The resolution shall set forth the 
specific purpose and objectives of the task force.
    (c) Membership and Ratios.--The Task Force shall be led by 
a Chair and Co-Chair. It shall include committee majority and 
minority members, on a volunteer basis.
    (d) Duration.--No task force shall exist for a cumulative 
period longer than six months in a Congress.
    (e) Powers and Duties.--
          (1) A task force is authorized to meet, hold 
        roundtables, and report to the full Committee on all 
        matters set forth in the resolution authorizing the 
        task force.
          (2) The task force shall submit the findings and 
        recommendations of the task force to the full Committee 
        within 30 days of completion of the task force.
          (3) The rules of the Committee are the rules of a 
        task force.

                Rule 7--General Oversight Responsibility

    (a) Purpose.--Pursuant to House rule X clause 2, the 
Committee shall carry out oversight responsibilities consistent 
with clause 1(s) of House rule X and Committee rule 5.
    (b) Oversight Plan.--Not later than March 1 of the first 
session of a Congress, the Chair shall prepare, in a meeting 
that is open to the public, adopt its authorization and 
oversight plan for that Congress. The plan shall be submitted 
simultaneously to the Committee on Oversight and Accountability 
and the Committee on House Administration.
    (c) Each such plan shall include, with respect to programs 
and agencies within the committee's jurisdiction, and to the 
maximum extent practicable--
          (A) a list of such programs or agencies with lapsed 
        authorizations that received funding in the prior 
        fiscal year or, in the case of a program or agency with 
        a permanent authorization, which has not been subject 
        to a comprehensive review by the committee in the prior 
        three Congresses;
          (B) a description of each such program or agency to 
        be authorized in the current Congress;
          (C) a description of each such program or agency to 
        be authorized in the next Congress, if applicable;
          (D) a description of any oversight to support the 
        authorization of each such program or agency in the 
        current Congress; and
          (E) recommendations for changes to existing law for 
        moving such programs or agencies from mandatory funding 
        to discretionary appropriations, where appropriate.
    (d) Each such plan may include, with respect to the 
programs and agencies within the committee's jurisdiction--
          (A) 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;
          (B) 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;
          (C) a description of such other oversight activities 
        as the committee may consider necessary.
    (e) In the development of such plan, the chair of each 
committee shall coordinate with other committees of 
jurisdiction to ensure that programs and agencies are subject 
to routine, comprehensive authorization efforts.
    (f) Oversight by Subcommittees.--The existence and 
activities of the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations 
shall in no way limit the responsibility of the other 
subcommittees of the Committee for carrying out oversight or 
investigative duties.
    (g) Pursuant to House rule XI clause 1(b), the Committee 
may conduct at any time such investigations and studies as it 
considers necessary or appropriate in the exercise of its 
responsibilities under rule X. Prior to initiating an 
investigation or study, the Chair shall, in consultation with 
the Ranking Member, set forth the objectives and scope of the 
investigation. Upon initiating an investigation or study, the 
Chair shall inform members in writing of the objectives and 
scope of the investigation or study. No changes to objectives 
or scope shall be made unless the consultation and notice 
requirements are met. All witness interviews--formal and 
informal--conducted in connection with a report or study shall 
be open to majority and minority staff.

                  Rule 8--Budget Act Responsibilities

    (a) Budget Act Responsibilities.--Pursuant to clause 
4(f)(1) of rule X of the Rules of the House, the Committee 
shall submit to the Committee on the Budget not later than six 
weeks after submission of the budget by the President, or at 
such time as the Committee on the Budget may request--
          (1) Its views and estimates with respect to all 
        matters to be set forth in the concurrent resolution on 
        the budget for the ensuing fiscal year that are within 
        its jurisdiction or functions; and
          (2) An estimate of the total amounts of new budget 
        authority, and budget outlays resulting therefrom, to 
        be provided or authorized in all bills and resolutions 
        within its jurisdiction that it intends to be effective 
        during that fiscal year.

                   Rule 9--Records and Other Matters

    (a) Transcripts.--There shall be a transcript made of each 
meeting and hearing of the Committee. Any such transcript shall 
be a substantially verbatim account of remarks actually made 
during the proceedings, subject only to technical, grammatical, 
and typographical corrections authorized by the person making 
the remarks involved. These transcripts shall be maintained in 
electronic format on a repository operated by the House Clerk.
    (b) Records.--
          (1) The Committee shall keep a record of all 
        Committee action. The record shall contain all 
        information required by clause 2(e)(1) of rule XI of 
        the Rules of the House and shall be available for 
        public inspection at reasonable times in the offices of 
        the Committee.
          (2) There shall be kept in writing a record of the 
        proceedings of the Committee, including a record of the 
        votes on any question on which a record vote is taken. 
        The result of each such record vote shall be made 
        publicly available by the Committee in electronic form 
        within 2 days of such record vote. Information so 
        available shall include a description of the amendment, 
        motion, order, or other proposition, the name of each 
        member voting for and each member voting against such 
        amendment, motion, order, or proposition, and the names 
        of those members present but not voting.
    (c) Availability of Archived Records.--The records of the 
Committee at the National Archives and Records Administration 
shall be made available for public use in accordance with House 
rule VII. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority Member of 
any decision made by the Clerk of the House, pursuant to clause 
4 of House rule VII, to withhold a record otherwise available, 
and the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a vote 
on written request of any member of the Committee.
    (d) Availability of Amendments.--Not later than 1 day after 
the adoption of any amendment, or 2 days after the disposition 
or withdrawal of any other amendment, to a measure or matter 
considered by the Committee, the Chair shall cause the text of 
each such amendment to be made publicly available in electronic 
form on a repository operated by the House Clerk.
    (e) Availability of Publications.--Pursuant to clause 
2(e)(4) of rule XI of the Rules of the House, the Committee 
shall make its publications available in electronic form to the 
maximum extent feasible.

                            Rule 10--Travel

    (a) Requirements for Travel.--All requests for travel, 
funded by the Committee, for members and staff in connection 
with activities or subject matters under the general 
jurisdiction of the Committee, shall be submitted to the Chair 
for approval or disapproval. All travel requests should be 
submitted to the Chair at least five working days in advance of 
the proposed travel. For all travel funded by any other source, 
notice shall be given to the Chair at least five working days 
in advance of the proposed travel. All travel requests shall be 
submitted to the Chair in writing and include--
          (1) The purpose of the travel.
          (2) The dates during which the travel is to occur.
          (3) The names of the locations to be visited and the 
        length of time to be spent in each.
          (4) The names of members and staff of the Committee 
        for whom the authorization is sought. Travel by the 
        minority shall be submitted to the Chair via the 
        Ranking Member.
    (b) Trip Reports.--Members and staff shall make a written 
report to the Chair within 15 working days on all travel 
approved under this subsection. Reports shall include a 
description of their itinerary, expenses, and activities, and 
pertinent information gained as a result of such travel.
    When travel involves majority and minority members or 
staff, the majority shall submit the report to the Chair on 
behalf of the majority and minority. The minority may append 
additional remarks to the report at their discretion.
    (c) Applicability of House Rules.--Members and staff of the 
Committee performing authorized travel on official business 
shall be governed by applicable laws, resolutions, and rules of 
the House and of the Committee on House Administration.

                  Rule 11--Facility or Property Naming

    (a) Facility or Property Naming.--No Department of Veterans 
Affairs (VA) facility or property shall be named after any 
individual by the Committee unless--
          (1) Such individual is deceased and was--
                  (A) A veteran who (i) was instrumental in the 
                construction or the operation of the facility 
                or property to be named, or (ii) was a 
                recipient of the Medal of Honor or, as 
                determined by the Chair and Ranking Minority 
                Member, otherwise performed military service of 
                an extraordinarily distinguished character;
                  (B) A member of the United States House of 
                Representatives or Senate who had a direct 
                association with such facility or property;
                  (C) An Administrator of Veterans' Affairs, a 
                Secretary of Veterans Affairs, a Secretary of 
                Defense or of a service branch, or a military 
                or other Federal civilian official of 
                comparable or higher rank; or
                  (D) An individual who, as determined by the 
                Chair and Ranking Minority Member, performed 
                outstanding service for veterans.
          (2) Each member of the Congressional delegation 
        representing the State in which the designated facility 
        or property is located must indicate in writing such 
        member's support of the proposal to name such facility 
        or property after such individual. Evidence of a 
        member's support in writing must be in the form of a 
        letter to the Chair and Ranking Member proposing to 
        name the particular VA facility or property in 
        question.
          (3) The pertinent State department or chapter of each 
        Congressionally chartered veterans' organization having 
        a national membership of at least 500,000 must indicate 
        in writing its support of such proposal. Under certain 
        circumstances, the Committee may grant a waiver to 
        accept written support from pertinent chapters or posts 
        of chartered veterans' organizations in lieu of the 
        State department.
    (b) The above criteria for naming a VA facility or property 
may be waived by unanimous consent.

                        Rule 12--Media Coverage

    (a) Media Coverage.--Any meeting of the Committee that is 
open to the public shall be open to coverage by radio, 
television, and still photography in accordance with the 
provisions of clause 4(f) of House rule XI as follows:
          (1) If audio or visual coverage of the hearing or 
        meeting is to be presented to the public as live 
        coverage, that coverage shall be conducted and 
        presented without commercial sponsorship.
          (2) The allocation among the television media of the 
        positions or the number of television cameras permitted 
        by a Committee Chair in a hearing or meeting room shall 
        be in accordance with fair and equitable procedures 
        devised by the Executive Committee of the Radio and 
        Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (3) Television cameras shall be placed so as not to 
        obstruct in any way the space between a witness giving 
        evidence or testimony and any member of the Committee 
        or the visibility of that witness and that member to 
        each other.
          (4) Television cameras shall operate from fixed 
        positions but may not be placed in positions that 
        obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing or 
        meeting by the other media.
          (5) Equipment necessary for coverage by the 
        television and radio media may not be installed in, or 
        removed from, the hearing or meeting room while the 
        Committee is in session.
          (6)(A) Except as provided in subdivision (B), 
        floodlights, spotlights, strobe lights, and flashguns 
        may not be used in providing any method of coverage of 
        the hearing or meeting.
          (B) The television media may install additional 
        lighting in a hearing or meeting room, without cost to 
        the Government, in order to raise the ambient lighting 
        level in a hearing or meeting room to the lowest level 
        necessary to provide adequate television coverage of a 
        hearing or meeting at the current state of the art of 
        television coverage.
          (7) If requests are made by more of the media than 
        will be permitted by the Committee Chair for coverage 
        of a hearing or meeting by still photography, that 
        coverage shall be permitted on the basis of a fair and 
        equitable pool arrangement devised by the Standing 
        Committee of Press Photographers.
          (8) Photographers may not position themselves between 
        the witness table and the members of the Committee at 
        any time during the course of a hearing or meeting.
          (9) Photographers may not place themselves in 
        positions that obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of 
        the hearing by the other media.
          (10) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media shall be currently accredited to the 
        Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (11) Personnel providing coverage by still 
        photography shall be currently accredited to the Press 
        Photographers' Gallery.
          (12) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media and by still photography shall conduct 
        themselves and their coverage activities in an orderly 
        and unobtrusive manner.
          (13) Majority Committee staff shall be required to 
        notify the Minority Committee staff if a hearing will 
        be streamed by an outside media outlet in addition to 
        the House Recording Studio.
          (14) Personnel providing coverage by the television 
        and radio media shall be currently accredited to the 
        Radio and Television Correspondents Galleries.
                      Committee on Ways and Means

  JASON SMITH, Missouri, Chairman

RICHARD E. NEAL, Massachusetts,      VERN BUCHANAN, Florida
  Ranking Member                     ADRIAN SMITH, Nebraska
LLOYD DOGGETT, Texas                 MIKE KELLY, Pennsylvania
MIKE THOMPSON, California            DAVID SCHWEIKERT, Arizona
JOHN B. LARSON, Connecticut          DARIN LaHOOD, Illinois
EARL BLUMENAUER, Oregon              BRAD R. WENSTRUP, Ohio
BILL PASCRELL, Jr., New Jersey       JODEY C. ARRINGTON, Texas
DANNY K. DAVIS, Illinois             DREW FERGUSON IV, Georgia
LINDA T. SANCHEZ, California         RON ESTES, Kansas
BRIAN HIGGINS, New York              LLOYD SMUCKER, Pennsylvania
TERRI A. SEWELL, Alabama             KEVIN HERN, Oklahoma
SUZAN K. DelBENE, Washington         CAROL D. MILLER, West Virginia
JUDY CHU, California                 GREGORY F. MURPHY, North Carolina
GWEN MOORE, Wisconsin                DAVID KUSTOFF, Tennessee
DANIEL T. KILDEE, Michigan           BRIAN K. FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania
DONALD S. BEYER, Jr., Virginia       W. GREGORY STEUBE, Florida
DWIGHT EVANS, Pennsylvania           CLAUDIA TENNEY, New York
BRADLEY SCOTT SCHNEIDER, Illinois    MICHELLE FISCHBACH, Minnesota
JIMMY PANETTA, California            BLAKE D. MOORE, Utah
                                     MICHELLE STEEL, California
                                     BETH VAN DUYNE, Texas
                                     RANDY FEENSTRA, Iowa
                                     NICOLE MALLIOTAKIS, New York
                                     MIKE CAREY, Ohio

    RULES OF THE COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted January 31, 2023)


                               A. GENERAL

                  Rule 1.--Application of House Rules

    The rules of the House are the rules of the Committee on 
Ways and Means and its subcommittees so far as applicable, 
except that a motion to recess from day to day, and a motion to 
dispense with the first reading (in full) of a bill or 
resolution, if printed copies are available, is a non-debatable 
motion of high privilege in the Committee.
    Each subcommittee of the Committee is part of the Committee 
and is subject to the authority and direction of the Committee 
and to its rules so far as applicable. Written rules adopted by 
the Committee, not inconsistent with the Rules of the House, 
shall be binding on each subcommittee of the Committee.
    The provisions of rule XI of the Rules of the House are 
incorporated by reference as the rules of the Committee to the 
extent applicable.

                   Rule 2.--Meeting Date and Quorums

    The regular meeting day of the Committee on Ways and Means 
shall be each Wednesday while the House is in session. However, 
the Committee shall not meet on the regularly scheduled meeting 
day if there is no business to be considered.
    A majority of the Committee constitutes a quorum for 
business; provided however, that two Members shall constitute a 
quorum at any regularly scheduled hearing called for the 
purpose of taking testimony and receiving evidence. In 
establishing a quorum for purposes of a public hearing, every 
effort shall be made to secure the presence of at least one 
Member each from the majority and the minority.
    The Chair of the Committee may call and convene, as he or 
she considers necessary, additional meetings of the Committee 
for the consideration of any bill or resolution pending before 
the Committee or for the conduct of other Committee business. 
The Committee shall meet pursuant to the call of the Chair.

                       Rule 3.--Committee Budget

    For each Congress, the Chair, in consultation with the 
Majority Members of the Committee, shall prepare a preliminary 
budget. Such budget shall include necessary amounts for staff 
personnel, travel, investigation, and other expenses of the 
Committee. After consultation with the Minority Members, the 
Chair shall include an amount budgeted by Minority Members for 
staff under their direction and supervision.

              Rule 4.--Publication of Committee Documents

    Any Committee or Subcommittee print, document, or similar 
material prepared for public distribution shall either be 
approved by the Committee or Subcommittee prior to distribution 
and opportunity afforded for the inclusion of supplemental, 
minority or additional views, or such document shall 
prominently display near the top of its cover the following: 
``Majority [or Minority] Staff Report,'' as appropriate.
    The requirements of this rule shall apply only to the 
publication of policy-oriented, analytical documents, and not 
to the publication of public hearings, legislative documents, 
documents which are administrative in nature or reports which 
are required to be submitted to the Committee under public law. 
The appropriate characterization of a document subject to this 
rule shall be determined after consultation with the Minority.

                        Rule 5.--Official Travel

    Consistent with the primary expense resolution and such 
additional expense resolution as may have been approved, the 
provisions of this rule shall govern official travel of 
Committee Members and Committee staff. Official travel to be 
reimbursed from funds set aside for the full Committee for any 
Member or any Committee staff member shall be paid only upon 
the prior authorization of the Chair. Official travel may be 
authorized by the Chair for any Member and any Committee staff 
member in connection with the attendance at hearings conducted 
by the Committee, its Subcommittees, or any other Committee or 
Subcommittee of the Congress on matters relevant to the general 
jurisdiction of the Committee, and meetings, conferences, 
facility inspections, and investigations which involve 
activities or subject matter relevant to the general 
jurisdiction of the Committee. Before such authorization is 
given, there shall be submitted to the Chair in writing the 
following:
          (1) The purpose of the official travel;
          (2) The dates during which the official travel is to 
        be made and the date or dates of the event for which 
        the official travel is being made;
          (3) The location of the event for which the official 
        travel is to be made; and
          (4) The names of the Members and Committee staff 
        seeking authorization.
    In the case of official travel of Members and staff of a 
Subcommittee to hearings, meetings, conferences, facility 
inspections and investigations involving activities or subject 
matter under the jurisdiction of such Subcommittee, prior 
authorization must be obtained from the Subcommittee Chair and 
the full Committee Chair. Such prior authorization shall be 
given by the full Committee Chair only upon the representation 
by the applicable Subcommittee Chair in writing setting forth 
those items enumerated above.
    Within 60 days of the conclusion of any official travel 
authorized under this rule, there shall be submitted to the 
full Committee Chair a written report covering the information 
gained as a result of the hearing, meeting, conference, 
facility inspection or investigation attended pursuant to such 
official travel.

      Rule 6.--Availability of Committee Records and Publications

    The records of the Committee at the National Archives and 
Records Administration shall be made available for public use 
in accordance with rule VII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives. The Chair shall notify the Ranking Minority 
Member of any decision, pursuant to clause 3(b)(3) or clause 
4(b) of rule VII, to withhold a record otherwise available, and 
the matter shall be presented to the Committee for a 
determination on the written request of any Member of the 
Committee. The Committee shall, to the maximum extent feasible, 
make its publications available in electronic form.

                       Rule 7.--Committee Website

    The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purpose of furthering the Committee's legislative and 
oversight responsibilities, including communicating information 
about the Committee's activities to Committee members, other 
members of the House and the public. The ranking minority 
member may maintain a similar website for the same purpose, 
including communicating information about the activities of the 
minority to Committee members, other members of the House, and 
the public.

                            B. SUBCOMMITTEES

             Rule 8.--Subcommittee Ratios and Jurisdiction

    All matters referred to the Committee on Ways and Means 
involving revenue measures, except those revenue measures 
referred to Subcommittees under paragraphs a, b, c, d, e or f 
shall be considered by the full Committee and not in 
Subcommittee. There shall be six standing Subcommittees as 
follows: a Subcommittee on Trade; a Subcommittee on Oversight; 
a Subcommittee on Health; a Subcommittee on Social Security; a 
Subcommittee on Work and Welfare; and a Subcommittee on Tax. 
The ratio of Republicans to Democrats on any Subcommittee of 
the Committee shall be consistent with the ratio of Republicans 
to Democrats on the full Committee.
    (a) The Subcommittee on Trade shall consist of 19 Members, 
11 of whom shall be Republicans and 8 of whom shall be 
Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Trade shall include 
bills and matters referred to the Committee on Ways and Means 
that relate to customs and customs administration including 
tariff and import fee structure, classification, valuation of 
and special rules applying to imports, and special tariff 
provisions and procedures which relate to customs operation 
affecting exports and imports; import trade matters, including 
import impact, industry relief from injurious imports, 
adjustment assistance and programs to encourage competitive 
responses to imports, unfair import practices including 
antidumping and countervailing duty provisions, and import 
policy which relates to dependence on foreign sources of 
supply; commodity agreements and reciprocal trade agreements 
involving multilateral and bilateral trade negotiations and 
implementation of agreements involving tariff and non-tariff 
trade barriers to and distortions of international trade; 
international rules, organizations and institutional aspects of 
international trade agreements; budget authorizations for the 
customs revenue functions of the Department of Homeland 
Security, the U.S. International Trade Commission, and the U.S. 
Trade Representative; and special trade-related problems 
involving market access, competitive conditions of specific 
industries, export policy and promotion, access to materials in 
short supply, bilateral trade relations including trade with 
developing countries, operations of multinational corporations, 
and trade with non-market economies.
    (b) The Subcommittee on Oversight shall consist of 13 
Members, 8 of whom shall be Republicans and 5 of whom shall be 
Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Oversight shall 
include all matters within the scope of the full Committee's 
jurisdiction. Said oversight jurisdiction shall not be 
exclusive but shall be concurrent with that of the other 
Subcommittees. With respect to matters involving the Internal 
Revenue Code and other revenue issues, said concurrent 
jurisdiction shall be shared with the full Committee. Before 
undertaking any investigation or hearing, the Chair of the 
Subcommittee on Oversight shall confer with the Chair of the 
full Committee and the Chair of any other Subcommittee having 
jurisdiction.
    (c) The Subcommittee on Health shall consist of 19 Members, 
11 of whom shall be Republicans and 8 of whom shall be 
Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Health shall 
include bills and matters referred to the Committee on Ways and 
Means that relate to programs providing payments (from any 
source) for health care, health delivery systems, or health 
research. More specifically, the jurisdiction of the 
Subcommittee on Health shall include bills and matters that 
relate to the health care programs of the Social Security Act 
(including titles V, XI (Part B), XVIII, and XIX thereof) and, 
concurrent with the full Committee, tax credit and deduction 
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code dealing with health 
insurance premiums and health care costs.
    (d) The Subcommittee on Social Security shall consist of 13 
Members, 8 of whom shall be Republicans and 5 of whom shall be 
Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Social Security 
shall include bills and matters referred to the Committee on 
Ways and Means that relate to the Federal Old Age, Survivors' 
and Disability Insurance System, the Railroad Retirement 
System, and employment taxes and trust fund operations relating 
to those systems. More specifically, the jurisdiction of the 
Subcommittee on Social Security shall include bills and matters 
involving title II of the Social Security Act and Chapter 22 of 
the Internal Revenue Code (the Railroad Retirement Tax Act), as 
well as provisions in title VII and title XI of the Act 
relating to procedure and administration involving the Old Age, 
Survivors' and Disability Insurance System.
    (e) The Subcommittee on Work and Welfare shall consist of 
13 Members, 8 of whom shall be Republicans and 5 of whom shall 
be Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Work and Welfare 
shall include bills and matters referred to the Committee on 
Ways and Means that relate to the public assistance provisions 
of the Social Security Act, including temporary assistance for 
needy families, child care, child and family services, child 
support, foster care, adoption, supplemental security income, 
social services, home visiting, and eligibility of welfare 
recipients for food stamps. More specifically, the jurisdiction 
of the Subcommittee on Work and Welfare shall include bills and 
matters relating to titles I, IV, VI, X, XIV, XVI, XVII, XX and 
related provisions of titles V, VII and XI of the Social 
Security Act.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Work and Welfare 
shall also include bills and matters referred to the Committee 
on Ways and Means that relate to the Federal-State system of 
unemployment compensation, and the financing thereof, including 
the programs for extended and emergency benefits. More 
specifically, the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Work and 
Welfare shall also include all bills and matters pertaining to 
the programs of unemployment compensation under titles III, IX 
and XII of the Social Security Act, Chapters 23 and 23A of the 
Internal Revenue Code, and the Federal-State Extended 
Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970, and provisions relating 
thereto.
    (f) The Subcommittee on Tax shall consist of 19 Members, 11 
of whom shall be Republicans and 8 of whom shall be Democrats.
    The jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Tax shall consist 
of those revenue measures that, from time to time, shall be 
referred to it specifically by the Chair of the full Committee.

                       Rule 9.--Committee Panels

    Subject to clause 5(b)(2)(C) of rule X of the Rules of the 
House, the Chair may designate a select panel of the Committee 
to inquire into and take testimony on matters of special 
national interest. Any such panel shall be subject to all 
Committee rules herein and shall not have legislative 
jurisdiction.
    Any select panel designated under this rule shall continue 
in existence for six months after the date of the designation 
and may be reauthorized in the discretion of the Chair for 
subsequent six month terms.

             Rule 10.--Ex-Officio Members of Subcommittees

    The Chair of the full Committee and the Ranking Minority 
Member may sit as ex-officio Members of all Subcommittees. They 
may be counted for purposes of assisting in the establishment 
of a quorum for a Subcommittee. However, their absence shall 
not count against the establishment of a quorum by the regular 
Members of the Subcommittee. Ex-officio Members shall neither 
vote in the Subcommittee nor be taken into consideration for 
the purposes of determining the ratio of the Subcommittee.

                    Rule 11.--Subcommittee Meetings

    Insofar as practicable, meetings of the full Committee and 
its Subcommittees shall not conflict. Subcommittee Chairmen 
shall set meeting dates after consultation with the Chair of 
the full Committee and other Subcommittee Chairmen with a view 
towards avoiding, wherever possible, simultaneous scheduling of 
full Committee and Subcommittee meetings or hearings.

      Rule 12.--Reference of Legislation and Subcommittee Reports

    Except for bills or measures retained by the Chair of the 
full Committee for full Committee consideration, every bill or 
other measure referred to the Committee shall be referred by 
the Chair of the full Committee to the appropriate Subcommittee 
in a timely manner.
    No measure reported by a Subcommittee shall be considered 
by the full Committee unless it has been presented to all 
Members of the full Committee at least two legislative days 
prior to the full Committee's meeting, together with a 
comparison with present law, a section-by-section analysis of 
the proposed change, a section-by-section justification, and a 
draft statement of the budget effects of the measure that is 
consistent with the requirements for reported measures under 
clause 3(d)(1) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.

         Rule 13.--Recommendation for Appointment of Conferees

    Whenever in the legislative process it becomes necessary to 
appoint conferees, the Chair of the full Committee shall 
recommend to the Speaker as conferees the names of those 
Committee Members as the Chair may designate. In making 
recommendations of Minority Members as conferees, the Chair 
shall consult with the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee.

                              C. HEARINGS

                          Rule 14.--Witnesses

    In order to assure the most productive use of the limited 
time available to question hearing witnesses, a witness who is 
scheduled to appear before the full Committee or a Subcommittee 
shall file with the Clerk of the Committee at least 48 hours in 
advance of his or her appearance a written statement of their 
proposed testimony. In addition, all witnesses shall comply 
with formatting requirements as specified by the Committee and 
the Rules of the House. Failure to comply with the 48-hour rule 
may result in a witness being denied the opportunity to testify 
in person. Failure to comply with the formatting requirements 
may result in a witness' statement being rejected for inclusion 
in the published hearing record. In addition to the 
requirements of clause 2(g)(5) of rule XI of the Rules of the 
House regarding information required of public witnesses, a 
witness shall limit his or her oral presentation to a summary 
of their position and shall provide sufficient copies of their 
written statement to the Clerk for distribution to Members, 
staff and news media.
    A witness appearing at a public hearing, or submitting a 
statement for the record of a public hearing, or submitting 
written comments in response to a published request for 
comments by the Committee must include in their statement or 
submission, a list of all clients, persons or organizations on 
whose behalf the witness appears.

                   Rule 15.--Questioning of Witnesses

    Committee Members may question witnesses only when 
recognized by the Chair for that purpose. All Members shall be 
limited to five minutes on the initial round of questioning. In 
questioning witnesses under the five minute rule, the Chair and 
the Ranking Minority Member shall be recognized first. In 
recognizing Members to question witnesses, the Chair may take 
into consideration the ratio of Majority Members to Minority 
Members and the number of Majority and Minority Members present 
and shall apportion the recognition for questioning in such a 
manner as not to disadvantage Members of the Majority.

                        Rule 16.--Subpoena Power

    The power to authorize and issue subpoenas is delegated to 
the Chair of the full Committee, as provided for under clause 
2(m)(3)(A)(i) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.

                     Rule 17.--Deposition Authority

    The Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority as 
issued by the Committee on Rules pursuant to H. Res. 5 titled--
Adopting the Rules of the House of Representatives for the One 
Hundred Eighteenth Congress, and for other purposes--are 
incorporated by reference and shall be considered the rules of 
the Committee.

                     Rule 18.--Records of Hearings

    An accurate stenographic record shall be kept of all 
testimony taken at a public hearing. The staff shall transmit 
to a witness the transcript of his or her testimony for 
correction and immediate return to the Committee offices. Only 
changes in the interest of clarity, accuracy and corrections in 
transcribing errors will be permitted. Changes that 
substantially alter the actual testimony will not be permitted. 
Members shall have the opportunity to correct their own remarks 
before publication. The Chair of the full Committee may order 
the printing of a hearing without the corrections of a witness 
or Member if he or she determines that a reasonable time has 
been afforded to make corrections and that further delay would 
impede the consideration of the legislation or other measure 
that is the subject of the hearing.

                   Rule 19.--Broadcasting of Hearings

    The provisions of clause 4(f) of rule XI of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives are specifically made a part of 
these rules by reference. In addition, the following policy 
shall apply to media coverage of any meeting of the full 
Committee or a Subcommittee:
          (1) An appropriate area of the Committee's hearing 
        room will be designated for members of the media and 
        their equipment.
          (2) No interviews will be allowed in the Committee 
        room while the Committee is in session. Individual 
        interviews must take place before the gavel falls for 
        the convening of a meeting or after the gavel falls for 
        adjournment.
          (3) Day-to-day notification of the next day's 
        electronic coverage shall be provided by the media to 
        the Chair of the full Committee through an appropriate 
        designee.
          (4) Still photography during a Committee meeting will 
        not be permitted to disrupt the proceedings or block 
        the vision of Committee Members or witnesses.
          (5) Further conditions may be specified by the Chair.

                               D. MARKUPS

                      Rule 20.--Previous Question

    The Chair shall not recognize a Member for the purpose of 
moving the previous question unless the Member has first 
advised the Chair and the Committee that this is the purpose 
for which recognition is being sought.

                 Rule 21.--Postponement of Proceedings

    The Chair may postpone further proceedings when a record 
vote is ordered on the question of approving any measure or 
matter or adopting an amendment.
    The Chair may resume proceedings on a postponed request at 
any time. In exercising postponement authority the Chair shall 
take reasonable steps to notify Members on the resumption of 
proceedings on any postponed record vote.
    When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.

                  Rule 22.--Motion to go to Conference

    The Chair is authorized to offer a motion under clause 1 of 
rule XXII of the Rules of the House of Representatives whenever 
the Chair considers it appropriate.

 Rule 23.--Official Transcripts of Markups and Other Committee Meetings

    An official stenographic transcript shall be kept 
accurately reflecting all markups and other official meetings 
of the full Committee and the Subcommittees, whether they be 
open or closed to the public. This official transcript, marked 
as ``uncorrected,'' shall be available for inspection by the 
public (except for meetings closed pursuant to clause 2(g)(1) 
of rule XI of the Rules of the House), by Members of the House, 
or by Members of the Committee together with their staffs, 
during normal business hours in the full Committee or 
Subcommittee office under such controls as the Chair of the 
full Committee deems necessary.
    The Chair may provide a Member of the Committee with 
electronic access to an unofficial transcript of an open markup 
or other open official meeting of the full Committee or a 
Subcommittee upon written request by the Member to the Chair, 
but the Member shall not cause such electronic unofficial 
transcript to be published or otherwise made publicly 
available.
    If (1) in executing technical and conforming changes, the 
Office of the House Legislative Counsel or (2) in the 
preparation of a Committee report, the Chief of Staff of the 
Joint Committee on Taxation determines (in consultation with 
appropriate majority and minority committee staff) that it is 
necessary to review the official transcript of a markup, such 
transcript may be released upon the signature and to the 
custody of an appropriate committee staff person. Such 
transcript shall be returned immediately after its review in 
the drafting session.
    The official transcript of a markup or Committee meeting 
other than a public hearing shall not be published or 
distributed to the public in any way except by a majority vote 
of the Committee. Before any public release of the uncorrected 
transcript, Members must be given a reasonable opportunity to 
correct their remarks. In instances in which a stenographic 
transcript is kept of a conference committee proceeding, all of 
the requirements of this rule shall likewise be observed.

                                E. STAFF

                Rule 24.--Supervision of Committee Staff

    The staff of the Committee shall be under the general 
supervision and direction of the Chair of the full Committee 
except as provided in clause 9 of rule X of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives concerning Committee expenses and 
staff.
    Pursuant to clause 6(d) of rule X of the Rules of the House 
of Representatives, the Chair of the full Committee, from the 
funds made available for the appointment of Committee staff 
pursuant to primary and additional expense resolutions, shall 
ensure that each Subcommittee receives sufficient staff to 
carry out its responsibilities under the rules of the 
Committee, and that the minority party is fairly treated in the 
appointment of such staff.
      
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            PART II--SELECT AND PERMANENT SELECT COMMITTEES

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               Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence

 MICHAEL R. TURNER, Ohio, Chairman

JAMES A. HIMES, Connecticut,         BRAD R. WENSTRUP, Ohio
  Ranking Member                     ERIC A. ``RICK'' CRAWFORD, 
ANDRE CARSON, Indiana                Arkansas
JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas                ELISE M. STEFANIK, New York
RAJA KRISHNAMOORTHI, Illinois        TRENT KELLY, Mississippi
JASON CROW, Colorado                 DARIN LaHOOD, Illinois
AMI BERA, California                 BRIAN K. FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania
STACEY E. PLASKETT, Virgin Islands   MIKE GALLAGHER, Wisconsin
JOSH GOTTHEIMER, New Jersey          AUSTIN SCOTT, Georgia
JIMMY GOMEZ, California              J. FRENCH HILL, Arkansas
CHRISSY HOULAHAN, Pennsylvania       DAN CRENSHAW, Texas
ABIGAIL DAVIS SPANBERGER, Virginia   MICHAEL WALTZ, Florida
                                     MIKE GARCIA, California

                     (As adopted February 7, 2023)


                      Rule 1.--General Provisions

    (A) Applicability of the Rules of the U.S. House of 
Representatives. The Rules of the U.S. House of Representatives 
(the ``House'') are the rules of the Permanent Select Committee 
on Intelligence (the ``Committee'') and its subcommittees 
insofar as applicable.
    (B) Applicability to Subcommittees. Except when the terms 
``Full Committee'' and ``Subcommittee'' are specifically 
mentioned, the following rules shall apply to the Committee's 
subcommittees and their respective Chairs and ranking minority 
members to the same extent as they apply to the full Committee 
and its Chair and Ranking Minority Member.
    (C) Changes in Rules. These rules may be modified, amended, 
waived, or repealed by a vote of the full Committee. A notice, 
in writing, of the proposed change or waiver shall be given to 
each member at least 48 hours prior to any meeting at which 
action on the proposed rule change or waiver is to be taken.
    (D) Committee Website. The Chair shall maintain an official 
Committee website for the purposes of furthering the 
Committee's legislative and oversight responsibilities, 
including communicating information about the Committee's 
activities to the Committee Members, other members, and the 
public at large. The Ranking Minority Member may maintain a 
similar website for the same purposes. The official Committee 
website shall display a link on its homepage to the website 
maintained by the Ranking Minority Member.
    (E) Activity Report. The Committee shall submit a report to 
the House on the activities of the Committee in accordance with 
clause 1(d) of rule XI of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.

          Rule 2.--Legislative Calendar and Committee Meetings

    (A) Legislative Calendar.
          (1) Generally. The Chief Clerk or other Committee 
        staff designated by the Chair, under the direction of 
        the Staff Director, shall maintain a calendar that 
        lists:
                  (a) The legislative measures introduced and 
                referred to the Committee;
                  (b) The status of such measures; and
                  (c) Such other matters that the Committee may 
                require.
          (2) Revisions to the Calendar. The calendar shall be 
        revised from time to time to show pertinent changes. A 
        copy of such revision shall be furnished to each Member 
        of the Committee upon request.
          (3) Consultation with Appropriate Government 
        Entities. Unless otherwise directed by the Committee, 
        legislative measures referred to the Committee may be 
        referred by the Chief Clerk to the appropriate 
        department or agency of the Government for reports 
        thereon.
    (B) Full Committee Regular Meeting. The regular meeting day 
of the Committee for the transaction of Committee business 
shall be the first Thursday on which the House of 
Representatives is in session of each month, unless otherwise 
directed by the Chair. The Chair of the Committee is authorized 
to dispense with a regular meeting or to change the date 
thereof when circumstances warrant.
    (C) Additional and Special Meetings. The Chair of the 
Committee may call and convene additional meetings when 
circumstances warrant. A special meeting of the Committee may 
be requested by Members of the Committee pursuant to the 
provisions of clause 2(c)(2) and clause 2(m)(1) of House rule 
XI.
    (D) Subcommittee Meetings. Except as otherwise directed by 
the Chair of the full Committee, each subcommittee is 
authorized to meet, hold hearings, receive testimony, mark up 
legislation, and report to the full Committee on all matters 
within its jurisdiction and/or referred to it. Insofar as 
possible, meetings of the subcommittees shall not conflict with 
meetings of the full Committee. A subcommittee Chair shall set 
meeting dates only after consultation with and approval of the 
Chair of the full Committee.
    (E) Subcommittee Field Hearings. The Chair of the 
Committee, at the request of a subcommittee Chair, may make a 
temporary assignment of any Member of the Committee to such 
subcommittee for the purpose of constituting a quorum at and 
participating in any public hearing by such subcommittee to be 
held outside of Washington, D.C. A Member appointed to such 
temporary position shall not be a voting member. The Chair of 
the Committee shall give reasonable notice of such temporary 
assignment to the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee and 
of the respective subcommittee.
    (F) Notice of Meetings.
          (1) Generally. In the case of any meeting of the 
        Committee, the Chief Clerk shall provide reasonable 
        notice to every Member of the Committee. Such notice 
        shall provide the time, place, and subject matter of 
        the meeting, and shall be made consistent with the 
        provisions of clause 2(g)(3) of House rule XI.
          (2) Hearings. Except as provided in subsection 
        (F)(4), a Committee hearing may not commence earlier 
        than one week after such notice.
          (3) Business Meetings. Except as provided in 
        subsection (F)(4), a Committee business meeting may not 
        commence earlier than the third day on which Members 
        have notice thereof (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
        legal holidays when the House is not in session).
          (4) Exception. A hearing or business meeting may 
        begin sooner than otherwise specified in either of the 
        following circumstances (in which case the Chair shall 
        provide the notice at the earliest possible time):
                  (a) the Chair, with the concurrence of the 
                Ranking Minority Member, determines there is 
                good cause; or
                  (b) the Committee determines by majority vote 
                in the presence of the number of Members 
                required under the rules of the Committee for 
                the transaction of business.
          (5) Definition. For purposes of this rule, ``notice'' 
        means:
                  (a) Written notification; or
                  (b) Notification delivered by facsimile 
                transmission, regular mail, or electronic mail.
    (G) Open Meetings.
          (1) Generally. Pursuant to House rule XI, but subject 
        to the limitations of subsections (G)(2) and (G)(3) of 
        this rule, Committee meetings held for the transaction 
        of business and Committee hearings shall be open to the 
        public.
          (2) Meetings. Any meeting or portion thereof for the 
        transaction of business, including the markup of 
        legislation, or any hearing or portion thereof, shall 
        be closed to the public if the Committee determines by 
        record vote in open session, with a majority of the 
        Committee present, that disclosure of the matters to be 
        discussed may:
                  (a) Endanger national security;
                  (b) Compromise sensitive law enforcement 
                information;
                  (c) Tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
                any person; or
                  (d) Otherwise violate any law or Rule of the 
                House.
          (3) Hearings. The Committee may vote to close a 
        Committee hearing pursuant to clause 11(d)(2) of House 
        rule X, regardless of whether a majority is present, so 
        long as at least two Members of the Committee are 
        present, one of whom is a Member of the Minority and 
        votes upon the motion.
          (4) Briefings. Committee briefings shall be closed to 
        the public.
    (H) Broadcasting Meetings. Whenever a hearing or meeting 
conducted by the Committee is open to the public, a majority of 
the Committee may permit that hearing or meeting to be covered, 
in whole or in part, by television broadcast, radio broadcast, 
and still photography, or by any such methods of coverage, 
subject to the provisions and in accordance with the spirit of 
the purposes enumerated in the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (I) Quorum.
          (1) Hearings. For purposes of taking testimony, or 
        receiving evidence, a quorum shall consist of two 
        Committee Members, at least one of whom is a Member of 
        the Majority.
          (2) Reporting Measures and Recommendations. For 
        purposes of reporting a measure or recommendation, a 
        quorum shall consist of a majority of the Committee's 
        Members.
          (3) Other Committee Proceedings. For purposes of the 
        transaction of all other Committee business, other than 
        the consideration of a motion to close a hearing as 
        described in section (G)(3), a quorum shall consist of 
        one-third of the Committee's Members.

Rule 3.--Jurisdiction and Membership of the Committee and Subcommittees

    (A) Generally. The Committee retains jurisdiction of all 
subjects listed in clause 11(b) of House rule X.
          (1) Creation of subcommittees shall be by majority 
        vote of the Committee.
          (2) Subcommittees shall deal with such legislation 
        and oversight of programs and policies as described in 
        section (C).
          (3) While subcommittees are provided jurisdictional 
        responsibilities in section (C), the Committee retains 
        the right to exercise oversight and legislative 
        jurisdiction over all subjects within its purview under 
        House rule X.
    (B) Establishment of Subcommittees. The Committee shall be 
organized into the following five subcommittees, and each shall 
have specific responsibility for such legislation and oversight 
of programs and policies as described in section (C) and as the 
Committee refers to it:
          (1) Subcommittee on the Central Intelligence Agency;
          (2) Subcommittee on the National Intelligence 
        Enterprise;
          (3) Subcommittee on Defense Intelligence and Overhead 
        Architecture;
          (4) Subcommittee on the National Security Agency and 
        Cyber; and
          (5) Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.
    (C) Subcommittee Jurisdiction.
          (1) Subcommittee on the Central Intelligence Agency. 
        Legislative and oversight responsibilities shall 
        include the programs, policies, budget, and operations 
        of the Central Intelligence Agency; all covert actions 
        of the Intelligence Community; and the collection, 
        exploitation, and dissemination of human intelligence 
        (HUMINT).
          (2) Subcommittee on the National Intelligence 
        Enterprise. Legislative and oversight responsibilities 
        shall include the programs, policies, budget, and 
        operations of the Office of the Director of National 
        Intelligence and the intelligence components of the 
        Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security 
        (including the U.S. Coast Guard), Department of Justice 
        (including the Drug Enforcement Administration and 
        Federal Bureau of Investigation), Department of State, 
        and Department of Treasury; matters regarding U.S. 
        persons' privacy and civil liberties; counter-
        intelligence; all domestic activities of the 
        Intelligence Community; and all cross-cutting matters 
        associated with the National Intelligence Enterprise.
          (3) Subcommittee on Defense Intelligence and Overhead 
        Architecture. Legislative and oversight 
        responsibilities shall include the programs, policies, 
        budget, operations, and intelligence and intelligence-
        related activities of the Department of Defense, 
        including the Undersecretary of Defense for 
        Intelligence and Security, Defense Intelligence Agency, 
        National Reconnaissance Office, National Geospatial-
        Intelligence Agency, and the intelligence components of 
        the Military Services (Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, 
        Navy, and Space Force); all activities funded by the 
        Military Intelligence Program; all matters related to 
        the Defense Intelligence Enterprise; and the 
        collection, exploitation, and dissemination of acoustic 
        intelligence (ACINT), geospatial intelligence (GEOINT), 
        imagery intelligence (IMINT), and measures and 
        signatures intelligence (MASINT).
          (4) Subcommittee on the National Security Agency and 
        Cyber. Legislative and oversight responsibilities shall 
        include the programs, policies, budget, and operations 
        of the National Security Agency/Central Security 
        Service; the intelligence and intelligence-related 
        activities of U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM); the 
        collection, exploitation, and dissemination of 
        communications intelligence (COMINT), electronic 
        intelligence (ELINT), foreign instrumentation signals 
        intelligence (FISINT), and signals intelligence 
        (SIGINT); and all cyber-intelligence activities of the 
        Intelligence Community, including support for the 
        nation's cyber-defense and cyber-offense.
          (5) Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. 
        Oversight responsibilities shall include all matters 
        within the scope of the full Committee's jurisdiction, 
        in concurrence with the relevant subcommittee(s) of 
        jurisdiction; any investigative matters referred by the 
        Chair; and receiving and reviewing whistleblower 
        complaints and other information concerning waste, 
        fraud, or abuse by the Intelligence Community.
    (D) Subcommittee Membership.
          (1) Generally. Each Member of the Committee may be 
        assigned to at least one of the subcommittees.
          (2) Selection and Ratio of Subcommittee Members. The 
        Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the full Committee 
        shall select their respective members for each 
        subcommittee. The size and ratio of each subcommittee 
        shall be determined by the Chair, in consultation with 
        the Ranking Minority Member.
          (3) Ex Officio Membership. In the event that the 
        Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the full Committee 
        do not choose to sit as regular voting members of one 
        or more of the subcommittees, each is authorized to sit 
        as an ex officio member of the subcommittees and 
        participate in the work of the subcommittees. When 
        sitting ex officio, however, they:
                  (a) Shall not have a vote in subcommittee 
                hearings or meetings; and
                  (b) Shall not be counted for purposes of 
                determining a quorum at subcommittee hearings 
                or meetings.

                   Rule 4.--Committee Working Groups

    (A) Generally. The Chair, in consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, or the Chair of a subcommittee with the 
concurrence of the Chair and in consultation with the ranking 
minority member of that subcommittee, may designate a working 
group to inquire into and take testimony on a matter that falls 
within the jurisdiction of the Committee or subcommittee, 
respectively.
    (B) Selection and Ratio of Working Group Members. The Chair 
and Ranking Minority Member of the full Committee, or 
subcommittee when applicable, shall select their respective 
members for each working group. The ratio of Majority to 
Minority members shall be comparable to the full Committee or 
respective subcommittee, consistent with the party ratios 
established by the Majority party, except that each working 
group shall have at least one more Majority Member than 
Minority Members. The Chair, or the Chair of the designating 
subcommittee, shall choose one of the Majority Members so 
appointed to serve as Chair of the working group. The Ranking 
Minority Member, or the ranking minority member of the 
designating subcommittee, shall similarly appoint the ranking 
minority member of the working group.
    (C) Limitation. No working group shall have legislative 
jurisdiction.

                 Rule 5.--Oversight and Investigations

    (A) Commencing Investigations. The Committee shall commence 
investigations only if approved by the Chair, in consultation 
with the Ranking Minority Member.
    (B) Conducting Investigations. An authorized investigation 
may be conducted by Members of the Committee or Committee staff 
designated by the Chair, in consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, to undertake any such investigation.
    (C) Closing Investigations. The Chair, upon notice to the 
Ranking Minority Member, may halt or end a previously 
authorized investigation at the Chair's discretion.

                       Rule 6.--Committee Reports

    (A) Bills and Resolutions. Each bill or resolution approved 
by the Committee shall be reported by the Chair of the 
Committee pursuant to clauses 2-4 of House rule XIII.
    (B) Approval of Investigative and Oversight Reports. Only 
those investigative or oversight reports approved by a majority 
vote of the Committee at a meeting at which a quorum is present 
may be ordered printed, unless otherwise required by the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.
    (C) Notice of Investigative and Oversight Reports. A 
proposed investigative or oversight report shall not be 
considered in the Committee unless the proposed report has been 
available to the Members of the Committee for at least three 
calendar days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
holidays, unless the House is in session on such days) before 
consideration of such proposed report in the Committee. If a 
hearing has been held on the matter reported upon, every 
reasonable effort shall be made to have such hearing transcript 
printed and available to the Members of the Committee before 
the consideration of the proposed report in the Committee.
    (D) Additional Views. If, at the time of approval of a 
report, a Member of the Committee gives notice of intent to 
file supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views, 
any Member of the Committee shall be entitled to file such 
views following clause 2(l) of House rule XI and clause 3(a)(1) 
of House rule XIII.

                      Rule 7.--Hearing Procedures

    (A) Generally. Hearings shall be conducted according to the 
procedures in clause 2(k) of House rule XI. The Chair of the 
Committee or subcommittee shall make an opening statement as 
set forth in clause 2(k)(1) of House rule XI. In addition, the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or subcommittee may 
make an opening statement.
    (B) Presiding Member. The Chair of the Committee or a 
subcommittee shall preside over each meeting and hearing 
thereof (``the presiding member'').
    (C) The Five-Minute Rule. Generally, the time any one 
Member may address the Committee, subcommittee, or working 
group on any measure or matter under consideration shall not 
exceed five minutes and then only when the Member has been 
recognized by the Chair or subcommittee Chair, as appropriate, 
except that this time limit may be exceeded by unanimous 
consent or authorization by the Chair. The five-minute 
limitation shall not apply to the Chair and the Ranking 
Minority Member or the Chair and the ranking minority member of 
a subcommittee or a working group. Upon request from a Member, 
the Chair may afford such Member additional time, not to exceed 
two minutes, for additional remarks that are in rebuttal of 
remarks made by another Member during a hearing, briefing, or 
meeting concerning the requesting Member's position or prior 
statements, as the Chair deems appropriate and necessary.
    (D) Markup. Prior to Committee or subcommittee markup of 
legislation, Committee staff should make every reasonable 
effort to resolve Majority and Minority differences regarding 
the legislation.
    (E) Amendments. When a bill or resolution is being 
considered by the Committee, Members shall provide the Chief 
Clerk in a timely manner with a sufficient number of written 
copies of any amendment offered, so as to enable each Member 
present to receive a copy thereof prior to taking action. A 
point of order may be made against any amendment not reduced to 
writing. A copy of each such amendment shall be maintained in 
the public records of the Committee. Any member, upon request, 
shall be recognized for not more than five minutes to address 
the Committee or subcommittee on behalf of an amendment which 
the member has offered to any pending bill or resolution.
    (F) Voting. Voting on a measure or matter may be by record 
vote, division vote, voice vote, or unanimous consent.
    (G) Request for Record Vote. A record vote of the Members 
may be directed by the Chair or upon the request of any Member.
    (H) Postponement of Further Proceedings. In accordance with 
clause 2(h) of House rule XI, the Chair is authorized to 
postpone further proceedings when a record vote is ordered on 
the question of approving a measure or matter or adopting an 
amendment. The Chair may resume proceedings on a postponed 
request at any time after reasonable notice. When proceedings 
resume on a postponed question, notwithstanding any intervening 
order for the previous question, an underlying proposition 
shall remain subject to further debate or amendment to the same 
extent as when the question was postponed.
    (I) Reporting Record Votes. Whenever the Committee reports 
any measure or matter by record vote, the report of the 
Committee upon such measure or matter shall include a 
tabulation of the votes cast in favor of, and the votes cast in 
opposition to, such measure or matter.
    (J) Availability of Record Votes on Committee Website. In 
addition to any other requirement of the Rules of the House, 
the Chair shall make the record votes on any measure or matter 
on which a record vote is taken, other than a motion to close a 
Committee hearing, briefing, or meeting, available on the 
Committee's website not later than 2 business days after such 
vote is taken. Such record shall include an unclassified 
description of the amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition, the name of each Member voting in favor of, and 
each Member voting in opposition to, such amendment, motion, 
order, or proposition, and the names of those Members of the 
Committee present but not voting.

                  Rule 8.--Motions To Go to Conference

    In accordance with clause 2(a) of House rule XI, the Chair 
is authorized and directed to offer a privileged motion to go 
to conference under clause 1 of House rule XXII whenever the 
Chair considers it appropriate.

     Rule 9.--Procedures for Taking Testimony or Receiving Evidence

    (A) Notice. Adequate notice shall be given to all witnesses 
appearing before the Committee.
    (B) Oath or Affirmation. The Chair may require testimony of 
witnesses to be given under oath or affirmation.
          Administration of Oath or Affirmation. Upon the 
        determination that a witness shall testify under oath 
        or affirmation, any Member of the Committee designated 
        by the Chair may administer the oath or affirmation.
          (1) Witnesses, when sworn, shall subscribe to the 
        following oath:
                  ``Do you solemnly swear (or affirm) that the 
                testimony you will give before this Committee 
                (or subcommittee, or working group) in the 
                matters now under consideration will be the 
                truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the 
                truth?''
    (C) Counsel for the Witness.
          (1) Generally. Witnesses before the Committee may be 
        accompanied by counsel, subject to the requirements of 
        subsection (C)(2).
          (2) Role of Counsel for the Witness. Counsel shall 
        not be allowed to examine witnesses before the 
        Committee, either directly or through cross-
        examination.
          (3) Counsel Clearances Required. In the event that a 
        meeting or hearing of the Committee may be closed 
        because the subject to be discussed deals with 
        classified information, counsel accompanying a witness 
        before the Committee must possess the requisite 
        security clearance and provide proof of such clearance 
        to the Committee at least 24 hours prior to the meeting 
        or hearing at which the counsel intends to be present.
          (4) Failure to Obtain Counsel. Any witness who is 
        unable to obtain counsel should notify the Committee. 
        If such notification occurs at least 24 hours prior to 
        the witness's appearance before the Committee, the 
        Committee shall then endeavor to obtain voluntary 
        counsel for the witness. Failure to obtain counsel, 
        however, will not excuse the witness from appearing and 
        testifying.
          (5) Conduct of Counsel for Witnesses. Counsel for 
        witnesses appearing before the Committee shall conduct 
        themselves ethically and professionally at all times in 
        their dealings with the Committee.
                  (a) A majority of Members of the Committee 
                may, should circumstances warrant, find that 
                counsel for a witness before the Committee 
                failed to conduct himself or herself in an 
                ethical or professional manner.
                  (b) Upon such finding, counsel may be subject 
                to appropriate disciplinary action.
          (6) Temporary Removal of Counsel.
                  (a) The Chair may remove counsel during any 
                proceeding before the Committee for failure to 
                act in an ethical and professional manner.
                  (b) Upon a motion, a majority of the Members 
                of the Committee may vote to overturn the 
                decision of the Chair to remove counsel for a 
                witness.
    (D) Statements by Witnesses.
          (1) Oral Statements. The Committee, subcommittees, or 
        working groups may direct and/or provide an opportunity 
        for a witness to make an oral statement, which shall be 
        brief and relevant, at the beginning and/or at the 
        conclusion of the witness's testimony at a hearing or 
        meeting. Each such oral statement shall not exceed five 
        minutes in length, unless otherwise determined by the 
        Chair.
          (2) Written Statements.
                  (a) Generally. The Committee, subcommittees, 
                or working groups may require each witness who 
                is to appear before it to file with the Chief 
                Clerk in advance of his or her appearance a 
                written statement of the proposed testimony and 
                to limit the oral presentation at such 
                appearance to a brief summary of the submitted 
                written statement. The submitted written 
                statement shall be entered for the record of 
                the proceeding.
                          (i) Any prepared statement to be 
                        presented by a witness to the 
                        Committee, subcommittees, or working 
                        groups shall be submitted to the 
                        Committee, subcommittee, or working 
                        group in electronic form at least 72 
                        hours in advance of presentation and 
                        shall be distributed to all Members of 
                        the Committee, subcommittee, or working 
                        group as soon as practicable but not 
                        less than 24 hours in advance of 
                        presentation.
                          (ii) In the event that the hearing 
                        was called with less than 24 hours' 
                        notice, written statements should be 
                        submitted as soon as practicable prior 
                        to the hearing.
                  (b) Availability of Statements. Pursuant to 
                clause 2(g)(5) of House rule XI, except as 
                provided for in paragraph (c), written witness 
                statements submitted for an open meeting or 
                hearing, with appropriate redactions to protect 
                the privacy or security of the witness, shall 
                be made publicly available in electronic form 
                on the Committee website 24 hours before the 
                witness appears, to the extent practicable, but 
                not later than one day after the witness 
                appears.
                  (c) Exception. If a prepared statement 
                contains national security information bearing 
                a classification of Confidential or higher or 
                is from a witness expected to testify at a 
                closed hearing or meeting, the statement shall 
                be made available in the Committee rooms to all 
                Members of the Committee, subcommittee, or 
                working group as soon as practicable but not 
                less than 24 hours in advance of presentation; 
                however, no such statement shall be removed 
                from the Committee offices or made publicly 
                available.
    (E) Questioning of Witnesses.
          (1) Generally. Questioning of witnesses before the 
        Committee shall be conducted by Members of the 
        Committee. In the course of any hearing, each Member 
        shall be allowed five minutes for the interrogation of 
        a witness until such time as each Member who so desires 
        has had an opportunity to question the witness. 
        Thereafter, additional rounds for questioning witnesses 
        by Members are within the discretion of the Chair of 
        the Committee, subcommittees, or working groups, as 
        appropriate.
          (2) Exceptions.
                  (a) The Chair, in consultation with the 
                Ranking Minority Member, may determine that 
                Committee staff will be authorized to question 
                witnesses at a hearing in accordance with 
                clause 2(j) of House rule XI.
                  (b) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member are 
                each authorized to designate Committee staff to 
                conduct such questioning.
    (F) Objections and Ruling.
          (1) Generally. Any objection raised by a witness, or 
        counsel for the witness, shall be ruled upon by the 
        Chair, and such ruling shall be the ruling of the 
        Committee.
          (2) Committee Action. A ruling by the Chair may be 
        overturned upon a majority vote of the Committee.
    (G) Record of Witness Testimony.
          (1) Transcript or Recording Required. A transcript or 
        recording shall be made of the testimony of each 
        witness appearing before the Committee during any 
        hearing of the Committee.
          (2) Opportunity to Inspect. Any witness testifying 
        before the Committee shall be given a reasonable 
        opportunity to inspect the transcript of the hearing 
        and may be accompanied by counsel to determine whether 
        such testimony was correctly transcribed. Such counsel:
                  (a) May review the transcript or recording 
                only if he or she has the appropriate security 
                clearances necessary to review any classified 
                aspect of the transcript; and
                  (b) Should, to the extent possible, be the 
                same counsel that was present for such 
                classified testimony.
          (3) Corrections.
                  (a) Pursuant to House rule XI, any 
                corrections the witness desires to make in a 
                transcript shall be limited to technical, 
                grammatical, and typographical corrections.
                  (b) Corrections may not be made to change the 
                substance of the testimony.
                  (c) Such corrections shall be submitted in 
                writing to the Committee within 7 days after 
                the transcript is made available to the 
                witnesses.
                  (d) Any questions arising with respect to 
                such corrections shall be decided by the Chair.
          (4) Copy for the Witness. At the request of the 
        witness, any portion of the witness's testimony given 
        in executive session shall be made available to that 
        witness if that testimony is subsequently quoted or 
        intended to be made part of a public record. Such 
        testimony shall be made available to the witness at the 
        witness's expense.
    (H) Requests to Testify.
          (1) Generally. The Committee will consider requests 
        to testify on any matter or measure pending before the 
        Committee.
          (2) Recommendations for Additional Evidence. Any 
        person who believes that testimony, other evidence, or 
        commentary, presented at a public hearing may tend to 
        affect adversely that person's reputation may submit to 
        the Committee, in writing:
                  (a) A request to appear personally before the 
                Committee;
                  (b) A sworn statement of facts relevant to 
                the testimony, evidence, or commentary; or
                  (c) Proposed questions for the cross-
                examination of other witnesses.
          (3) Committee Discretion. The Committee may take 
        those actions it deems appropriate with respect to such 
        requests.
    (I) Contempt Procedures. Citations for contempt of Congress 
shall be forwarded to the House only if:
          (1) Reasonable notice is provided to all Members of 
        the Committee of a meeting to be held to consider any 
        such contempt recommendations;
          (2) The Committee has met and considered the contempt 
        allegations;
          (3) The subject of the allegations was afforded an 
        opportunity to state, either in writing or in person, 
        why he or she should not be held in contempt; and
          (4) The Committee agreed by majority vote to forward 
        the citation recommendations to the House.
    (J) Release of Name of Witness.
          (1) Generally. At the request of a witness scheduled 
        to be heard by the Committee, the name of that witness 
        shall not be released publicly prior to, or after, the 
        witness's appearance before the Committee.
          (2) Exceptions. Notwithstanding subsection (J)(1), 
        the Chair may authorize the release to the public of 
        the name of any witness scheduled to appear before the 
        Committee.

                          Rule 10.--Subpoenas

    (A) Generally. All subpoenas shall be authorized by the 
Chair of the full Committee, upon consultation with the Ranking 
Minority Member, or by vote of the full Committee. A subpoena 
may be authorized and issued in the conduct of any 
investigation or series of investigations or activities to 
require the attendance and testimony of such witnesses and the 
production of such books, records, correspondence, memoranda, 
papers, and documents as deemed necessary.
    (B) Subpoena Contents. Any subpoena authorized by the Chair 
of the full Committee or by the full Committee may compel:
          (1) The attendance of witnesses and testimony before 
        the Committee; or
          (2) The production of memoranda, documents, records, 
        or any other tangible item.
    (C) Signing of Subpoena. A subpoena authorized by the Chair 
of the full Committee or by the full Committee may be signed by 
the Chair or by any Member of the Committee designated to do so 
by the full Committee.
    (D) Subpoena Service. A subpoena authorized by the Chair of 
the full Committee, or by the full Committee, may be served by 
any person designated to do so by the Chair.
    (E) Other Requirements. Each subpoena shall have attached 
thereto a copy of these rules. All subpoenas must be reviewed 
by the House Office of General Counsel and signed by the Clerk 
of the House prior to issuance.
    (F) Receipt of Subpoena Records.
          (1) Unless otherwise determined by the Committee or 
        subcommittee, certain information received by the 
        Committee or subcommittee pursuant to a subpoena or 
        request for documents or information not made part of 
        the record at an open hearing shall be deemed to have 
        been received in executive session when the Chair, in 
        the Chair's judgment and after consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, deems that in 
        view of all of the circumstances, such as the 
        sensitivity of the information or the confidential 
        nature of the information, such action is appropriate.
          (2) All national security information bearing a 
        classification of Confidential or higher which has been 
        received by the Committee or a subcommittee in response 
        to a subpoena request shall be deemed to have been 
        received in executive session and shall be given 
        appropriate safekeeping in accordance with these rules.

                         Rule 11.--Depositions

    (A) Generally. The Chair of the Committee, upon 
consultation with to the Ranking Minority Member of the 
Committee, may order the taking of depositions, under oath and 
pursuant to notice or subpoena. Depositions taken under the 
authority prescribed in this section shall not be inconsistent 
with House rules, resolutions, and orders, including any 
applicable deposition regulations issued by the Chair of the 
House Rules Committee and printed in the Congressional Record.
    (B) Notices. Notices for the taking of depositions shall 
specify the date, time, and place of examination. All Members 
of the Committee shall also receive three calendar days' 
written notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
holidays, unless the House is in session on such days) that a 
deposition has been scheduled, except in exigent circumstances. 
Depositions may continue from day to day.
    (C) Oaths. Depositions shall be taken under oath 
administered by a Member or a person otherwise authorized to 
administer oaths.
    (D) Consultation. Consultation with the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee shall include three calendar days' 
notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays unless 
the House is in session on such days), and a copy of a proposed 
deposition subpoena, if applicable, before any deposition is 
taken. Any such subpoena must be authorized pursuant to rule 10 
to be issued.
    (E) Attendance. Deponents may be accompanied at a 
deposition by two designated personal, nongovernmental 
attorneys to advise them of their rights. Only Members, 
Committee staff designated by the Chair of the Committee or the 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee, an official reporter, 
the deponent, and the deponent's two designated attorneys are 
permitted to attend. Other persons, including government agency 
personnel, observers, and counsel for other persons or for 
agencies under investigation, may not attend.
    (F) Joint Depositions. The Chair of the Committee may 
designate a deposition as part of a joint investigation between 
committees, and in that case, provide notice to Members of both 
committees.
    (G) Who May Question. A deposition shall be conducted by 
any Member or counsel designated by the Chair of the Committee 
or Ranking Minority Member of the Committee. When depositions 
are conducted by Committee counsel, there shall be no more than 
two Committee counsel permitted to question a witness per 
round. One of the Committee counsel shall be designated by the 
Chair of the Committee and the other by the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee. Other Committee staff members 
designated by the Chair of the Committee or Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee may attend but may not pose questions 
to the witness.
    (H) Order of Questions. Questions in the deposition shall 
be propounded in rounds, alternating between the majority and 
minority. A single round shall not exceed 60 minutes per side, 
unless the Members or counsel conducting the deposition agree 
to a different length of questioning. In each round, the 
Member(s) or Committee counsel designated by the Chair of the 
Committee shall ask questions first, and the Member(s) or 
Committee counsel designated by the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee shall ask questions second.
    (I) Objections. Any objection made during a deposition must 
be stated concisely and in a non-argumentative and non-
suggestive manner. The witness may refuse to answer a question 
only to preserve a privilege. When the witness has refused to 
answer a question to preserve a privilege, Members or staff may 
(a) proceed with the deposition, or (b) either at that time or 
at a subsequent time, seek a ruling from the Chair either by 
telephone or otherwise. If the Chair of the Committee overrules 
any such objection during the deposition, the witness shall be 
ordered to answer. If following the deposition's recess, the 
Chair of the Committee overrules any such objection and thereby 
orders a witness to answer any question to which a privilege 
objection was lodged, such ruling shall be filed with the Chief 
Clerk of the Committee and shall be provided to the Members and 
the witness no less than three days before the reconvened 
deposition. If a Member of the Committee appeals in writing the 
ruling of the Chair, the appeal shall be preserved for 
Committee consideration. A deponent who refuses to answer a 
question after being directed by the Chair in writing, or 
orally during the proceeding as reflected in the record, may be 
subject to sanction, except that no sanctions may be imposed if 
the ruling of the Chair is reversed by the Committee on appeal.
    (J) Record of Testimony. Testimony shall be either 
transcribed or electronically recorded or both. If a witness's 
testimony is transcribed, the witness or the witness's counsel 
shall be afforded an opportunity to review a copy. No later 
than five days after the witness has been notified of the 
opportunity to review the transcript, the witness may submit 
suggested changes to the Chair of the Committee. Committee 
staff may make any typographical and technical changes. 
Substantive changes, modifications, clarifications, or 
amendments to the deposition transcript submitted by the 
witness must be accompanied by a letter signed by the witness 
requesting the changes and a statement of the witness's reasons 
for each proposed change. Any substantive changes, 
modifications, clarifications, or amendments shall be included 
as an appendix to the transcript conditioned upon the witness 
signing the transcript.
    (K) Transcription Requirements. The individual 
administering the oath, if other than a Member, shall certify 
on the transcript that the witness was duly sworn. The 
transcriber shall certify that the transcript is a true record 
of the testimony, and the transcript shall be filed, together 
with any electronic recording, with the Chief Clerk of the 
Committee in Washington, D.C. Depositions shall be considered 
to have been taken in Washington, D.C., as well as the location 
actually taken once filed there with the Chief Clerk of the 
Committee for the Committee's use. The Chair of the Committee 
and the Ranking Minority Member of the Committee shall be 
provided with a copy of the transcripts of the deposition at 
the same time.
    (L) Release. The Chair of the Committee and Ranking 
Minority Member of the Committee shall consult in advance 
regarding the release of deposition testimony, transcripts, or 
recordings, and portions thereof. If either objects in writing 
to a proposed release of a deposition testimony, transcript or 
recording, or a portion thereof, the matter shall be promptly 
referred to the Committee for resolution.

        Rule 12.--Receipt and Handling of Classified Information

    (A) Generally. In the case of any information that has been 
classified under established security procedures and submitted 
to the Committee by any source on an exclusive basis, the 
Committee shall receive such classified information as 
executive session material.
    (B) Staff Receipt of Classified Information. For purposes 
of receiving classified information, the Committee staff is 
authorized to accept information on behalf of the Committee. 
Committee staff shall operate under strict security procedures 
administered by the Committee Security Director under the 
direct supervision of the Staff Director, in accordance with 
the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Security 
Policy Manual.
    (C) Non-Disclosure of Classified Information. Any 
classified information received by the Committee, from any 
source, shall not be disclosed to any person not a member of 
the Committee or the Committee staff, or otherwise released, 
except as provided by the Rules of the House and these rules.
    (D) Security Measures.
          (1) Strict Security. The Committee's offices shall 
        operate under strict security procedures administered 
        by the Security Director under the direct supervision 
        of the Staff Director.
          (2) U.S. Capitol Police Presence Required. At least 
        one uniformed U.S. Capitol Police officer shall be on 
        duty at all times outside the entrance to Committee 
        offices to control entry of all persons to such 
        offices.
          (3) Identification Required. Before entering the 
        Committee's offices all persons shall identify 
        themselves to the U.S. Capitol Police officer described 
        in subsection (D)(2) and to any appropriate Member of 
        the Committee or Committee staff.
          (4) Maintenance of Classified Information. Classified 
        information shall be segregated and maintained in 
        approved security storage locations.
          (5) Examination of Classified Information. Classified 
        information in the Committee's possession shall be 
        examined in an appropriately secure manner.
          (6) Prohibition on Removal of Classified Information. 
        Removal of any classified information from the 
        Committee's offices is strictly prohibited, except as 
        provided by these rules.
          (7) Exception. Notwithstanding the prohibition set 
        forth in subsection (D)(6), classified information may 
        be removed from the Committee's offices in furtherance 
        of official Committee business. Appropriate security 
        procedures shall govern the handling of any classified 
        information removed from the Committee's offices.
          (8) Security Policy Manual. A security policy manual 
        shall be maintained by the Security Director in 
        coordination with the Staff Director on behalf of the 
        Chair. All Members and staff shall at all times adhere 
        to the policies set forth in the Committee Security 
        Policy Manual. The Chair may direct changes to the 
        security policy of the Committee, in consultation with 
        the Ranking Minority Member, at any time.
    (E) Registry.
          (1) Generally. The Committee shall maintain a 
        registry that:
                  (a) Provides a brief description of the 
                content of all classified information provided 
                to the Committee by the executive branch that 
                remain in the possession of the Committee; and
                  (b) Lists by number all such documents.
          (2) Designation by the Staff Director. The Staff 
        Director shall designate a member of the Committee 
        staff to be responsible for the organization and daily 
        maintenance of such registry.
          (3) Availability. Such registry shall be available to 
        all Members of the Committee and Committee staff.

          Rule 13.--Committee Access to Classified Information

    (A) Obligation to Not Disclose.
          (1) Oath Requirement. Before any Member of the 
        Committee, or the Committee staff, shall have access to 
        classified information, the following oath shall be 
        executed:
                  ``I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will 
                not disclose or cause to be disclosed any 
                classified information received in the course 
                of my service on the House Permanent Select 
                Committee on Intelligence, except when 
                authorized to do so by the Committee or the 
                House of Representatives.''
          (2) Non-Disclosure Agreement. Members of the 
        Committee and the Committee staff shall agree in 
        writing not to divulge or cause to be divulged any 
        classified information which comes into such person's 
        possession while a member of the Committee, to any 
        person not a Member of the Committee or the Committee 
        staff, except as authorized by the Committee in 
        accordance with the Rules of the House and these rules.
          (3) Copy. A copy of such executed oath and non-
        disclosure agreement shall be retained in the files of 
        the Committee.
    (B) Access to Classified Information by Members of the 
Committee. All Members of the Committee shall have access to 
all classified papers and other material received by the 
Committee from any source, with the exception of any access 
limitations established pursuant to 50 U.S.C. 3093(c)(2). If 
the executive branch seeks to limit such access to classified 
papers and other material in accordance with existing law or 
policy and makes such request in writing, the Chair, in 
consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, may agree to 
restrict member and staff access to certain classified 
information pursuant to the executive branch's request.
    (C) Access to Classified Information by Staff of the 
Committee.
          (1) Appropriate Clearances Required. Committee staff 
        must have the appropriate clearances, as determined by 
        the Chair of the Committee in consultation with the 
        Director of National Intelligence, prior to any access 
        to classified information.
          (2) Need-to-Know Required for Controlled Access 
        Programs (CAPs), Special Access Programs (SAPs), and 
        similarly restricted classified information. Committee 
        staff shall have access to CAPs, SAPs, and similarly 
        restricted information provided to the Committee on a 
        strict ``need-to-know'' basis, as determined by the 
        Chair of the Committee, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member when applicable, and under the 
        Chair's direction by the Staff Director.
    (D) Termination of Access. In the event of the termination 
of the Committee, Members and Committee staff must follow any 
determination by the House of Representatives with respect to 
the protection of classified information received while a 
Member of the Committee or as Committee staff.

  Rule 14.--Committee Control of Access to Classified Information by 
                                Others.

    (A) Access to Classified Information by Non-Committee 
Members. Pursuant to the Rules of the House and notwithstanding 
sections (B) and (C) of this rule, members who are not Members 
of the Committee may be granted access to such classified 
information in the possession of the Committee, and be admitted 
on a non-participatory basis to classified hearings or 
briefings of the Committee involving discussions of classified 
information in the following manner:
          (1) Decision of the Chair. The Chair, in consultation 
        with the Ranking Minority Member, may grant access to 
        the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of any other 
        committee of the House, either at the Chair's 
        invitation or the Chair's approval of the other 
        committee's Chair or Ranking Minority Member's request, 
        to examine classified information in the possession of 
        the Committee, or to attend Committee hearings or 
        briefings relating to the lawful intelligence or 
        intelligence-related activities of a department or 
        agency of the United States on a non-participatory, 
        case-by-case basis, when the Chair has determined 
        appropriate or necessary to do so.
                  (a) Consideration for Access to Classified 
                Information. Prior to the Chair granting access 
                to the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of any 
                other committee, either through the Chair's 
                invitation or approval of the other committee 
                Chair or Ranking Minority Member's request, the 
                Chair shall consider:
                          (i) The sensitivity to the national 
                        defense or the confidential conduct of 
                        the foreign relations of the United 
                        States of the information sought;
                          (ii) The likelihood of its being 
                        directly or indirectly disclosed;
                          (iii) The jurisdictional interest of 
                        the member making the request; and
                          (iv) Such other concerns, 
                        constitutional or otherwise, as may 
                        affect the public interest of the 
                        United States.
                  (b) Consultation Authorized. Prior to the 
                Chair granting access to any Chair and Ranking 
                Minority Member of any other committee, the 
                Chair may consult the Director of National 
                Intelligence and such other officials it 
                considers necessary.
                  (c) Finality of Chair's Decision. The Chair's 
                decision shall be final. The Chair's decision 
                on whether to grant or deny a request for 
                access shall be documented in writing, a copy 
                of which shall be furnished to the Ranking 
                Minority Member of the Committee, and to the 
                requesting member when applicable. The Security 
                Director of the Committee shall keep a copy of 
                the written determination within the files of 
                the Committee.
          (2) Committee Approval of a Non-Committee Member's 
        Request. Notwithstanding the Chair's authority to 
        approve requests for access of the Chair or Ranking 
        Minority Member of any other committee as provided in 
        subsection (A)(1), the Committee shall consider non-
        committee member requests to examine classified 
        information in the possession of the Committee, or to 
        attend Committee hearings or briefings relating to the 
        lawful intelligence or intelligence-related activities 
        of a department or agency of the United States, and may 
        grant access on a non-participatory, case-by-case 
        basis, when the Committee has determined appropriate or 
        necessary to do so.
                  (a) Written Request Required. Non-committee 
                members who desire to examine classified 
                information in the possession of the Committee, 
                or to attend Committee hearings or briefings 
                must notify the Chief Clerk or Committee staff 
                designated by the Chair. Such notification 
                shall be in writing, and shall state with 
                specificity the justification for the request 
                and the need for access.
                  (b) Consideration of Request. The Committee 
                shall consider each such request by non-
                committee members at the earliest practicable 
                opportunity. The Committee shall determine, by 
                record vote, what action it deems appropriate 
                under the circumstances, including but not 
                limited to:
                          (i) Approving the request, in whole 
                        or part;
                          (ii) Denying the request;
                          (iii) Providing the requested 
                        information or material in a different 
                        form than that sought by the member; or
                          (iv) Making the requested information 
                        or material available to all members of 
                        the House.
                  (c) Committee Consideration. Prior to making 
                a determination on the request, the Committee 
                shall consider:
                          (i) The sensitivity to the national 
                        defense or the confidential conduct of 
                        the foreign relations of the United 
                        States of the information sought;
                          (ii) The likelihood of its being 
                        directly or indirectly disclosed;
                          (iii) The jurisdictional interest of 
                        the member making the request; and
                          (iv) Such other concerns, 
                        constitutional or otherwise, as may 
                        affect the public interest of the 
                        United States.
                  (d) Consultation Authorized. Prior to the 
                Committee taking action on any request from a 
                non-committee member, the Committee may consult 
                the Director of National Intelligence and such 
                other officials it considers necessary.
          (3) Chair and Ranking Minority Member Consideration 
        of Requests for Previously Granted Materials. If the 
        Committee has previously granted a non-committee member 
        access to classified information in the possession of 
        the Committee, the Chair and Ranking Minority Member 
        may jointly determine, in writing, what action they 
        deem appropriate for subsequent requests for the same 
        information in the same Congress.
                  (a) In their determination, the Chair and 
                Ranking Minority Member shall consider the 
                factors described in paragraph (A)(2)(c) and 
                may take any action they deem appropriate, 
                including, but not limited to, the actions 
                described in paragraph (A)(2)(b).
                  (b) If the Chair and Ranking Minority Member 
                are unable to reach a joint determination or if 
                they refer a request to the Committee, the 
                Committee shall consider the request at the 
                earliest practicable opportunity in the manner 
                described in subsection (A)(2).
          (4) Finality of Committee Decision.
                  (a) Should the non-committee member making 
                such a request disagree with the determination 
                by the Committee or the determination by the 
                Chair and Ranking Minority Member with respect 
                to an access request or any part thereof 
                pursuant to subsections (A)(2) or (A)(3), that 
                member must notify the Committee in writing of 
                such disagreement.
                  (b) The Committee shall subsequently consider 
                the matter and decide, by record vote, what 
                further action or recommendation, if any, the 
                Committee will take.
    (B) Access to Classified Information by Designated Members 
and Staff of the House Committee on Appropriations. The Chair, 
in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, may admit the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on 
Appropriations, and the Chair and Ranking Minority Member of 
the Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations, 
and a designated staffer from the Majority and Minority 
committee staff of the House Committee on Appropriations and 
from the Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on 
Appropriations to attend closed hearings and briefings of the 
Committee involving discussions of classified information. Such 
members and designated staff may also be granted access to 
classified information in the possession of the Committee 
incident to such attendance.
          (1) Admission. The Chair may determine whether to 
        admit the designated members and designated staff to 
        each closed hearing or briefing of the Committee 
        involving discussions of classified information. When 
        admitted, the designated members shall not be counted 
        for quorum purposes and shall not have a vote in any 
        meeting.
          (2) Reciprocity. The Chair, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member, may condition access provided 
        under section (B) on reciprocal admission of Members 
        and staff of the Committee to classified hearings and 
        briefings of the Committee on Appropriations and the 
        Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on 
        Appropriations involving discussions of classified 
        information.
    (C) Access to Classified Information by Designated Members 
and Staff of the House Committee on Armed Services. The Chair, 
in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, may admit the 
Chair and Ranking Minority Member, and a designated staff 
member of the Majority and Minority of the House Committee on 
Armed Services to closed hearings and briefings of the 
Committee involving discussions of classified information. Such 
members and designated staff may also be granted access to 
classified information in the possession of the Committee 
incident to such attendance.
          (1) Admission. The Chair may determine whether to 
        admit the designated members and designated staff to 
        each closed hearing or briefing of the Committee 
        involving discussions of classified information. When 
        admitted, the designated members shall not be counted 
        for quorum purposes and shall not have a vote in any 
        meeting.
          (2) Reciprocity. The Chair, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member, may condition access provided 
        under section (C) on reciprocal admission of Members 
        and staff of the Committee to classified hearings and 
        briefings of the Committee on Armed Services involving 
        discussions of classified information.
    (D) Calling Information to the Attention of the House. 
Pursuant to Section 501 of the National Security Act of 1947 
(50 U.S.C. 3091), and to the Rules of the House, the Committee 
shall call to the attention of the House those matters 
requiring the attention of the House on the basis of the 
following provisions:
          (1) By Request of a Committee Member. At the request 
        of any Member of the Committee to call to the attention 
        of the House, the Committee shall meet at the earliest 
        practicable opportunity to consider and make a 
        determination.
          (2) Factors to be Considered. Prior to making a 
        determination on the request, the Committee shall 
        consider the following factors, among any others it 
        deems appropriate:
                  (a) The effect of the matter in question on 
                the national defense or the foreign relations 
                of the United States;
                  (b) Whether the matter in question involves 
                sensitive intelligence sources and methods;
                  (c) Whether the matter in question otherwise 
                raises questions affecting the national 
                interest; and
                  (d) Whether the matter in question affects 
                matters within the jurisdiction of another 
                Committee of the House.
          (3) Views of Other Committees. In examining such 
        factors, the Committee may seek the opinion of Members 
        of the Committee appointed from standing committees of 
        the House with jurisdiction over the matter in 
        question, or submissions from such other committees.
          (4) Other Advice. The Committee may seek the advice 
        of any executive branch official when considering 
        whether to call information to the attention of the 
        House.
          (5) Reasonable Opportunity to Examine Materials. 
        Before the Committee makes any decision regarding any 
        proposal to bring any matter to the attention of the 
        House, Members of the Committee shall have a reasonable 
        opportunity to examine all pertinent testimony, 
        documents, or other materials in the Committee's 
        possession that may inform their decision on the 
        question.
          (6) Notification to the House. The Committee may 
        bring a matter to the attention of the House, when, 
        after consideration of the factors set forth in this 
        rule, it considers the matter in question so important 
        that it requires the attention of all members of the 
        House, and time is of the essence, or for any reason 
        the Committee finds compelling.
          (7) Method of Disclosure to the House.
                  (a) Should the Committee decide by record 
                vote that a matter requires the attention of 
                the House, it shall make arrangements to notify 
                the House.
                  (b) In such cases, the Committee shall 
                consider whether:
                          (i) To request an immediate closed 
                        session of the House (with time equally 
                        divided between the Majority and the 
                        Minority); or
                          (ii) To publicly disclose the matter 
                        in question pursuant to clause 11(g) of 
                        House rule X.
    (E) Requirement to Protect Sources and Methods. In bringing 
a matter to the attention of the House or to any non-committee 
member or staff, the Committee, with due regard for the 
protection of intelligence sources and methods, shall take all 
necessary steps to safeguard materials or information relating 
to the matter in question.
    (F) Acknowledgement of Rules. Prior to any classified 
information within the possession of the Committee being made 
available to any non-committee member or staff, the Security 
Director for the Committee shall provide each recipient a copy 
of these rules, as well as the applicable portions of the 
Committee's Security Policy Manual and the Rules of the House 
of Representatives governing the handling and disclosure of 
classified information. A copy of each recipient's signed 
acknowledgement of receipt and agreement to comply shall be 
retained in the files of the Committee.
    (G) Records and Notes. Any records or notes taken by any 
non-committee member or staff incident to receiving access to 
classified information in the possession of the Committee 
pursuant to this rule, including executive session information 
and the substance of any hearing or briefing that was closed to 
the public, shall remain Committee information subject to these 
rules and stored in the possession of the Committee.
    (H) Ensuring Clearances and Secure Storage. If the 
Committee determines, upon record vote, that such classified 
information made available to a non-committee member or staff, 
or any records or notes taken by the non-committee member or 
staff incident to accessing such classified information, may be 
stored by a non-committee member on a temporary or permanent 
basis, prior to such storage the Security Director shall ensure 
that such other non-committee member receiving such classified 
information has the ability to properly store classified 
information in a manner consistent with all governing rules, 
regulations, policies, procedures, and statutes.
    (I) Log. The Security Director for the Committee shall 
maintain a written record identifying the name of each non-
committee member and staff receiving access to classified 
information in the possession of the Committee, the particular 
classified information provided to such non-committee member or 
staff, and the date upon which such material is provided and 
the date upon which such material will cease to be provided.
    (J) Additional Authority.
          (a) Staff Director's Additional Authority. The Staff 
        Director is further empowered to provide for such 
        additional measures which he or she deems necessary to 
        protect such classified information authorized by the 
        Chair or the Committee to be provided to such non-
        committee member or staff.
          (b) Notice to Originating Agency. In the event that 
        the Chair or the Committee grants access to classified 
        information provided to the Committee by an agency of 
        the executive branch to a non-committee member or staff 
        pursuant to this rule, the Committee shall notify the 
        providing agency of such action.
          (c) Requests to Limit Access for Non-Committee 
        Members and Staff. If the executive branch seeks to 
        limit such access to classified information in 
        accordance with existing law or policy and makes such 
        request in writing, the Chair, in consultation with the 
        Ranking Minority Member, may agree to restrict access 
        to certain classified information pursuant to the 
        executive branch's request.

        Rule 15.--Limits on Discussion of Classified Information

    (A) Generally. Except as otherwise provided by these rules 
and the Rules of the House of Representatives, Members of the 
Committee and Committee staff shall not at any time, either 
during that person's tenure as a Member of the Committee or as 
Committee staff, or anytime thereafter, discuss or disclose, or 
cause to be discussed or disclosed:
          (1) The classified substance of the work of the 
        Committee;
          (2) Any information, whether classified or not, 
        received by the Committee in executive session;
          (3) Any classified information received by the 
        Committee from any source; or
          (4) The substance, whether classified or not, of any 
        Committee event that was closed to the public pursuant 
        to these rules or the Rules of the House, to include 
        the questions or statements of other Members or staff.
    (B) Exceptions.
          (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section (A) of 
        this rule, Members of the Committee and the Committee 
        staff may discuss and disclose those matters described 
        in section (A) with:
                  (a) Members and staff of the Senate Select 
                Committee on Intelligence designated by the 
                Chair of that committee;
                  (b) The Chairs and Ranking Minority Members 
                of the House and Senate Committees on 
                Appropriations and staff of those committees 
                designated by the Chairs of those committees;
                  (c) The Chair and Ranking Minority Member of 
                the Subcommittee on Defense of the House 
                Committee on Appropriations and staff of that 
                subcommittee as designated by the Chair of that 
                subcommittee; and
                  (d) The Chairs and Ranking Minority Members 
                of the House and Senate Committees on Armed 
                Services and staff of those committees 
                designated by the Chairs of those committees, 
                on all matters relating to any Military 
                Intelligence Programs or Special Access 
                Programs, or other intelligence and 
                intelligence-related activities of or 
                concerning the Department of Defense.
          (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of section (A), 
        Members of the Committee and the Committee staff may 
        discuss with and disclose to the Chair and Ranking 
        Minority Member of a subcommittee of the House 
        Appropriations Committee, and staff of that 
        subcommittee as designated by the Chair of that 
        subcommittee, or a subcommittee of the House Armed 
        Services Committee, and staff of that subcommittee as 
        designated by the Chair of that subcommittee, only the 
        budget-related information regarding an agency or 
        program as is necessary to facilitate the enactment of 
        an appropriations or authorization bill which includes 
        an authorization or appropriation for such agency or 
        program.
          (3) The Chair may, in consultation with the Ranking 
        Minority Member, upon the written request to the Chair 
        from the Inspector General of an element of the 
        Intelligence Community, grant access to Committee 
        transcripts or documents that are relevant to an 
        investigation of an allegation of possible false 
        testimony or other inappropriate conduct before the 
        Committee, or that are otherwise relevant to the 
        Inspector General's investigation.
          (4) Upon the written request of the head of an 
        Intelligence Community element, the Chair may, in 
        consultation with the Ranking Minority Member, make 
        available Committee briefing or hearing transcripts to 
        that element for review by that element if a 
        representative of that element testified, presented 
        information to the Committee, or was present at the 
        briefing or hearing the transcript of which is 
        requested for review.
          (5) Members of the Committee and Committee staff may 
        discuss and disclose such matters as otherwise directed 
        by the Committee, pursuant to the Rules of the House of 
        Representatives and these rules.
    (C) Requirement to Protect Sources and Methods. When 
discussing or disclosing any information pursuant to section 
(B), Members of the Committee and Committee staff shall take 
all necessary steps to safeguard materials or information 
relating to the matter in question, with due regard for the 
protection of intelligence sources and methods.
    (D) Records of Closed Proceedings. Any records or notes 
taken by any person memorializing material otherwise prohibited 
from disclosure by Members of the Committee and Committee staff 
under these rules, including information received in executive 
session and the substance of any hearing or briefing that was 
closed to the public, shall remain Committee material subject 
to these rules and may not be publicly discussed, disclosed, or 
caused to be publicly discussed or disclosed, unless authorized 
by the Committee consistent with these rules.
    (E) Non-Disclosure in Proceedings. Members of the Committee 
and the Committee staff shall not discuss either the substance 
or procedure of the work of the Committee with any person not a 
Member of the Committee or the Committee staff in connection 
with any proceeding, judicial or otherwise, either during the 
person's tenure as a Member of the Committee, or of the 
Committee staff, or at any time thereafter, except as directed 
by the Committee in accordance with the Rules of the House and 
these rules.
    (F) Requests for Testimony of Staff.
          (1) All Committee staff must, as a condition of 
        employment, agree in writing to notify the Committee 
        immediately of any request for testimony received while 
        a member of the Committee staff, or at any time 
        thereafter, concerning any classified information 
        received by such person while a member of the Committee 
        staff.
          (2) Committee staff shall not disclose, in response 
        to any such request for testimony, any such classified 
        information, except as authorized by the Committee in 
        accordance with the Rules of the House and these rules.
          (3) In the event of the termination of the Committee, 
        Committee staff will be subject to any determination 
        made by the House of Representatives with respect to 
        any requests for testimony involving classified 
        information received while a member of the Committee 
        staff.

                       Rule 16.--Committee Staff

    (A) Definition. In these rules, ``Committee staff'' or 
``staff of the Committee'' means:
          (1) Employees of the Committee;
          (2) Consultants to the Committee;
          (3) Employees of other Government agencies detailed 
        to the Committee; or
          (4) Any other person engaged by contract, or 
        otherwise, to perform services for, or at the request 
        of, the Committee.
    (B) Appointment of Committee Staff and Security 
Requirements.
          (1) Chair's Authority. Except as provided in 
        subsection (B)(2), the Committee staff shall be 
        appointed, and may be removed, by the Chair and shall 
        work under the general supervision and direction of the 
        Chair.
          (2) Staff Assistance to Minority Membership. Except 
        as provided in subsection (B)(3) and section (D), and 
        except as otherwise provided by these rules, the 
        Committee staff provided to the Minority party Members 
        of the Committee shall be appointed, and may be 
        removed, by the Ranking Minority Member of the 
        Committee, and shall work under the general supervision 
        and direction of such Ranking Minority Member.
          (3) Security Clearance Required. Except as provided 
        in section (C), any offer of employment for a 
        prospective Committee staff position shall be 
        contingent upon:
                  (a) The completion of a background 
                investigation, when applicable; and
                  (b) A determination by the Chair, in 
                consultation with the Director of National 
                Intelligence, that requirements for the 
                appropriate security clearances commensurate 
                with the sensitivity of the classified 
                information to which such employee or person 
                will be given access have been met.
    (C) Personnel to Perform Non-Classified Functions of the 
Committee. As necessary and on a case-by-case basis, the Chair 
may appoint Committee staff who shall perform only non-
classified functions and administrative tasks of the Committee. 
Such employees may be appointed without the completion of a 
formal background investigation. The Staff Director and 
Security Director shall implement necessary measures to ensure 
such an employee has no access to any classified information.
    (D) Security and Non-disclosure of Classified Information. 
Notwithstanding subsection (B)(2), the Chair shall supervise 
and direct the Committee staff with respect to the security and 
non-disclosure of classified information. Committee staff shall 
comply with requirements necessary to ensure the security and 
non-disclosure of classified information as determined by the 
Chair, in consultation with the Ranking Minority Member.
    (E) Other Conditions of Employment. All Committee staff 
must, before joining the Committee staff, agree in writing, as 
a condition of employment, to be bound by the Rules of the 
House, including the jurisdiction of the Committee on Ethics 
and of the Committee concerning the security of classified 
information during and after the period of the employment or 
contractual agreement of such employee or person with the 
Committee, and to not to divulge or cause to be divulged any 
classified information which comes into such person's 
possession while a member of the Committee staff, to any person 
not a member of the Committee or the Committee staff, except as 
authorized by the Committee in accordance with the Rules of the 
House and these rules.

                       Rule 17--Committee Travel

    (A) Authority. The Chair may authorize Members and 
Committee staff to travel on Committee business.
    (B) Requests.
          (1) Member Requests. Members requesting authorization 
        for such travel shall state the purpose and length of 
        the trip, and shall submit such request directly to the 
        Chair.
          (2) Committee Staff Requests. Committee staff 
        requesting authorization for such travel shall state 
        the purpose and length of the trip, and shall submit 
        such request through their supervisors to the Staff 
        Director and the Chair.
    (C) Notification to Members.
          (1) Generally. Members of the Committee shall be 
        notified of all official foreign travel of Committee 
        staff, prior to the commencement of such travel, when 
        the travel is to be conducted without an accompanying 
        Member.
          (2) Content. All Members of the Committee are to be 
        advised, prior to the commencement of such travel, of 
        its length, nature, and purpose.
    (D) Trip Reports.
          (1) Generally. The lead Committee staff accompanying 
        an official Committee travel delegation shall submit a 
        full report of all issues discussed during any travel 
        to the Chief Clerk within a reasonable period of time 
        following the completion of such trip. For purposes of 
        this rule, the term ``reasonable period of time'' 
        means:
                  (a) No later than 30 days after returning 
                from a foreign trip; and
                  (b) No later than 15 days after returning 
                from a domestic trip.
          (2) Availability of Reports. Such trip reports shall 
        be:
                  (a) Available for review by any Member or 
                appropriately cleared Committee staff; and
                  (b) Considered executive session material for 
                purposes of these rules.
    (E) Limitations on Travel.
          (1) Generally. The Chair may prohibit Committee 
        business travel of Committee staff who fail to comply 
        with the requirements of subsection (D)(1) of this 
        rule.
          (2) Exception. The Chair may authorize Committee 
        staff to travel on Committee business, notwithstanding 
        the requirements of subsection (D)(1) of this rule:
                  (a) At the specific request of a Member of 
                the Committee; or
                  (b) In the event there are circumstances 
                beyond the control of the Committee staff 
                hindering compliance with such requirements.

    Rule 18.--Committee Records Transferred to the National Archives

    (A) Generally. The records of the Committee at the National 
Archives and Records Administration shall be made available for 
public use in accordance with the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.
    (B) Notice of Withholding. The Chair shall notify the 
Ranking Minority Member of any decision, pursuant to the Rules 
of the House of Representatives, to withhold a record otherwise 
available, and the matter shall be presented to the full 
Committee for a determination of the question of public 
availability on the written request of any Member of the 
Committee.
Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States 
                    and the Chinese Communist Party

    MIKE GALLAGHER, Wisconsin, 
             Chairman

RAJA KRISHNAMOORTHI, Illinois,       ROBERT J. WITTMAN, Virginia
  Ranking Member                     BLAINE LUETKEMEYER, Missouri
KATHY CASTOR, Florida                ANDY BARR, Kentucky
ANDRE CARSON, Indiana                DAN NEWHOUSE, Washington
SETH MOULTON, Massachusetts          JOHN R. MOOLENAAR, Michigan
RO KHANNA, California                DARIN LaHOOD, Illinois
ANDY KIM, New Jersey                 NEAL P. DUNN, Florida
MIKIE SHERRILL, New Jersey           JIM BANKS, Indiana
HALEY M. STEVENS, Michigan           DUSTY JOHNSON, South Dakota
JAKE AUCHINCLOSS, Massachusetts      MICHELLE STEEL, California
RITCHIE TORRES, New York             ASHLEY HINSON, Iowa
SHONTEL M. BROWN, Ohio               CARLOS A. GIMENEZ, Florida

RULES OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON THE STRATEGIC COMPETITION BETWEEN THE 
  UNITED STATES AND THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                     (As adopted February 28, 2023)


                       Rule I. General Provisions

    (a) Applicability of House Rules. The provisions of H. Res. 
11 (118th Cong.), which established the Select Committee on 
Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese 
Communist Party (``Select Committee'' or ``Committee''), are 
hereby incorporated by reference. Nothing herein shall be 
construed as superseding any provision of that title. The Rules 
of the House of Representatives shall apply to the Committee to 
the extent provided by that resolution.
    (b) Applicability of Certain Authorities. Pursuant to H. 
Res. 11 Section 1(c)(3) (118th Cong.), the Committee has the 
authorities and responsibilities of, and shall be subject to 
the same limitations and restrictions as, a standing committee 
of the House, including those authorities and responsibilities 
delegated to the Committee pursuant to H. Res. 5 Section 3(k) 
(118th Cong.).
    (c) Applicability of Certain Regulations. The regulations 
issued by the House Committee on Rules of the 118th Congress 
entitled Regulations for the Remote Participation of Committee 
Witnesses and Regulations for the Use of Deposition Authority 
(both attached) are hereby incorporated by reference.
    (d) Publication. The Committee rules shall be made publicly 
available in electronic form and published in the Congressional 
Record not later than 60 days after the Committee adopts its 
rules.

                           Rule II. Meetings

    (a) Schedule. The Committee's regular meeting date shall be 
the first Wednesday of every month that the House is in 
session. The Chair may call additional meetings as the Chair 
considers necessary, and may dispense with a regular meeting 
if, in the judgment of the Chair, there is no need for the 
meeting.
    (b) Presiding. The Chair shall call to order and preside 
over the meetings of the Committee. In the Chair's absence, the 
Chair may designate a member to carry out such duties.
    (c) Notice.
          (1) The Chair shall provide to each Member the date, 
        place, and subject matter of a Committee meeting. The 
        meeting may not commence earlier than the third 
        calendar day (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal 
        holidays except when the House is in session on such a 
        day) on which members have notice thereof.
          (2) To the greatest extent practicable, the Chair 
        shall cause of the text of a report to be made 
        available to the Members at least 24 hours prior to the 
        commencement of a meeting for the purpose of 
        considering such a report. If the report is made 
        available 24 hours in advance of the meeting (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day), it shall be 
        considered as read in committee.
    (d) Waiver. The requirements of paragraph (c)(1) may be 
waived by a majority of the Committee present and voting (a 
majority being present) or by the Chair with the concurrence of 
the Ranking Member. If the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) are 
waived, the Chair shall announce such a meeting at the earliest 
possible time.
    (e) Postponement of Votes. The Chair, after consultation 
with the Ranking Member, may postpone further proceedings when 
a recorded vote is ordered on the question of approving any 
measure or matter or adopting an amendment and may resume 
proceedings on a postponed vote at any time after reasonable 
notice to members by the Clerk or other designee of the Chair. 
When proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.

                           Rule III. Hearings

    (a) Announcement.
          (1) Notice. The Chair shall announce the date, time, 
        place, and subject matter of a Committee hearing at 
        least one week prior to the hearing. The hearing may 
        commence sooner if the Chair, with the concurrence of 
        the Ranking Member, determines there is good cause or 
        if the Committee so determines by a majority vote, a 
        quorum being present. The Chair shall announce such a 
        hearing at the earliest possible time.
          (2) Witnesses. The Chair shall make available to the 
        public and to members a list of witnesses, including 
        minority witnesses, not later than two business days 
        before the hearing.
    (b) Written Witness Statement; Oral Testimony.
          (1) Filing of Statement. To the greatest extent 
        practicable, each witness shall file a written 
        statement with the Clerk at least two business days 
        before the witness's scheduled testimony. The Clerk 
        shall distribute the statement to the members of the 
        Committee as soon as is practicable and not later than 
        the business day before the hearing. For purposes of 
        this subsection, testimony may include the written 
        statement of a witness, as well as any video, 
        photographs, audio-visual matter, posters, or other 
        supporting materials that the witness intends to 
        present or display before the Committee. Such testimony 
        shall be provided in electronic form to the extent 
        practicable.
          (2) Witness Opening Statements. Each witness's oral 
        testimony shall not exceed five minutes unless so 
        permitted by the Chair, after consultation with the 
        Ranking Member.
          (3) Publication. Statements filed under this 
        paragraph shall be made publicly available in 
        electronic form not later than one day after the 
        witness appears.
          (4) Truth in Testimony. Each witness appearing in a 
        nongovernmental capacity shall include with the written 
        statement of his or her proposed testimony, to the 
        greatest extent practicable:
                  (A) a curriculum vitae;
                  (B) a disclosure of any Federal grants or 
                contracts received during the past 36 months by 
                the witness or by an entity represented by the 
                witness and related to the subject matter of 
                the hearing;
                  (C) a disclosure of any payments or grants 
                from a foreign government, foreign political 
                party, or agent thereof within the past 36 
                months to any entity from which the witness is 
                compensated more than $10,000 a year and 
                related to the subject matter of the hearing;
                  (D) with respect to a foreign adversary, a 
                disclosure of any payments, grants, or in-kind 
                contributions from any agent of a foreign 
                adversary within the past five years to any 
                entity from which the witness is compensated 
                more than $10,000 a year;
                  (E) a disclosure of whether the witness is a 
                fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a 
                director, officer, advisor, or resident agent) 
                of any organization or entity that has an 
                interest in the subject matter of a hearing.
    The disclosure shall include the amount, country of origin, 
and entity originating any payment, grant, or in-kind 
contribution required to be disclosed.
    An ``agent of a foreign adversary'' means (i) a government 
or political party of a foreign adversary; (ii) any entity in 
which an entity identified in subpart (i) owns a 10% stake or 
greater; (iii) any entity subject to the direction, ownership, 
control, or influence of an entity identified in subparts (i) 
or (ii); and (iv) any agent of an entity identified in subparts 
(i)-(iii).
    A ``foreign adversary'' means the People's Republic of 
China, the Republic of Cuba, the Islamic Republic of Iran, the 
Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation, 
and the Maduro regime of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
    (c) Witness Selection. The minority party members are 
entitled, upon request to the Chair by the Ranking Member, to 
call at least one witness selected by the minority members to 
testify at a hearing. If the Chair selects more than two 
majority witnesses, the minority party members are entitled, 
upon request to the Chair by the Ranking Member, to call an 
additional witness selected by the minority members. Three 
witness panels are preferred, but in the case of a four-witness 
panel, at least one witness shall be selected by the Chair with 
the concurrence of the Ranking Member.
    The Chair and the Ranking Member each agree to consult the 
other with regard to the selection of hearing witnesses.
    (d) Opening Statements. The Chair shall deliver an opening 
statement announcing the subject of the hearing. The Ranking 
Member may also deliver an opening statement. The Chair may, 
after consultation with the Ranking Member, allow other members 
to deliver opening statements. Any member may delegate time 
allocated for the member's opening statement to another member. 
Opening statements shall not exceed five minutes unless so 
permitted by the Chair, after consultation with the Ranking 
Member.
    (e) Questioning of Witnesses.
          (1) Order. To the greatest extent practicable, the 
        Chair shall initiate the right to question witnesses 
        before the Committee, followed by the Ranking Member 
        and all other members thereafter, alternating between 
        majority and minority members. A member may only 
        question a witness when recognized by the Chair for 
        that purpose.
          (2) Time Allocated. In general, each member who so 
        desires shall have the opportunity to question 
        witnesses related to the subject matter of the hearing 
        for five (5) minutes.
          (3) Extended Questioning. The Chair, after 
        consultation with the Ranking Member, may permit a 
        specified number of members to engage in colloquies, 
        question witnesses, or otherwise discuss or debate 
        matters related to the subject matter of the hearing 
        for longer than five (5) minutes. The time for extended 
        questioning shall be divided equally between the 
        majority and the minority and shall not exceed one 
        hour.
          (4) Staff Questioning. The Chair, with the 
        concurrence of the Ranking Member, may permit 
        designated staff members to question witnesses related 
        to the subject matter of the hearing. The time 
        allocated for staff questioning shall be divided 
        equally between the majority and the minority and shall 
        not exceed one hour.
          (6) Questions for the Record. Each member may submit 
        to the Chair written questions for the record to be 
        answered by the witnesses who have appeared. Questions 
        shall be submitted not later than one week after a 
        hearing. The Chair shall transmit all such questions to 
        the appropriate witnesses and provide the responses 
        from the witnesses in the hearing record.
    (f) Presiding. The Chair shall call to order and preside 
over hearings or may designate another member to carry out such 
duties.
    (g) Oaths. The Chair shall administer oaths to any witness 
before the Committee or may designate another member to carry 
out such duties. Each witness appearing before the Committee 
shall affirm the following oath:
          Do you solemnly swear or affirm, under penalty of 
        law, that the testimony you are about to give is the 
        truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so 
        help you God?
    (h) Claims of Privilege. Claims of common-law privilege 
made by witnesses in hearings, or by interviewees in 
investigations or inquiries, are applicable only at the 
discretion of the Chair, subject to appeal to the Committee.

                         Rule IV. Quorum Rules

    (a) In General. A majority of the Members of the Committee 
shall constitute a quorum for the purposes of adopting a 
committee report under rule V, or where otherwise required by 
House rules.
    (b) Testimony and Evidence. For the purpose of taking 
testimony and receiving evidence, no fewer than two members of 
the Committee shall constitute a quorum.
    (c) Other. For the purposes of taking any other action, 
one-third of the members of the Committee shall constitute a 
quorum.
    (d) No Proxy Voting. Members may not vote by proxy on any 
measure.

                       Rule V. Committee Reports

    (a) Authority to Issue Committee Reports. The Committee may 
produce reports pursuant to H. Res. 11 (118th Cong.) Section 
1(e).
    (b) Procedures. Committee reports shall be issued by 
majority vote at a Committee meeting convened pursuant to rule 
II. The record of such a meeting shall include the total number 
of votes cast for and against, and the names of those voting 
for, voting against, and present but not voting on the adoption 
of the report.
    (c) Additional Views. At the time of the approval of a 
Committee report, any Member may give notice of intent to file 
supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views. If a 
Member gives such notice, all members of the Committee shall be 
entitled to no less than two business days to file such views.
    (d) Publication. To the extent feasible, the Committee 
shall make Committee reports available on its website within 30 
days of adoption.

                           Rule VI. Subpoenas

    The power to authorize and issue subpoenas pursuant to 
clause 2(m) of House rule XI is hereby delegated to the Chair.

                      Rule VII. Committee Records

    (a) Recorded Votes. Within 48 hours of a recorded vote, the 
Committee shall publish on its website a record with a 
description of the measure voted upon, a list of those present 
at the meeting, and the result of the recorded vote, including 
the name of each member voting for, voting against, or present 
but not voting on the measure.
    (b) Archived Records. The records of the Committee at the 
National Archives and Records Administration shall be made 
available for public use pursuant to the Rules of the House. 
The Chair shall notify the Ranking Member of any decision to 
withhold a record otherwise available, and the matter shall be 
presented to the Committee for a determination on the written 
request of any member of the Committee.

                      Rule VIII. Open Proceedings

    Meetings and hearings convened pursuant to rules II and III 
shall be open to the public, including radio, television, and 
still photography coverage, unless closed in accordance with 
clause 2(g) of House rule XI. The audio and video coverage of 
Committee proceedings permitted under clause 4 of House rule XI 
shall apply to the Committee.

                        Rule IX. Committee Staff

    (a) Appointment. The staff of the Committee shall be 
appointed as follows:
          (1) In General. Except as provided in subsection (2), 
        Committee staff shall be appointed by the Chair, may be 
        removed by the Chair, and shall work under the general 
        supervision and direction of the Chair;
          (2) Minority Staff. All staff provided to the 
        minority party members of the Committee shall be 
        appointed by the Ranking Member, and may be removed by 
        the Ranking Member, and shall work under the general 
        supervision and direction of the Ranking Member;
    (b) Compensation. The Chair shall fix the compensation of 
all staff, after consultation with the Ranking Member regarding 
any minority party staff, within the budget approved for such 
purposes.

                             Rule X. Budget

    (a) In General. The Chair shall prepare a budget providing 
amounts for staff, committee travel, hearings, investigations, 
and other expenses of the Committee.
    (b) Minority Expenses. Consistent with clause 9 of House 
rule X, the Chair shall, after consultation with the Ranking 
Member, designate an amount budgeted for the Ranking Minority 
Member for the compensation of the minority staff, travel 
expenses of minority members and staff, and minority office 
expenses. All expenses of minority members and staff shall be 
paid for out of the amount so set aside.

                            Rule XI. Travel

    (a) Authorization. The Chair may authorize travel for any 
member and any staff member of the Committee in connection with 
activities or subject matters under the general jurisdiction of 
the Committee. Travel to be reimbursed from funds set aside for 
the Committee for any member or staff member shall be paid only 
upon the prior authorization of the Chair.
    (b) Requesting Authorization. Before such authorization is 
granted, the requester shall submitted to the Chair in writing: 
(1) The purpose of the travel; (2) The dates during which the 
travel is to occur; (3) The names of the states or countries to 
be visited and the length of time to be spent in each; (4) An 
agenda of anticipated activities; and (5) The names of members 
and staff of the Committee for whom the authorization is 
sought.
    (c) Travel Reports. Within 30 days of completing authorized 
travel, Members and staff of the Committee shall make a written 
report to the Chair on any travel they have conducted under 
this subsection, including a description of their itinerary, 
expenses, and activities, and of pertinent information gained 
as a result of such travel.
    (d) House Rules. Members and staff of the Committee 
performing authorized travel on official business shall be 
governed by applicable laws, resolutions, and regulations of 
the House and of the Committee on House Administration.

                           Rule XII. Website

    The Chair shall maintain an official Committee website for 
the purpose of carrying out the official responsibilities of 
the Committee, including communicating information about the 
Committee's activities. The Ranking Member may maintain a 
minority website. To the maximum extent feasible, the Committee 
shall make its publications available in electronic form on the 
official Committee website maintained by the Chair.

                        Rule XIII. Miscellaneous

    The Chair may establish additional procedures and take such 
actions as may be necessary to carry out the foregoing rules or 
to facilitate the effective operation of the Committee to the 
extent permissible under House rules.
      
=======================================================================


                PART III--CONGRESSIONAL JOINT COMMITTEES

=======================================================================

      
                        Joint Economic Committee

   SENATOR MARTIN HEINRICH, New 
         Mexico, Chairman

REPRESENTATIVE DAVID SCHWEIKERT, Arizona, Vice ChairBUCHAR, Minnesota
SENATOR MIKE LEE, Utah               SENATOR MAGGIE HASSAN, New 
SENATOR TOM COTTON, Arkansas         Hampshire
SENATOR ERIC SCHMITT, Missouri       SENATOR MARK KELLY, Arizona
SENATOR J.D. VANCE, Ohio             SENATOR PETER WELCH, Vermont
REPRESENTATIVE JODEY C. ARRINGTON, TexasTATOR JOHN FETTERMAN, 
REPRESENTATIVE RON ESTES, Kansas     Pennsylvania
REPRESENTATIVE A. DREW FERGUSON IV, GeorgiaENTATIVE DONALD S. BEYER, 
REPRESENTATIVE LLOYD SMUCKER, PennsylvaniaVirginia
REPRESENTATIVE NICOLE MALLIOTAKIS, New YorkENTATIVE DAVID J. TRONE, 
                                     Maryland
                                     REPRESENTATIVE GWEN MOORE, 
                                     Wisconsin
                                     REPRESENTATIVE KATIE PORTER, 
                                     California

                 RULES OF THE JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE 
                         FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS

                      (As adopted April 25, 2023)

                                 Rule 1

    The rules of the Senate and House, insofar as they are 
applicable, shall govern the committee and its subcommittees. 
The rules of the Committee, insofar as they are applicable, 
shall be the rules of any subcommittee of the Committee.

                                 Rule 2

    The meetings of the Committee shall be held at such times 
and in such places as the Chairman may designate, or at such 
times as a quorum of the Committee may request in writing, with 
adequate advance notice provided to all members of the 
Committee. Subcommittee meetings shall not be held when the 
full Committee is meeting. Where the rules require a vote of 
the members of the Committee, polling of members either in 
writing or by telephone shall not be permitted to substitute 
for a vote taken at a Committee meeting, unless the Ranking 
Minority Member assents to a waiver of this requirement.

                                 Rule 3

    Ten members of the Committee shall constitute a quorum. A 
majority of the members of a subcommittee shall constitute a 
quorum of such subcommittee.

                                 Rule 4

    Written or telegraphic proxies of Committee members will be 
received and recorded on any vote taken by the Committee, 
except at the organization meeting at the beginning of each 
Congress, or for the purpose of creating a quorum.

                                 Rule 5

    The Chairman may name standing or special subcommittees. 
Any member of the Committee shall have the privilege of sitting 
with any subcommittee during its hearings or deliberations, but 
no such member who is not a member of the subcommittee shall 
vote on any matter before such subcommittee.

                                 Rule 6

    The chairmanship and vice chairmanship of the Committee 
shall alternate between the House and Senate by Congresses. The 
senior member of the minority party in the House of Congress 
opposite to that of the Chairman shall be the Ranking Minority 
Member of the Committee. In the event the House and Senate are 
under different party control, the Chairman and Vice Chairman 
shall represent the majority party in the respective Houses.

                                 Rule 7

    Questions as to the order of business and the procedure of 
the Committee shall in the first instance be decided by the 
Chairman, subject always to an appeal to the Committee.

                                 Rule 8

    All hearings conducted by the Committee or its 
subcommittees shall be open to the public except where the 
Committee or subcommittee, as the case may be, by a majority 
vote orders an executive session. Whenever possible, all public 
hearings shall include some sessions held on the Senate side 
and some on the House side. House and Senate members shall 
alternate in order of seating and interrogation.

                                 Rule 9

    So far as practicable all witnesses appearing before the 
Committee shall file advance written statements of their 
proposed testimony, and their oral testimony shall be limited 
to brief summaries. Brief insertions of additional germane 
material will be received for the record, subject to the 
approval of the Chairman.

                                Rule 10

    An accurate stenographic record shall be kept of all 
testimony and each witness provided with a copy thereof. 
Witnesses may make changes in testimony for the purpose of 
correcting grammatical errors, obvious errors of fact, and 
errors of transcription. Brief supplemental materials when 
required to clarify the transcript may be inserted in the 
record subject to the approval of the Chairman. Witnesses shall 
be allowed 3 days within which to correct and return the 
transcript of their testimony. If not so returned, the clerk 
may close the record whenever necessary.

                                Rule 11

    Each member of the Committee shall be provided with a copy 
of the hearings transcript for the purpose of correcting errors 
of transcription and grammar, and clarifying questions or 
remarks. If another person is authorized by a Committee member 
to make his corrections, the clerk shall be so notified.
    Members who have received unanimous consent to submit 
written questions to witnesses shall be allowed 2 days within 
which to submit these to the executive director for 
transmission to the witnesses. The record may be held open for 
a period not to exceed 1 week awaiting responses by witnesses.

                                Rule 12

    Testimony received in executive hearings shall not be 
released or included in any report without the approval of a 
majority of the Committee.

                                Rule 13

    The Chairman shall provide adequate time for questioning of 
witnesses by all members, and the rule of germaneness shall be 
enforced in all hearings.

                                Rule 14

    None of the hearings of the Committee shall be telecast or 
broadcast, whether directly or through such devices as 
recordings, tapes, motion pictures, or other mechanical means, 
if in conflict with a rule or practice of the House on the side 
of the Capitol where hearings are being held. If no general 
rule or practice prevails in regard to such telecasts or 
broadcasts, none of the hearings of the Committee shall be 
telecast or broadcast unless approved by a majority of the 
members of the Committee.
    Telecasts or broadcasts of any such portion of hearings of 
the Committee as may include testimony of a witness, shall not 
be authorized if such witness objects to such telecast or 
broadcast: Provided, That such witness shall be afforded the 
opportunity to make such objection, if any, to the Committee at 
a time when the proceedings are not being telecast or 
broadcast.

                                Rule 15

    No Committee report shall be made public or transmitted to 
the Congress without the approval of a majority of the 
Committee except that when the Congress has adjourned, 
subcommittees may by majority vote and with the express 
permission of the full Committee submit reports to the full 
Committee and simultaneously release same to the public: 
Provided, That any member of the Committee may make a report 
supplementary to or dissenting from the majority report. Such 
supplementary or dissenting reports should be as brief as 
possible. Factual reports by the Committee staff may be printed 
for the distribution to Committee members and the public only 
upon authorization of the Chairman of the full Committee either 
with the approval of a majority of the Committee or with the 
consent of the Ranking Minority Member.

                                Rule 16

    No summary of a Committee report, prediction of the 
contents of a report, or statement of conclusions concerning 
any investigation shall be made by a member of the Committee or 
of the Committee staff prior to the issuance of a report of the 
Committee.

                                Rule 17

    There shall be kept a complete record of all Committee 
proceedings and actions. The clerk of the Committee, or a 
designated member of the Committee staff, shall act as 
recording secretary of all proceedings before the Committee and 
shall prepare and circulate to all members of the Committee the 
minutes of such proceedings. Minutes circulated will be 
considered approved unless objection is registered prior to the 
next Committee meeting. The records of the Committee shall be 
open to all members of the Committee.

                                Rule 18

    The Committee shall have a professional and clerical staff 
under the supervision of an executive director. The Committee 
shall appoint and remove the executive director with the 
approval of not less than 10 members of the Committee. Staff 
operating procedures shall be determined by the executive 
director, with the approval of the Chairman of the Committee, 
and after notification to the Ranking Minority Member with 
respect to basic revisions. The executive director under the 
general supervision of the Chairman is authorized to deal 
directly with agencies of the Government and with non-
Government groups and individuals on behalf of the Committee.
    The professional members of the Committee staff shall be 
appointed and removed on the recommendation of the executive 
director with approval by a majority vote of the Committee. The 
professional staff members, including the executive director, 
shall be persons selected without regard to political 
affiliations who, as a result of training, experience, and 
attainments, are exceptionally qualified to analyze and 
interpret economic developments and programs. The clerical and 
temporary staff shall be appointed and removed by the executive 
director with the approval of the Chairman, and after 
notification to the Ranking Minority Member. The Committee 
staff shall serve all members of the Committee in an objective, 
non partisan manner. From time to time, upon request the 
executive director shall designate individual members of the 
staff to assist subcommittees, individual Committee members, 
and the minority members. The staff, to the extent possible, 
shall be organized along functional lines to permit 
specialization.

                                Rule 19

    Attendance at executive sessions shall be limited to 
members of the Committee and of the Committee staff. Other 
persons whose presence is requested or consented to by the 
Committee may be admitted to such sessions.

                                Rule 20

    Selection of witnesses for Committee hearings shall be made 
by the Committee staff under the direction of the Chairman. A 
list of proposed witnesses shall be submitted to the members of 
the Committee for review sufficiently in advance of the 
hearings to permit suggestions by the Committee members to 
receive appropriate consideration.

                                Rule 21

    The Chairman of the Committee shall have the overall 
responsibility for preparing and carrying out the Committee's 
program, including staff duties, subject to prior approval of 
each item on the program by a majority of the Committee or, 
alternatively, by the Ranking Minority Member. Prior to and 
during the transition from one Congress to another, the 
outgoing Committee shall prepare and have ready a plan for the 
consideration of the President's Economic Report and the 
preparation of the Committee's report thereon in order to meet 
the March 1 deadline established by Public Law 304 (79th 
Cong.), as amended.

                                Rule 22

    Proposals for amending Committee rules shall be sent to all 
members at least 1 week before final action is taken thereon, 
unless the amendment is made by unanimous consent. Approval by 
at least 11 members of the Committee shall be required to amend 
these rules.

                                Rule 23

    The information contained in any books, papers, or 
documents furnished to the Committee by any individual, 
partnership, corporation, or other legal entity shall, upon the 
request of the individual, partnership, corporation, or other 
entity furnishing the same, be maintained in strict confidence 
by the members and staff of the Committee, except that any such 
information may be released outside of executive session of the 
Committee if the release thereof is effected in a manner which 
will not reveal the identity of such individual, partnership, 
corporation, or entity: Provided, That the Committee by 
majority vote may authorize the disclosure of the identity of 
any such individual, partnership, corporation, or entity in 
connection with any pending hearing or as a part of a duly 
authorized report of the Committee if such release is deemed 
essential to the performance of the functions of the Committee 
and is in the public interest.
                     Joint Committee on the Library

SENATOR AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota, 
               Chair

SENATOR MARK R. WARNER, Virginia     REPRESENTATIVE BRYAN STEIL, 
SENATOR JON OSSOFF, Georgia          Wisconsin, Vice Chair
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPH D. MORELLE, New YorkOR DEB FISCHER, Nebraska
REPRESENTATIVE TERRI A. SEWELL, AlabamaNATOR CINDY HYDE-SMITH, 
                                     Mississippi
                                     REPRESENTATIVE MARK AMODEI, Nevada
                                     REPRESENTATIVE MIKE CAREY, Ohio

 RULES OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS ON THE LIBRARY FOR THE 118TH 
                                CONGRESS


                       (As adopted March 8, 2023)


                   Title I--Meetings of the Committee

    1. Regular meetings may be called by the Chair, with the 
concurrence of the Vice Chair, as may be deemed necessary or 
pursuant to the provision of paragraph 3 of rule XXVI of the 
Standing Rules of the Senate.
    2. Meetings of the committee, including meetings to conduct 
hearings, shall be open to the public, except that a meeting or 
series of meetings by the committee on the same subject for a 
period of no more than 14 calendar days may be closed to the 
public on a motion made and seconded to go into closed session 
to discuss only whether the matters enumerated in subparagraphs 
(A) through (F) would require the meeting to be closed followed 
immediately by a recorded vote in open session by a majority of 
the members of the committee when it is determined that the 
matters to be discussed or the testimony to be taken at such 
meeting or meetings--
          1. will disclose matters necessary to be kept secret 
        in the interests of national defense or the 
        confidential conduct of the foreign relations of the 
        United States;
          2. will relate solely to matters of the committee 
        staff personnel or internal staff management or 
        procedures;
          3. will tend to charge an individual with crime or 
        misconduct, to disgrace or injure the professional 
        standing of an individual, or otherwise to expose an 
        individual to public contempt or obloquy, or will 
        represent a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy of 
        an individual;
          4. will disclose the identity of any informer or law 
        enforcement agent or will disclose any information 
        relating to the investigation or prosecution of a 
        criminal offense that is required to be kept secret in 
        the interest of effective law enforcement;
    3.
          1. will disclose information relating to the trade 
        secrets or financial or commercial information 
        pertaining specifically to a given person if--
                  1. an Act of Congress requires the 
                information to be kept confidential by 
                Government officers and employees; or
                  2. the information has been obtained by the 
                Government on a confidential basis, other than 
                through an application by such person for a 
                specific Government financial or other benefit, 
                and is required to be kept secret in order to 
                prevent undue injury to the benefit, and is 
                required to be kept secret in order to prevent 
                undue injury to the competitive position of 
                such person; or
          2. may divulge matters required to kept confidential 
        under the provisions of law or Government regulation. 
        (Paragraph 5(b) of rule XXVI of the Standing Rules of 
        the Senate.)
    4. Written notices of committee meetings will normally be 
sent by the committee's staff director to all members at least 
3 days in advance. In addition, the committee staff will email 
or telephone reminders of committee meetings to all members of 
the committee or to the appropriate staff assistants in their 
offices.
    5. A copy of the committee's intended agenda enumerating 
separate items of committee business will normally be sent to 
all members of the committee by the staff director at least 1 
day in advance of all meetings. This does not preclude any 
member of the committee from raising appropriate non-agenda 
topics.
    6. Any witness who is to appear before the committee in any 
hearing shall file with the clerk of the committee at least 3 
business days before the date of his or her appearance, a 
written statement of his or her proposed testimony and an 
executive summary thereof, in such form as the Chair may 
direct, unless the Chair waived such a requirement for good 
cause.

                           Title II--Quorums

    1. Pursuant to paragraph 7(a)(1) of rule XXVI of the 
Standing Rules, 4 members of the committee shall constitute a 
quorum.
    2. Pursuant to paragraph 7(a)(2) of rule XXVI of the 
Standing Rules, 2 members of the committee shall constitute a 
quorum for the purpose of taking testimony; provided, however, 
once a quorum is established, any one member can continue to 
take such testimony.
    3. Under no circumstance may proxies be considered for the 
establishment of a quorum.

                           Title III--Voting

    1. Voting in the committee on any issue will normally be by 
voice vote.
    2. If a third of the members present so demand, a recorded 
vote will be taken on any question by roll call.
    3. The results of roll call votes taken in any meeting upon 
a measure, or any amendment thereto, shall be stated in the 
committee report on that measure unless previously announced by 
the committee, and such report or announcement shall include a 
tabulation of the votes cast in favor and the votes cast in 
opposition to each measure and amendment by each member of the 
committee. (Paragraph 7(b) and (c) of rule XXVI of the Standing 
Rules.)

            Title IV--Delegation and Authority to the Chair 
                             and Vice Chair

    1. The Chair and Vice Chair are authorized to sign all 
necessary vouchers and routine papers for which the committee's 
approval is required and to decide on the committee's behalf on 
all routine business.
    2. The Chair is authorized to engage commercial reporters 
for the preparation of transcripts of committee meetings and 
hearings.
    3. The Chair is authorized to issue, on behalf of the 
committee, regulations normally promulgated by the committee at 
the beginning of each session.
                      Joint Committee on Printing

   REPRESENTATIVE BRYAN STEIL, 
         Wisconsin, Chair

SENATOR AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota, Vice Chair DEB FISCHER, Nebraska
SENTATOR JEFF MERKLEY, Oregon        SENATOR BILL HAGERTY, Tennessee
SENATOR ALEX PADILLA, California     REPRESENTATIVE H. MORGAN GRIFFITH, 
REPRESENTATIVE DEREK KILMER, Washingtonrginia
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPH D. MORELLE, New YorkSENTATIVE GREGORY F. MURPHY, 
                                     North Carolina

    RULES OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING FOR THE 118TH CONGRESS


                       (As adopted March 8, 2023)


                        Rule 1.--Committee Rules

    (a) The rules of the Senate and House insofar as they are 
applicable, shall govern the Committee.
    (b) The Committee's rules shall be published in the 
Congressional Record as soon as possible following the 
Committee's organizational meeting in each odd-numbered year
    (c) Where these rules require a vote of the members of the 
Committee, polling of members either in writing or by telephone 
shall not be permitted to substitute for a vote taken at a 
Committee meeting, unless the Vice Chair or Ranking Minority 
Member as applicable assents to waiver of this requirement.
    (d) Proposals for amending Committee rules shall be sent to 
all members at least one week before final action is taken 
thereon, unless the amendment is made by unanimous consent.

                  Rule 2.--Regular Committee Meetings

    (a) The regular meeting date of the Committee shall be the 
second Wednesday of every month when the House and Senate are 
in session. A regularly scheduled meeting need not be held if 
there is no business to be considered and after appropriate 
notification is made to the Vice Chair or Ranking Minority 
Member as applicable. Additional meetings may be called by the 
Chair, as he may deem necessary or at the request of the 
majority of the members of the Committee.
    (b) If the Chair of the Committee is not present at any 
meeting of the Committee, the Vice Chair or Ranking Member of 
the majority party on the Committee who is present shall 
preside at the meeting.

                            Rule 3.--Quorum

    (a) Five members of the Committee shall constitute a 
quorum, which is required for the purpose of closing meetings, 
promulgating Committee orders or changing the rules of the 
Committee.
    (b) Three members shall constitute a quorum for purposes of 
taking testimony and receiving evidence.

                   Rule 4.--Open and Closed Meetings

    (a) Each meeting for the transaction of business of the 
Committee shall be open to the public except when the 
Committee, in open session and with a quorum present, 
determines by roll call vote that all or part of the remainder 
of the meeting on that day shall be closed to the public. No 
such vote shall be required to close a meeting that relates 
solely to internal budget or personnel matters.
    (b) No person other than members of the Committee, and such 
congressional staff and other representatives as they may 
authorize, shall be present in any business session that has 
been closed to the public.

        Rule 5.--Alternating Chair and Vice-Chair by Congresses

    (a) The Chair and Vice Chair of the Committee shall 
alternate between the House and the Senate by Congresses: The 
senior member of the minority party in the House of Congress 
opposite of that of the Chair shall be the Vice Chair or 
Ranking Minority Member of the Committee as applicable.
    (b) In the event the House and Senate are under different 
party control, the Chair and Vice Chair shall represent the 
majority party in their respective Houses. When the Chair and 
Vice-Chair represent different parties, the Vice-Chair shall 
also fulfill the responsibilities of the Ranking Minority 
Member as prescribed by these rules.

                    Rule 6.--Parliamentary Questions

    (a) Questions as to the order of business and the 
procedures of Committee shall in the first instance be decided 
by the Chair; subject always to an appeal to the Committee.

         Rule 7.--Hearings: Public Announcements and Witnesses

    (a) The Chair, in the case of hearings to be conducted by 
the Committee, shall make public announcement of the date, 
place and subject matter of any hearing to be conducted on any 
measure or matter at least one week before the commencement of 
that hearing unless the Committee determines that there is good 
cause to begin such hearing at an earlier date. In the latter 
event, the Chair shall make such public announcement at the 
earliest possible date. The staff director of the Committee 
shall promptly notify the Daily Digest of the Congressional 
Record as soon as possible after such public announcement is 
made.
    (b) So far as practicable, all witnesses appearing before 
the Committee shall file advance written statements of their 
proposed testimony at least 48 hours in advance of their 
appearance and their oral testimony shall be limited to brief 
summaries. Limited insertions or additional germane material 
will be received for the record, subject to the approval of the 
Chair.

                    Rule 8.--Official Hearing Record

    (a) An accurate stenographic record shall be kept of all 
Committee proceedings and actions. Brief supplemental materials 
when required to clarify the transcript may be inserted in the 
record subject to the approval of the Chair.
    (b) Each member of the Committee shall be provided with a 
copy of the hearing transcript for the purpose of correcting 
errors of transcription and grammar, and clarifying questions 
or remarks. If any other person is authorized by a Committee 
Member to make his corrections, the staff director shall be so 
notified.
    (c) Members who have received unanimous consent to submit 
written questions to witnesses shall be allowed two days within 
which to submit these to the staff director for transmission to 
the witnesses. The record may be held open for a period not to 
exceed two weeks awaiting the responses by witnesses.
    (d) A witness may obtain a transcript copy of his testimony 
given at a public session or, if given at an executive session, 
when authorized by the Committee. Testimony received in closed 
hearings shall not be released or included in any report 
without the approval of the Committee.

               Rule 9.--Witnesses for Committee Hearings

    (a) Selection of witnesses for Committee hearings shall be 
made by the Committee staff under the direction of the Chair. A 
list of proposed witnesses shall be submitted to the members of 
the Committee for review sufficiently in advance of the 
hearings to permit suggestions by the Committee members to 
receive appropriate consideration.
    (b) The Chair shall provide adequate time for questioning 
of witnesses by all members, including minority Members and the 
rule of germaneness shall be enforced in all hearings notified.
    (c) Whenever a hearing is conducted by the Committee upon 
any measure or matter, the minority on the Committee shall be 
entitled, upon unanimous request to the Chair before the 
completion of such hearings, to call witnesses selected by the 
minority to testify with respect to the measure or matter 
during at least one day of hearing thereon.

            Rule 10.--Confidential Information Furnished to 
                             the Committee

    The information contained in any books, papers or documents 
furnished to the Committee by any individual, partnership, 
corporation or other legal entity shall, upon the request of 
the individual, partnership, corporation or entity furnishing 
the same, be maintained in strict confidence by the members and 
staff of the Committee, except that any such information may be 
released outside of executive session of the Committee if the 
release thereof is effected in a manner which will not reveal 
the identity of such individual, partnership, corporation or 
entity in connection with any pending hearing or as a part of a 
duly authorized report of the Committee if such release is 
deemed essential to the performance of the functions of the 
Committee and is in the public interest

              Rule 11.--Broadcasting of Committee Hearings

    The rule for broadcasting of Committee hearings shall be 
the same as rule XI, clause 4, of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives.

                      Rule 12.--Committee Reports

    (a) No Committee report shall be made public or transmitted 
to the Congress without the approval of a majority of the 
Committee except when Congress has adjourned: provided that any 
member of the Committee may make a report supplementary to or 
dissenting from the majority report. Such supplementary or 
dissenting reports should be as brief as possible.
    (b) Factual reports by the Committee staff may be printed 
for distribution to Committee members and the public only upon 
authorization of the Chair either with the approval of a 
majority of the Committee or with the consent of the Vice Chair 
or Ranking Minority Member as applicable.

             Rule 13.--Confidentiality of Committee Reports

    No summary of a Committee report, prediction of the 
contents of a report, or statement of conclusions concerning 
any investigation shall be made by a member of the Committee or 
by any staff member of the Committee prior to the issuance of a 
report of the Committee.

                       Rule 14.--Committee Staff

    (a) The Committee shall have a staff director, selected by 
the Chair. The staff director shall be an employee of the House 
of Representatives or of the Senate.
    (b) The Vice Chair or Ranking Minority Member as applicable 
may designate an employee of the House of Representatives or of 
the Senate as the staff director for the Vice Chair or Ranking 
Minority Member as applicable.
    (c) The staff director, under the general supervision of 
the Chair, is authorized to deal directly with agencies of the 
Government and with non-Government groups and individuals on 
behalf of the Committee.
    (d) The Chair or staff director shall timely notify the 
Vice Chair or Ranking Minority Member as applicable or the 
staff director for the Vice Chair or Ranking Minority Member as 
applicable of decisions made on behalf of the Committee.
    (e) The Chair is authorized to appoint the Clerk of the 
Committee (and such deputies or assistants as the Chair in his 
discretion determines may be necessary) to perform the required 
and usual duties on behalf of the Committee.
    (1) Upon such appointment, the Chairman shall inform the 
Committee.
    (2) Further, the Chairman is authorized to appoint an 
acting Clerk of the Committee to perform the required and usual 
duties of the Clerk of the Committee on behalf of the Committee 
until a permanent clerk is named.
    (f) The Chair is authorized to appoint the Parliamentarian 
of the Committee (and such deputies or assistants as the Chair 
in his discretion determines may be necessary) to perform the 
required and usual duties on behalf of the Committee
    (1) Upon such appointment, the Chair shall inform the 
Committee.
    (2) Further, the Chair is authorized to appoint an acting 
Parliamentarian of the Committee to perform the required and 
usual duties of the Parliamentarian of the Committee on behalf 
of the Committee until a permanent parliamentarian is named.

                       Rule 15.--Committee Chair

    The Chair of the Committee may establish such other 
procedures and take such actions as may be necessary to carry 
out the foregoing rules or to facilitate the effective 
operation of the Committee. Specifically, the Chair is 
authorized, during the interim periods between meetings of the 
Committee, to act on all requests submitted by any executive 
department, independent agency, temporary or permanent 
commissions and committees of the Federal Government, the 
Government Publishing Office and any other Federal entity, 
pursuant to the requirements of applicable Federal law and 
regulations.

               Rule 16.--Other Procedures and Regulations

    (a) The Chair may establish such other procedures and take 
such actions as may be necessary to carry out the 
responsibilities of the Committee or to facilitate its 
effective operation.
    (b) The Chair may direct staff of the Committee to make any 
necessary technical or conforming changes to these Rules 
without intervening Committee action. In all cases, the Chair 
shall cause the most current version of the rules to be 
available to members of the Committee.
                      Joint Committee on Taxation

   REPRESENTATIVE JASON SMITH, 
          Missouri, Chair

SENATOR RON WYDEN, Oregon, Vice ChairSENATOR MIKE CRAPO, Idaho
SENATOR DEBBIE STABENOW, Michigan    SENATOR CHUCK GRASSLEY, Iowa
SENATOR MARIA CANTWELL, Washington   REPRESENTATIVE VERN BUCHANAN, 
REPRESENTATIVE RICHARD E. NEAL, Massachusetts
REPRESENTATIVE LLOYD DOGGETT, Texas  REPRESENTATIVE ADRIAN SMITH, 
                                     Nebraska
    A description of the Joint Committee on Taxation and the 
rules by which it functions can be found in the United States 
of America Internal Revenue Code, Title 26. Therefore, the 
Joint Committee does not adopt written rules.
      
=======================================================================


                                APPENDIX

=======================================================================


                                 Rule X


                       ORGANIZATION OF COMMITTEES


             COMMITTEES AND THEIR LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTIONS

    1. There shall be in the House the following standing 
committees, each of which shall have the jurisdiction and 
related functions assigned by this clause and clauses 2, 3, and 
4. All bills, resolutions, and other matters relating to 
subjects within the jurisdiction of the standing committees 
listed in this clause shall be referred to those committees, in 
accordance with clause 2 of rule XII, as follows:
          (a) Committee on Agriculture.
                  (1) Adulteration of seeds, insect pests, and 
                protection of birds and animals in forest 
                reserves.
                  (2) Agriculture generally.
                  (3) Agricultural and industrial chemistry.
                  (4) Agricultural colleges and experiment 
                stations.
                  (5) Agricultural economics and research.
                  (6) Agricultural education extension 
                services.
                  (7) Agricultural production and marketing and 
                stabilization of prices of agricultural 
                products, and commodities (not including 
                distribution outside of the United States).
                  (8) Animal industry and diseases of animals.
                  (9) Commodity exchanges.
                  (10) Crop insurance and soil conservation.
                  (11) Dairy industry.
                  (12) Entomology and plant quarantine.
                  (13) Extension of farm credit and farm 
                security.
                  (14) Inspection of livestock, poultry, meat 
                products, and seafood and seafood products.
                  (15) Forestry in general and forest reserves 
                other than those created from the public 
                domain.
                  (16) Human nutrition and home economics.
                  (17) Plant industry, soils, and agricultural 
                engineering.
                  (18) Rural electrification.
                  (19) Rural development.
                  (20) Water conservation related to activities 
                of the Department of Agriculture.
          (b) Committee on Appropriations.
                  (1) Appropriation of the revenue for the 
                support of the Government.
                  (2) Rescissions of appropriations contained 
                in appropriation Acts.
                  (3) Transfers of unexpended balances.
                  (4) Bills and joint resolutions reported by 
                other committees that provide new entitlement 
                authority as defined in section 3(9) of the 
                Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and referred 
                to the committee under clause 4(a)(2).
                  (5) Bills and joint resolutions that provide 
                new budget authority, limitation on the use of 
                funds, or other authority relating to new 
                direct loan obligations and new loan guarantee 
                commitments referencing section 504(b) of the 
                Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
          (c) Committee on Armed Services.
                  (1) Ammunition depots; forts; arsenals; and 
                Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space 
                Force reservations and establishments.
                  (2) Common defense generally.
                  (3) Conservation, development, and use of 
                naval petroleum and oil shale reserves.
                  (4) The Department of Defense generally, 
                including the Departments of the Army, Navy, 
                and Air Force, generally.
                  (5) Interoceanic canals generally, including 
                measures relating to the maintenance, 
                operation, and administration of interoceanic 
                canals.
                  (6) Merchant Marine Academy and State 
                Maritime Academies.
                  (7) Military applications of nuclear energy.
                  (8) Tactical intelligence and intelligence-
                related activities of the Department of 
                Defense.
                  (9) National security aspects of merchant 
                marine, including financial assistance for the 
                construction and operation of vessels, 
                maintenance of the U.S. shipbuilding and ship 
                repair industrial base, cabotage, cargo 
                preference, and merchant marine officers and 
                seafarers as these matters relate to the 
                national security.
                  (10) Pay, promotion, retirement, and other 
                benefits and privileges of members of the armed 
                forces.
                  (11) Scientific research and development in 
                support of the armed services.
                  (12) Selective service.
                  (13) Size and composition of the Army, Navy, 
                Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force.
                  (14) Soldiers' and sailors' homes.
                  (15) Strategic and critical materials 
                necessary for the common defense.
                  (16) Cemeteries administered by the 
                Department of Defense.
          (d) Committee on the Budget.
                  (1) Concurrent resolutions on the budget (as 
                defined in section 3(4) of the Congressional 
                Budget Act of 1974), other matters required to 
                be referred to the committee under titles III 
                and IV of that Act, and other measures setting 
                forth appropriate levels of budget totals for 
                the United States Government.
                  (2) Budget process generally.
                  (3) Establishment, extension, and enforcement 
                of special controls over the Federal budget, 
                including the budgetary treatment of off-budget 
                Federal agencies and measures providing 
                exemption from reduction under any order issued 
                under part C of the Balanced Budget and 
                Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
          (e) Committee on Education and the Workforce.
                  (1) Child labor.
                  (2) Gallaudet University and Howard 
                University and Hospital.
                  (3) Convict labor and the entry of goods made 
                by convicts into interstate commerce.
                  (4) Food programs for children in schools.
                  (5) Labor standards and statistics.
                  (6) Education or labor generally.
                  (7) Mediation and arbitration of labor 
                disputes.
                  (8) Regulation or prevention of importation 
                of foreign laborers under contract.
                  (9) Workers' compensation.
                  (10) Vocational rehabilitation.
                  (11) Wages and hours of labor.
                  (12) Welfare of miners.
                  (13) Work incentive programs.
                  (14) Organization, administration, and 
                general management of the Department of 
                Education.
                  (15) Organization, administration, and 
                general management of the Department of Labor.
          (f) Committee on Energy and Commerce.
                  (1) Biomedical research and development.
                  (2) Consumer affairs and consumer protection.
                  (3) Health and health facilities (except 
                health care supported by payroll deductions).
                  (4) Interstate energy compacts.
                  (5) Interstate and foreign commerce 
                generally.
                  (6) Exploration, production, storage, supply, 
                marketing, pricing, and regulation of energy 
                resources, including all fossil fuels, solar 
                energy, and other unconventional or renewable 
                energy resources.
                  (7) Conservation of energy resources.
                  (8) Energy information generally.
                  (9) The generation and marketing of power 
                (except by federally chartered or Federal 
                regional power marketing authorities); 
                reliability and interstate transmission of, and 
                ratemaking for, all power; and siting of 
                generation facilities (except the installation 
                of interconnections between Government 
                waterpower projects).
                  (10) General management of the Department of 
                Energy and management and all functions of the 
                Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
                  (11) National energy policy generally.
                  (12) Public health and quarantine.
                  (13) Regulation of the domestic nuclear 
                energy industry, including regulation of 
                research and development reactors and nuclear 
                regulatory research.
                  (14) Regulation of interstate and foreign 
                communications.
                  (15) Travel and tourism.
    The committee shall have the same jurisdiction with respect 
to regulation of nuclear facilities and of use of nuclear 
energy as it has with respect to regulation of nonnuclear 
facilities and of use of nonnuclear energy.
          (g) Committee on Ethics.
                  The Code of Official Conduct.
          (h) Committee on Financial Services.
                  (1) Banks and banking, including deposit 
                insurance and Federal monetary policy.
                  (2) Economic stabilization, defense 
                production, renegotiation, and control of the 
                price of commodities, rents, and services.
                  (3) Financial aid to commerce and industry 
                (other than transportation).
                  (4) Insurance generally.
                  (5) International finance.
                  (6) International financial and monetary 
                organizations.
                  (7) Money and credit, including currency and 
                the issuance of notes and redemption thereof; 
                gold and silver, including the coinage thereof; 
                valuation and revaluation of the dollar.
                  (8) Public and private housing.
                  (9) Securities and exchanges.
                  (10) Urban development.
          (i) Committee on Foreign Affairs.
                  (1) Relations of the United States with 
                foreign nations generally.
                  (2) Acquisition of land and buildings for 
                embassies and legations in foreign countries.
                  (3) Establishment of boundary lines between 
                the United States and foreign nations.
                  (4) Export controls, including 
                nonproliferation of nuclear technology and 
                nuclear hardware.
                  (5) Foreign loans.
                  (6) International commodity agreements (other 
                than those involving sugar), including all 
                agreements for cooperation in the export of 
                nuclear technology and nuclear hardware.
                  (7) International conferences and congresses.
                  (8) International education.
                  (9) Intervention abroad and declarations of 
                war.
                  (10) Diplomatic service.
                  (11) Measures to foster commercial 
                intercourse with foreign nations and to 
                safeguard American business interests abroad.
                  (12) International economic policy.
                  (13) Neutrality.
                  (14) Protection of American citizens abroad 
                and expatriation.
                  (15) The American National Red Cross.
                  (16) Trading with the enemy.
                  (17) United Nations organizations.
          (j) Committee on Homeland Security.
                  (1) Overall homeland security policy.
                  (2) Organization, administration, and general 
                management of the Department of Homeland 
                Security.
                  (3) Functions of the Department of Homeland 
                Security relating to the following:
                          (A) Border and port security (except 
                        immigration policy and non-border 
                        enforcement).
                          (B) Customs (except customs revenue).
                          (C) Integration, analysis, and 
                        dissemination of homeland security 
                        information.
                          (D) Domestic preparedness for and 
                        collective response to terrorism.
                          (E) Research and development.
                          (F) Transportation security.
                          (G) Cybersecurity.
          (k) Committee on House Administration.
                  (1) Appropriations from accounts for 
                committee salaries and expenses (except for the 
                Committee on Appropriations); House Information 
                Resources; and allowance and expenses of 
                Members, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, 
                officers, and administrative offices of the 
                House.
                  (2) Auditing and settling of all accounts 
                described in subparagraph (1).
                  (3) Employment of persons by the House, 
                including staff for Members, Delegates, the 
                Resident Commissioner, and committees; and 
                reporters of debates, subject to rule VI.
                  (4) Except as provided in paragraph (r)(11), 
                the Library of Congress, including management 
                thereof; the House Library; statuary and 
                pictures; acceptance or purchase of works of 
                art for the Capitol; the Botanic Garden; and 
                purchase of books and manuscripts.
                  (5) The Smithsonian Institution and the 
                incorporation of similar institutions (except 
                as provided in paragraph (r)(11)).
                  (6) Expenditure of accounts described in 
                subparagraph (1).
                  (7) Franking Commission.
                  (8) Printing and correction of the 
                Congressional Record.
                  (9) Accounts of the House generally.
                  (10) Assignment of office space for Members, 
                Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, and 
                committees.
                  (11) Disposition of useless executive papers.
                  (12) Election of the President, Vice 
                President, Members, Senators, Delegates, or the 
                Resident Commissioner; corrupt practices; 
                contested elections; credentials and 
                qualifications; and Federal elections 
                generally.
                  (13) Services to the House, including the 
                House Restaurant, parking facilities, and 
                administration of the House Office Buildings 
                and of the House wing of the Capitol.
                  (14) Travel of Members, Delegates, and the 
                Resident Commissioner.
                  (15) Raising, reporting, and use of campaign 
                contributions for candidates for office of 
                Representative, of Delegate, and of Resident 
                Commissioner.
                  (16) Compensation, retirement, and other 
                benefits of the Members, Delegates, the 
                Resident Commissioner, officers, and employees 
                of Congress.
          (l) Committee on the Judiciary.
                  (1) The judiciary and judicial proceedings, 
                civil and criminal.
                  (2) Administrative practice and procedure.
                  (3) Apportionment of Representatives.
                  (4) Bankruptcy, mutiny, espionage, and 
                counterfeiting.
                  (5) Civil liberties.
                  (6) Constitutional amendments.
                  (7) Criminal law enforcement and 
                criminalization.
                  (8) Federal courts and judges, and local 
                courts in the Territories and possessions.
                  (9) Immigration policy and non-border 
                enforcement.
                  (10) Interstate compacts generally.
                  (11) Claims against the United States.
                  (12) Meetings of Congress; attendance of 
                Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
                Commissioner; and their acceptance of 
                incompatible offices.
                  (13) National penitentiaries.
                  (14) Patents, the Patent and Trademark 
                Office, copyrights, and trademarks.
                  (15) Presidential succession.
                  (16) Protection of trade and commerce against 
                unlawful restraints and monopolies.
                  (17) Revision and codification of the 
                Statutes of the United States.
                  (18) State and territorial boundary lines.
                  (19) Subversive activities affecting the 
                internal security of the United States.
          (m) Committee on Natural Resources.
                  (1) Fisheries and wildlife, including 
                research, restoration, refuges, and 
                conservation.
                  (2) Forest reserves and national parks 
                created from the public domain.
                  (3) Forfeiture of land grants and alien 
                ownership, including alien ownership of mineral 
                lands.
                  (4) Geological Survey.
                  (5) International fishing agreements.
                  (6) Interstate compacts relating to 
                apportionment of waters for irrigation 
                purposes.
                  (7) Irrigation and reclamation, including 
                water supply for reclamation projects and 
                easements of public lands for irrigation 
                projects; and acquisition of private lands when 
                necessary to complete irrigation projects.
                  (8) Native Americans generally, including the 
                care and allotment of Native American lands and 
                general and special measures relating to claims 
                that are paid out of Native American funds.
                  (9) Insular areas of the United States 
                generally (except those affecting the revenue 
                and appropriations).
                  (10) Military parks and battlefields, 
                national cemeteries administered by the 
                Secretary of the Interior, parks within the 
                District of Columbia, and the erection of 
                monuments to the memory of individuals.
                  (11) Mineral land laws and claims and entries 
                thereunder.
                  (12) Mineral resources of public lands.
                  (13) Mining interests generally.
                  (14) Mining schools and experimental 
                stations.
                  (15) Marine affairs, including coastal zone 
                management (except for measures relating to oil 
                and other pollution of navigable waters).
                  (16) Oceanography.
                  (17) Petroleum conservation on public lands 
                and conservation of the radium supply in the 
                United States.
                  (18) Preservation of prehistoric ruins and 
                objects of interest on the public domain.
                  (19) Public lands generally, including entry, 
                easements, and grazing thereon.
                  (20) Relations of the United States with 
                Native Americans and Native American tribes.
                  (21) Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline (except 
                ratemaking).
          (n) Committee on Oversight and Accountability.
                  (1) Federal civil service, including 
                intergovernmental personnel; and the status of 
                officers and employees of the United States, 
                including their compensation, classification, 
                and retirement.
                  (2) Municipal affairs of the District of 
                Columbia in general (other than 
                appropriations).
                  (3) Federal paperwork reduction.
                  (4) Government management and accounting 
                measures generally.
                  (5) Holidays and celebrations.
                  (6) Overall economy, efficiency, and 
                management of government operations and 
                activities, including Federal procurement.
                  (7) National archives.
                  (8) Population and demography generally, 
                including the Census.
                  (9) Postal service generally, including 
                transportation of the mails.
                  (10) Public information and records.
                  (11) Relationship of the Federal Government 
                to the States and municipalities generally.
                  (12) Reorganizations in the executive branch 
                of the Government.
          (o) Committee on Rules.
                  (1) Rules and joint rules (other than those 
                relating to the Code of Official Conduct) and 
                the order of business of the House.
                  (2) Recesses and final adjournments of 
                Congress.
          (p) Committee on Science, Space, and Technology.
                  (1) All energy research, development, and 
                demonstration, and projects therefor, and all 
                federally owned or operated nonmilitary energy 
                laboratories.
                  (2) Astronautical research and development, 
                including resources, personnel, equipment, and 
                facilities.
                  (3) Civil aviation research and development.
                  (4) Environmental research and development.
                  (5) Marine research.
                  (6) Commercial application of energy 
                technology.
                  (7) National Institute of Standards and 
                Technology, standardization of weights and 
                measures, and the metric system.
                  (8) National Aeronautics and Space 
                Administration.
                  (9) National Space Council.
                  (10) National Science Foundation.
                  (11) National Weather Service.
                  (12) Outer space, including exploration and 
                control thereof.
                  (13) Science scholarships.
                  (14) Scientific research, development, and 
                demonstration, and projects therefor.
          (q) Committee on Small Business.
                  (1) Assistance to and protection of small 
                business, including financial aid, regulatory 
                flexibility, and paperwork reduction.
                  (2) Participation of small-business 
                enterprises in Federal procurement and 
                Government contracts.
          (r) Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
                  (1) Coast Guard, including lifesaving 
                service, lighthouses, lightships, ocean 
                derelicts, and the Coast Guard Academy.
                  (2) Federal management of emergencies and 
                natural disasters.
                  (3) Flood control and improvement of rivers 
                and harbors.
                  (4) Inland waterways.
                  (5) Inspection of merchant marine vessels, 
                lights and signals, lifesaving equipment, and 
                fire protection on such vessels.
                  (6) Navigation and laws relating thereto, 
                including pilotage.
                  (7) Registering and licensing of vessels and 
                small boats.
                  (8) Rules and international arrangements to 
                prevent collisions at sea.
                  (9) The Capitol Building and the Senate and 
                House Office Buildings.
                  (10) Construction or maintenance of roads and 
                post roads (other than appropriations 
                therefor).
                  (11) Construction or reconstruction, 
                maintenance, and care of buildings and grounds 
                of the Botanic Garden, the Library of Congress, 
                and the Smithsonian Institution.
                  (12) Merchant marine (except for national 
                security aspects thereof).
                  (13) Purchase of sites and construction of 
                post offices, customhouses, Federal 
                courthouses, and Government buildings within 
                the District of Columbia.
                  (14) Oil and other pollution of navigable 
                waters, including inland, coastal, and ocean 
                waters.
                  (15) Marine affairs, including coastal zone 
                management, as they relate to oil and other 
                pollution of navigable waters.
                  (16) Public buildings and occupied or 
                improved grounds of the United States 
                generally.
                  (17) Public works for the benefit of 
                navigation, including bridges and dams (other 
                than international bridges and dams).
                  (18) Related transportation regulatory 
                agencies (except the Transportation Security 
                Administration).
                  (19) Roads and the safety thereof.
                  (20) Transportation, including civil 
                aviation, railroads, water transportation, 
                transportation safety (except automobile safety 
                and transportation security functions of the 
                Department of Homeland Security), 
                transportation infrastructure, transportation 
                labor, and railroad retirement and unemployment 
                (except revenue measures related thereto).
                  (21) Water power.
          (s) Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
                (1) Veterans' measures generally.
                (2) Cemeteries of the United States in which 
                veterans of any war or conflict are or may be 
                buried, whether in the United States or abroad 
                (except cemeteries administered by the 
                Secretary of the Interior).
                  (3) Compensation, vocational rehabilitation, 
                and education of veterans.
                  (4) Life insurance issued by the Government 
                on account of service in the Armed Forces.
                  (5) Pensions of all the wars of the United 
                States, general and special.
                  (6) Readjustment of servicemembers to civil 
                life.
                  (7) Servicemembers' civil relief.
                  (8) Veterans' hospitals, medical care, and 
                treatment of veterans.
          (t) Committee on Ways and Means.
                  (1) Customs revenue, collection districts, 
                and ports of entry and delivery.
                  (2) Reciprocal trade agreements.
                  (3) Revenue measures generally.
                  (4) Revenue measures relating to insular 
                possessions.
                  (5) Bonded debt of the United States, subject 
                to the last sentence of clause 4(f).
                  (6) Deposit of public monies.
                  (7) Transportation of dutiable goods.
                  (8) Tax exempt foundations and charitable 
                trusts.
                  (9) National social security (except health 
                care and facilities programs that are supported 
                from general revenues as opposed to payroll 
                deductions and except work incentive programs).

                   GENERAL OVERSIGHT RESPONSIBILITIES

    2. (a) The various standing committees shall have general 
oversight responsibilities as provided in paragraph (b) in 
order to assist the House in--
          (1) its analysis, appraisal, and evaluation of--
                  (A) the application, administration, 
                execution, and effectiveness of Federal laws; 
                and
                  (B) conditions and circumstances that may 
                indicate the necessity or desirability of 
                enacting new or additional legislation; and
          (2) its formulation, consideration, and enactment of 
        changes in Federal laws, and of such additional 
        legislation as may be necessary or appropriate.
    (b)(1) In order to determine whether laws and programs 
addressing subjects within the jurisdiction of a committee are 
being implemented and carried out in accordance with the intent 
of Congress and whether they should be continued, curtailed, or 
eliminated, each standing committee (other than the Committee 
on Appropriations) shall review and study on a continuing 
basis--
          (A) the application, administration, execution, and 
        effectiveness of laws and programs addressing subjects 
        within its jurisdiction;
          (B) the organization and operation of Federal 
        agencies and entities having responsibilities for the 
        administration and execution of laws and programs 
        addressing subjects within its jurisdiction;
          (C) any conditions or circumstances that may indicate 
        the necessity or desirability of enacting new or 
        additional legislation addressing subjects within its 
        jurisdiction (whether or not a bill or resolution has 
        been introduced with respect thereto); and
          (D) future research and forecasting on subjects 
        within its jurisdiction.
    (2) Each committee to which subparagraph (1) applies having 
more than 20 members shall establish an oversight subcommittee, 
or require its subcommittees to conduct oversight in their 
respective jurisdictions, to assist in carrying out its 
responsibilities under this clause. The establishment of an 
oversight subcommittee does not limit the responsibility of a 
subcommittee with legislative jurisdiction in carrying out its 
oversight responsibilities.
    (c) Each standing committee shall review and study on a 
continuing basis the impact or probable impact of tax policies 
affecting subjects within its jurisdiction as described in 
clauses 1 and 3.
    (d)(1) Not later than March 1 of the first session of a 
Congress, each standing committee (other than the Committee on 
Appropriations, the Committee on Ethics, and the Committee on 
Rules) shall, in a meeting that is open to the public, adopt 
its authorization and oversight plan for that Congress. Such 
plan shall be submitted simultaneously to the Committee on 
Oversight and Accountability and the Committee on House 
Administration.
    (2) Each such plan shall include, with respect to programs 
and agencies within the committee's jurisdiction, and to the 
maximum extent practicable--
          (A) a list of such programs, or agencies with lapsed 
        authorizations that received funding in the prior 
        fiscal year or, in the case of a program or agency with 
        a permanent authorization, which has not been subject 
        to a comprehensive review by the committee in the prior 
        three Congresses;
          (B) a description of each such program or agency to 
        be authorized in the current Congress;
          (C) a description of each such program or agency to 
        be authorized in the next Congress, if applicable;
          (D) a description of any oversight to support the 
        authorization of each such program or agency in the 
        current Congress; and
          (E) recommendations for changes to existing law for 
        moving such programs or agencies from mandatory funding 
        to discretionary appropriations, where appropriate.
    (3) Each such plan may include with respect to the programs 
and agencies within the committee's jurisdiction--
          (A) 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;
          (B) 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
          (C) a description of such other oversight activities 
        as the committee may consider necessary.
    (4) In the development of such plan, the chair of each 
committee shall coordinate with other committees of 
jurisdiction to ensure that programs and agencies are subject 
to routine, comprehensive authorization efforts.
    (5) Not later than April 15 in the first session of a 
Congress, after consultation with the Speaker, the Majority 
Leader, and the Minority Leader, the Committee on Oversight and 
Accountability shall report to the House the authorization and 
oversight plans submitted by committees under subparagraph (1) 
together with any recommendations that it, or the House 
leadership group described above, may make to ensure the most 
effective coordination of authorization and oversight plans and 
otherwise to achieve the objectives of this clause.
    (e) The Speaker, with the approval of the House, may 
appoint special ad hoc oversight committees for the purpose of 
reviewing specific matters within the jurisdiction of two or 
more standing committees.

                      SPECIAL OVERSIGHT FUNCTIONS

    3. (a) The Committee on Appropriations shall conduct such 
studies and examinations of the organization and operation of 
executive departments and other executive agencies (including 
an agency the majority of the stock of which is owned by the 
United States) as it considers necessary to assist it in the 
determination of matters within its jurisdiction.
    (b) The Committee on Armed Services shall review and study 
on a continuing basis laws, programs, and Government activities 
relating to international arms control and disarmament and the 
education of military dependents in schools.
    (c) The Committee on the Budget shall study on a continuing 
basis the effect on budget outlays of relevant existing and 
proposed legislation and report the results of such studies to 
the House on a recurring basis.
    (d) The Committee on Education and the Workforce shall 
review, study, and coordinate on a continuing basis laws, 
programs, and Government activities relating to domestic 
educational programs and institutions and programs of student 
assistance within the jurisdiction of other committees.
    (e) The Committee on Energy and Commerce shall review and 
study on a continuing basis laws, programs, and Government 
activities relating to nuclear and other energy and nonmilitary 
nuclear energy research and development including the disposal 
of nuclear waste.
    (f) The Committee on Foreign Affairs shall review and study 
on a continuing basis laws, programs, and Government activities 
relating to customs administration, intelligence activities 
relating to foreign policy, international financial and 
monetary organizations, and international fishing agreements.
    (g)(1) The Committee on Homeland Security shall review and 
study on a continuing basis all Government activities relating 
to homeland security, including the interaction of all 
departments and agencies with the Department of Homeland 
Security.
    (2) In addition, the committee shall review and study on a 
primary and continuing basis all Government activities, 
programs, and organizations related to homeland security that 
fall within its primary legislative jurisdiction.
    (h) The Committee on Natural Resources shall review and 
study on a continuing basis laws, programs, and Government 
activities relating to Native Americans.
    (i) The Committee on Oversight and Accountability shall 
review and study on a continuing basis the operation of 
Government activities at all levels, including the Executive 
Office of the President.
    (j) The Committee on Rules shall review and study on a 
continuing basis the congressional budget process, and the 
committee shall report its findings and recommendations to the 
House from time to time.
    (k) The Committee on Science, Space, and Technology shall 
review and study on a continuing basis laws, programs, and 
Government activities relating to nonmilitary research and 
development.
    (l) The Committee on Small Business shall study and 
investigate on a continuing basis the problems of all types of 
small business.
    (m) The Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence shall 
review and study on a continuing basis laws, programs, and 
activities of the intelligence community and shall review and 
study on an exclusive basis the sources and methods of entities 
described in clause 11(b)(1)(A).

                   ADDITIONAL FUNCTIONS OF COMMITTEES

    4. (a)(1)(A) The Committee on Appropriations shall, within 
30 days after the transmittal of the Budget to Congress each 
year, hold hearings on the Budget as a whole with particular 
reference to--
          (i) the basic recommendations and budgetary policies 
        of the President in the presentation of the Budget; and
          (ii) the fiscal, financial, and economic assumptions 
        used as bases in arriving at total estimated 
        expenditures and receipts.
    (B) In holding hearings under subdivision (A), the 
committee shall receive testimony from the Secretary of the 
Treasury, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, 
the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, and such other 
persons as the committee may desire.
    (C) A hearing under subdivision (A), or any part thereof, 
shall be held in open session, except when the committee, in 
open session and with a quorum present, determines by record 
vote that the testimony to be taken at that hearing on that day 
may be related to a matter of national security. The committee 
may by the same procedure close one subsequent day of hearing. 
A transcript of all such hearings shall be printed and a copy 
thereof furnished to each Member, Delegate, and the Resident 
Commissioner.
    (D) A hearing under subdivision (A), or any part thereof, 
may be held before a joint meeting of the committee and the 
Committee on Appropriations of the Senate in accordance with 
such procedures as the two committees jointly may determine.
    (2) Pursuant to section 401(b)(2) of the Congressional 
Budget Act of 1974, when a committee reports a bill or joint 
resolution that provides new entitlement authority as defined 
in section 3(9) of that Act, and enactment of the bill or joint 
resolution, as reported, would cause a breach of the 
committee's pertinent allocation of new budget authority under 
section 302(a) of that Act, the bill or joint resolution may be 
referred to the Committee on Appropriations with instructions 
to report it with recommendations (which may include an 
amendment limiting the total amount of new entitlement 
authority provided in the bill or joint resolution). If the 
Committee on Appropriations fails to report a bill or joint 
resolution so referred within 15 calendar days (not counting 
any day on which the House is not in session), the committee 
automatically shall be discharged from consideration of the 
bill or joint resolution, and the bill or joint resolution 
shall be placed on the appropriate calendar.
    (3) In addition, the Committee on Appropriations shall 
study on a continuing basis those provisions of law that (on 
the first day of the first fiscal year for which the 
congressional budget process is effective) provide spending 
authority or permanent budget authority and shall report to the 
House from time to time its recommendations for terminating or 
modifying such provisions.
    (4) In the manner provided by section 302 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the Committee on 
Appropriations (after consulting with the Committee on 
Appropriations of the Senate) shall subdivide any allocations 
made to it in the joint explanatory statement accompanying the 
conference report on such concurrent resolution, and promptly 
report the subdivisions to the House as soon as practicable 
after a concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year 
is agreed to.
    (b) The Committee on the Budget shall--
          (1) review on a continuing basis the conduct by the 
        Congressional Budget Office of its functions and 
        duties;
          (2) hold hearings and receive testimony from Members, 
        Senators, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, and 
        such appropriate representatives of Federal departments 
        and agencies, the general public, and national 
        organizations as it considers desirable in developing 
        concurrent resolutions on the budget for each fiscal 
        year;
          (3) make all reports required of it by the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974;
          (4) study on a continuing basis those provisions of 
        law that exempt Federal agencies or any of their 
        activities or outlays from inclusion in the Budget of 
        the United States Government, and report to the House 
        from time to time its recommendations for terminating 
        or modifying such provisions;
          (5) study on a continuing basis proposals designed to 
        improve and facilitate the congressional budget 
        process, and report to the House from time to time the 
        results of such studies, together with its 
        recommendations; and
          (6) request and evaluate continuing studies of tax 
        expenditures, devise methods of coordinating tax 
        expenditures, policies, and programs with direct budget 
        outlays, and report the results of such studies to the 
        House on a recurring basis.
    (c)(1) The Committee on Oversight and Accountability 
shall--
          (A) receive and examine reports of the Comptroller 
        General of the United States and submit to the House 
        such recommendations as it considers necessary or 
        desirable in connection with the subject matter of the 
        reports;
          (B) evaluate the effects of laws enacted to 
        reorganize the legislative and executive branches of 
        the Government; and
          (C) study intergovernmental relationships between the 
        United States and the States and municipalities and 
        between the United States and international 
        organizations of which the United States is a member.
    (2) In addition to its duties under subparagraph (1), the 
Committee on Oversight and Accountability may at any time 
conduct investigations of any matter without regard to clause 
1, 2, 3, or this clause conferring jurisdiction over the matter 
to another standing committee.
    The findings and recommendations of the committee in such 
an investigation shall be made available to any other standing 
committee having jurisdiction over the matter involved.
    (3)(A) The Committee on Oversight and Accountability may 
adopt a rule authorizing and regulating the taking of 
depositions by a member or counsel of the committee, including 
pursuant to subpoena under clause 2(m) of rule XI (which hereby 
is made applicable for such purpose).
    (B) A rule adopted by the committee pursuant to this 
subparagraph--
          (i) may provide that a deponent be directed to 
        subscribe an oath or affirmation before a person 
        authorized by law to administer the same; and
          (ii) shall ensure that the minority members and staff 
        of the committee are accorded equitable treatment with 
        respect to notice of and a reasonable opportunity to 
        participate in any proceeding conducted thereunder.
    (C) Information secured pursuant to the authority described 
in subdivision (A) shall retain the character of discovery 
until offered for admission in evidence before the committee, 
at which time any proper objection shall be timely.
    (d)(1) The Committee on House Administration shall--
          (A) provide policy direction for the Chief 
        Administrative Officer, the Inspector General, the 
        Office of Diversity and Inclusion, and the Office of 
        the Whistleblower Ombuds and oversight of the Clerk, 
        Sergeant-at-Arms, Chief Administrative Officer, 
        Inspector General, Office of Diversity and Inclusion, 
        and Office of the Whistleblower Ombuds;
          (B) oversee the management of services provided to 
        the House by the Architect of the Capitol, except those 
        services that lie within the jurisdiction of the 
        Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure under 
        clause 1(r);
          (C) have the function of accepting on behalf of the 
        House a gift, except as otherwise provided by law, if 
        the gift does not involve a duty, burden, or condition, 
        or is not made dependent on some future performance by 
        the House;
          (D) promulgate regulations to carry out subdivision 
        (C); and
          (E) establish and maintain standards for making 
        documents publicly available in electronic form by the 
        House and its committees.
    (2) An employing office of the House may enter into a 
settlement of a complaint under the Congressional 
Accountability Act of 1995 that provides for the payment of 
funds only after receiving the joint approval of the chair and 
ranking minority member of the Committee on House 
Administration concerning the amount of such payment.
    (e)(1) Each standing committee shall, in its consideration 
of all public bills and public joint resolutions within its 
jurisdiction, ensure that appropriations for continuing 
programs and activities of the Federal Government and the 
government of the District of Columbia will be made annually to 
the maximum extent feasible and consistent with the nature, 
requirement, and objective of the programs and activities 
involved. In this subparagraph programs and activities of the 
Federal Government and the government of the District of 
Columbia includes programs and activities of any department, 
agency, establishment, wholly owned Government corporation, or 
instrumentality of the Federal Government or of the government 
of the District of Columbia.
    (2) Each standing committee shall review from time to time 
each continuing program within its jurisdiction for which 
appropriations are not made annually to ascertain whether the 
program should be modified to provide for annual 
appropriations.

                      BUDGET ACT RESPONSIBILITIES

    (f)(1) Each standing committee shall submit to the 
Committee on the Budget not later than six weeks after the 
submission of the budget by the President, or at such time as 
the Committee on the Budget may request--
          (A) its views and estimates with respect to all 
        matters to be set forth in the concurrent resolution on 
        the budget for the ensuing fiscal year that are within 
        its jurisdiction or functions; and
          (B) an estimate of the total amounts of new budget 
        authority, and budget outlays resulting therefrom, to 
        be provided or authorized in all bills and resolutions 
        within its jurisdiction that it intends to be effective 
        during that fiscal year.
    (2) The views and estimates submitted by the Committee on 
Ways and Means under subparagraph (1) shall include a specific 
recommendation, made after holding public hearings, as to the 
appropriate level of the public debt that should be set forth 
in the concurrent resolution on the budget.

             ELECTION AND MEMBERSHIP OF STANDING COMMITTEES

    5. (a)(1) The standing committees specified in clause 1 
shall be elected by the House within seven calendar days after 
the commencement of each Congress, from nominations submitted 
by the respective party caucus or conference. A resolution 
proposing to change the composition of a standing committee 
shall be privileged if offered by direction of the party caucus 
or conference concerned.
    (2) The Committee on the Budget shall be composed of 
members as follows:
          (A) Members, Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner 
        who are members of other standing committees, including 
        five from the Committee on Appropriations, five from 
        the Committee on Ways and Means, and one from the 
        Committee on Rules;
          (B) one Member designated by the elected leadership 
        of the majority party; and
          (C) one Member designated by the elected leadership 
        of the minority party.
    (3)(A) The Committee on Ethics shall be composed of 10 
members, five from the majority party and five from the 
minority party.
    (B) Except as permitted by subdivision (C), a member of the 
Committee on Ethics may not serve on the committee during more 
than three Congresses in a period of five successive Congresses 
(disregarding for this purpose any service for less than a full 
session in a Congress).
    (C) A member of the Committee on Ethics may serve on the 
committee during a fourth or fifth Congress in a period of five 
successive Congresses only as either the chair or the ranking 
minority member of the committee.
    (4)(A) At the beginning of a Congress, the Speaker or a 
designee and the Minority Leader or a designee each shall name 
10 Members, Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner from the 
respective party of such individual who are not members of the 
Committee on Ethics to be available to serve on investigative 
subcommittees of that committee during that Congress. The lists 
of Members, Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner so named 
shall be announced to the House.
    (B) Whenever the chair and the ranking minority member of 
the Committee on Ethics jointly determine that Members, 
Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner named under subdivision 
(A) should be assigned to serve on an investigative 
subcommittee of that committee, each of them shall select an 
equal number of such Members, Delegates, or Resident 
Commissioner from the respective party of such individual to 
serve on that subcommittee.
    (b)(1) Membership on a standing committee during the course 
of a Congress shall be contingent on continuing membership in 
the party caucus or conference that nominated the Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner concerned for election to 
such committee. Should a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner cease to be a member of a particular party caucus 
or conference, that Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner 
shall automatically cease to be a member of each standing 
committee to which elected on the basis of nomination by that 
caucus or conference. The chair of the relevant party caucus or 
conference shall notify the Speaker whenever a Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner ceases to be a member of 
that caucus or conference.
    The Speaker shall notify the chair of each affected 
committee that the election of such Member, Delegate, or 
Resident Commissioner to the committee is automatically vacated 
under this subparagraph.
    (2)(A) Except as specified in subdivision (B), a Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner may not serve simultaneously 
as a member of more than two standing committees or more than 
four subcommittees of the standing committees.
    (B)(i) Ex officio service by a chair or ranking minority 
member of a committee on each of its subcommittees under a 
committee rule does not count against the limitation on 
subcommittee service.
    (ii) Service on an investigative subcommittee of the 
Committee on Ethics under paragraph (a)(4) does not count 
against the limitation on subcommittee service.
    (iii) Any other exception to the limitations in subdivision 
(A) may be approved by the House on the recommendation of the 
relevant party caucus or conference.
    (C) In this subparagraph the term ``subcommittee'' includes 
a panel (other than a special oversight panel of the Committee 
on Armed Services), task force, special subcommittee, or other 
subunit of a standing committee that is established for a 
cumulative period longer than six months in a Congress.
    (c) One of the members of each standing committee shall be 
elected by the House, on the nomination of the majority party 
caucus or conference, as chair thereof. In the absence of the 
member serving as chair, the member next in rank (and so on, as 
often as the case shall happen) shall act as chair. Rank shall 
be determined by the order members are named in resolutions 
electing them to the committee. In the case of a vacancy in the 
elected chair of a committee, the House shall elect another 
chair.
    (d)(1) Except as permitted by subparagraph (2), a committee 
may have not more than five subcommittees.
    (2)(A) A committee that maintains a subcommittee on 
oversight may have not more than six subcommittees.
    (B) The Committee on Agriculture may have not more than six 
subcommittees.
    (C) The Committee on Appropriations may have not more than 
13 subcommittees.
    (D) The Committee on Armed Services may have not more than 
seven subcommittees.
    (E) The Committee on Foreign Affairs may have not more than 
seven subcommittees.
    (F) The Committee on Oversight and Accountability may have 
not more than seven subcommittees.
    (G) The Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure may 
have not more than six subcommittees.
    (e) The House shall fill a vacancy on a standing committee 
by election on the nomination of the respective party caucus or 
conference.

                          EXPENSE RESOLUTIONS

    6. (a) Whenever a committee, commission, or other entity 
(other than the Committee on Appropriations) is granted 
authorization for the payment of its expenses (including staff 
salaries) for a Congress, such authorization initially shall be 
procured by one primary expense resolution reported by the 
Committee on House Administration. A primary expense resolution 
may include a reserve fund for unanticipated expenses of 
committees. An amount from such a reserve fund may be allocated 
to a committee only by the approval of the Committee on House 
Administration. A primary expense resolution reported to the 
House may not be considered in the House unless a report 
thereon was available on the previous calendar day.
    For the information of the House, such report shall--
          (1) state the total amount of the funds to be 
        provided to the committee, commission, or other entity 
        under the primary expense resolution for all 
        anticipated activities and programs of the committee, 
        commission, or other entity; and
          (2) to the extent practicable, contain such general 
        statements regarding the estimated foreseeable 
        expenditures for the respective anticipated activities 
        and programs of the committee, commission, or other 
        entity as may be appropriate to provide the House with 
        basic estimates of the expenditures contemplated by the 
        primary expense resolution.
    (b) After the date of adoption by the House of a primary 
expense resolution for a committee, commission, or other entity 
for a Congress, authorization for the payment of additional 
expenses (including staff salaries) in that Congress may be 
procured by one or more supplemental expense resolutions 
reported by the Committee on House Administration, as 
necessary. A supplemental expense resolution reported to the 
House may not be considered in the House unless a report 
thereon was available on the previous calendar day. For the 
information of the House, such report shall--
          (1) state the total amount of additional funds to be 
        provided to the committee, commission, or other entity 
        under the supplemental expense resolution and the 
        purposes for which those additional funds are 
        available; and
          (2) state the reasons for the failure to procure the 
        additional funds for the committee, commission, or 
        other entity by means of the primary expense 
        resolution.
    (c) The preceding provisions of this clause do not apply 
to--
          (1) a resolution providing for the payment from 
        committee salary and expense accounts of the House of 
        sums necessary to pay compensation for staff services 
        performed for, or to pay other expenses of, a 
        committee, commission, or other entity at any time 
        after the beginning of an odd-numbered year and before 
        the date of adoption by the House of the primary 
        expense resolution described in paragraph (a) for that 
        year; or
          (2) a resolution providing each of the standing 
        committees in a Congress additional office equipment, 
        airmail and special-delivery postage stamps, supplies, 
        staff personnel, or any other specific item for the 
        operation of the standing committees, and containing an 
        authorization for the payment from committee salary and 
        expense accounts of the House of the expenses of any of 
        the foregoing items provided by that resolution, 
        subject to and until enactment of the provisions of the 
        resolution as permanent law.
    (d) From the funds made available for the appointment of 
committee staff by a primary or additional expense resolution, 
the chair of each committee shall ensure that sufficient staff 
is made available to each subcommittee to carry out its 
responsibilities under the rules of the committee and that the 
minority party is treated fairly in the appointment of such 
staff.
    (e) Funds authorized for a committee under this clause and 
clauses 7 and 8 are for expenses incurred in the activities of 
the committee.

                            INTERIM FUNDING

    7. (a) For the period beginning at noon on January 3 and 
ending at midnight on March 31 in each odd-numbered year, such 
sums as may be necessary shall be paid out of the committee 
salary and expense accounts of the House for continuance of 
necessary investigations and studies by--
          (1) each standing and select committee established by 
        these rules; and
          (2) except as specified in paragraph (b), each select 
        committee established by resolution.
    (b) In the case of the first session of a Congress, amounts 
shall be made available for a select committee established by 
resolution in the preceding Congress only if--
          (1) a resolution proposing to reestablish such select 
        committee is introduced in the present Congress; and
          (2) the House has not adopted a resolution of the 
        preceding Congress providing for termination of funding 
        for investigations and studies by such select 
        committee.
    (c) Each committee described in paragraph (a) shall be 
entitled for each month during the period specified in 
paragraph (a) to 9 percent (or such lesser percentage as may be 
determined by the Committee on House Administration) of the 
total annualized amount made available under expense 
resolutions for such committee in the preceding session of 
Congress.
    (d) Payments under this clause shall be made on vouchers 
authorized by the committee involved, signed by the chair of 
the committee, except as provided in paragraph (e), and 
approved by the Committee on House Administration.
    (e) Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule of the 
House, or other authority, from noon on January 3 of the first 
session of a Congress until the election by the House of the 
committee concerned in that Congress, payments under this 
clause shall be made on vouchers signed by the ranking member 
of the committee as it was constituted at the expiration of the 
preceding Congress who is a member of the majority party in the 
present Congress.
    (f)(1) The authority of a committee to incur expenses under 
this clause shall expire upon adoption by the House of a 
primary expense resolution for the committee.
    (2) Amounts made available under this clause shall be 
expended in accordance with regulations prescribed by the 
Committee on House Administration.
    (3) This clause shall be effective only insofar as it is 
not inconsistent with a resolution reported by the Committee on 
House Administration and adopted by the House after the 
adoption of these rules.

                                 TRAVEL

    8. (a) Local currencies owned by the United States shall be 
made available to the committee and its employees engaged in 
carrying out their official duties outside the United States or 
its territories or possessions. Appropriated funds, including 
those authorized under this clause and clause 6, may not be 
expended for the purpose of defraying expenses of members of a 
committee or its employees in a country where local currencies 
are available for this purpose.
    (b) The following conditions shall apply with respect to 
travel outside the United States or its territories or 
possessions:
          (1) A member or employee of a committee may not 
        receive or expend local currencies for subsistence in a 
        country for a day at a rate in excess of the maximum 
        per diem set forth in applicable Federal law.
          (2) A member or employee shall be reimbursed for the 
        expenses of such individual for a day at the lesser 
        of--
                  (A) the per diem set forth in applicable 
                Federal law; or
                  (B) the actual, unreimbursed expenses (other 
                than for transportation) incurred during that 
                day.
          (3) Each member or employee of a committee shall make 
        to the chair of the committee an itemized report 
        showing the dates each country was visited, the amount 
        of per diem furnished, the cost of transportation 
        furnished, and funds expended for any other official 
        purpose and shall summarize in these categories the 
        total foreign currencies or appropriated funds 
        expended. Each report shall be filed with the chair of 
        the committee not later than 60 days following the 
        completion of travel for use in complying with 
        reporting requirements in applicable Federal law and 
        shall be open for public inspection.
    (c)(1) In carrying out the activities of a committee 
outside the United States in a country where local currencies 
are unavailable, a member or employee of a committee may not 
receive reimbursement for expenses (other than for 
transportation) in excess of the maximum per diem set forth in 
applicable Federal law.
    (2) A member or employee shall be reimbursed for the 
expenses of such individual for a day, at the lesser of--
          (A) the per diem set forth in applicable Federal law; 
        or
          (B) the actual unreimbursed expenses (other than for 
        transportation) incurred during that day.
    (3) A member or employee of a committee may not receive 
reimbursement for the cost of any transportation in connection 
with travel outside the United States unless the member or 
employee actually paid for the transportation.
    (d) The restrictions respecting travel outside the United 
States set forth in paragraph (c) also shall apply to travel 
outside the United States by a Member, Delegate, Resident 
Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House authorized 
under any standing rule.

                            COMMITTEE STAFFS

    9. (a)(1) Subject to subparagraph (2) and paragraph (f), 
each standing committee may appoint, by majority vote, not more 
than 30 professional staff members to be compensated from the 
funds provided for the appointment of committee staff by 
primary and additional expense resolutions. Each professional 
staff member appointed under this subparagraph shall be 
assigned to the chair and the ranking minority member of the 
committee, as the committee considers advisable.
    (2) Subject to paragraph (f) whenever a majority of the 
minority party members of a standing committee (other than the 
Committee on Ethics or the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence) so request, not more than 10 persons (or one-
third of the total professional committee staff appointed under 
this clause, whichever is fewer) may be selected, by majority 
vote of the minority party members, for appointment by the 
committee as professional staff members under subparagraph (1). 
The committee shall appoint persons so selected whose character 
and qualifications are acceptable to a majority of the 
committee. If the committee determines that the character and 
qualifications of a person so selected are unacceptable, a 
majority of the minority party members may select another 
person for appointment by the committee to the professional 
staff until such appointment is made. Each professional staff 
member appointed under this subparagraph shall be assigned to 
such committee business as the minority party members of the 
committee consider advisable.
    (b)(1) The professional staff members of each standing 
committee--
          (A) may not engage in any work other than committee 
        business during congressional working hours; and
          (B) may not be assigned a duty other than one 
        pertaining to committee business.
    (2)(A) Subparagraph (1) does not apply to staff designated 
by a committee as ``associate? or ``shared'' staff who are not 
paid exclusively by the committee, provided that the chair 
certifies that the compensation paid by the committee for any 
such staff is commensurate with the work performed for the 
committee in accordance with clause 8 of rule XXIII.
    (B) The use of any ``associate'' or ``shared'' staff by a 
committee other than the Committee on Appropriations shall be 
subject to the review of, and to any terms, conditions, or 
limitations established by, the Committee on House 
Administration in connection with the reporting of any primary 
or additional expense resolution.
    (c) Each employee on the professional or investigative 
staff of a standing committee shall be entitled to pay at a 
single gross per annum rate, to be fixed by the chair and that 
does not exceed the maximum rate of pay as in effect from time 
to time under applicable provisions of law.
    (d) Subject to appropriations hereby authorized, the 
Committee on Appropriations may appoint by majority vote such 
staff as it determines to be necessary (in addition to the 
clerk of the committee and assistants for the minority). The 
staff appointed under this paragraph, other than minority 
assistants, shall possess such qualifications as the committee 
may prescribe.
    (e) A committee may not appoint to its staff an expert or 
other personnel detailed or assigned from a department or 
agency of the Government except with the written permission of 
the Committee on House Administration.
    (f) If a request for the appointment of a minority 
professional staff member under paragraph (a) is made when no 
vacancy exists for such an appointment, the committee 
nevertheless may appoint under paragraph (a) a person selected 
by the minority and acceptable to the committee. A person so 
appointed shall serve as an additional member of the 
professional staff of the committee until such a vacancy occurs 
(other than a vacancy in the position of head of the 
professional staff, by whatever title designated), at which 
time that person is considered as appointed to that vacancy. 
Such a person shall be paid from the applicable accounts of the 
House described in clause 1(k)(1) of rule X. If such a vacancy 
occurs on the professional staff when seven or more persons 
have been so appointed who are eligible to fill that vacancy, a 
majority of the minority party members shall designate which of 
those persons shall fill the vacancy.
    (g) Each staff member appointed pursuant to a request by 
minority party members under paragraph (a), and each staff 
member appointed to assist minority members of a committee 
pursuant to an expense resolution described in clause 6(a), 
shall be accorded equitable treatment with respect to the 
fixing of the rate of pay, the assignment of work facilities, 
and the accessibility of committee records.
    (h) Paragraph (a) may not be construed to authorize the 
appointment of additional professional staff members of a 
committee pursuant to a request under paragraph (a) by the 
minority party members of that committee if 10 or more 
professional staff members provided for in paragraph (a)(1) who 
are satisfactory to a majority of the minority party members 
are otherwise assigned to assist the minority party members.
    (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(2), a committee may 
employ nonpartisan staff, in lieu of or in addition to 
committee staff designated exclusively for the majority or 
minority party, by an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
members of the majority party and of a majority of the members 
of the minority party.

                      SELECT AND JOINT COMMITTEES

    10. (a) Membership on a select or joint committee appointed 
by the Speaker under clause 11 of rule I during the course of a 
Congress shall be contingent on continuing membership in the 
party caucus or conference of which the Member, Delegate, or 
Resident Commissioner concerned was a member at the time of 
appointment.
    Should a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner cease 
to be a member of that caucus or conference, that Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner shall automatically cease to 
be a member of any select or joint committee to which assigned. 
The chair of the relevant party caucus or conference shall 
notify the Speaker whenever a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner ceases to be a member of a party caucus or 
conference. The Speaker shall notify the chair of each affected 
select or joint committee that the appointment of such Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner to the select or joint 
committee is automatically vacated under this paragraph.
    (b) Each select or joint committee, other than a conference 
committee, shall comply with clause 2(a) of rule XI unless 
specifically exempted by law.

               PERMANENT SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE

    11. (a)(1) There is established a Permanent Select 
Committee on Intelligence (hereafter in this clause referred to 
as the ``select committee''). The select committee shall be 
composed of not more than 22 Members, Delegates, or the 
Resident Commissioner, of whom not more than 13 may be from the 
same party. The select committee shall include at least one 
Member, Delegate, or the Resident Commissioner from each of the 
following committees:
          (A) the Committee on Appropriations;
          (B) the Committee on Armed Services;
          (C) the Committee on Foreign Affairs; and
          (D) the Committee on the Judiciary.
    (2) The Speaker and the Minority Leader shall be ex officio 
members of the select committee but shall have no vote in the 
select committee and may not be counted for purposes of 
determining a quorum thereof.
    (3) The Speaker and Minority Leader each may designate a 
respective leadership staff member to assist in the capacity of 
the Speaker or Minority Leader as ex officio member, with the 
same access to committee meetings, hearings, briefings, and 
materials as employees of the select committee and subject to 
the same security clearance and confidentiality requirements as 
employees of the select committee under this clause.
    (4)(A) Except as permitted by subdivision (B), a Member, 
Delegate, or Resident Commissioner, other than the Speaker or 
the Minority Leader, may not serve as a member of the select 
committee during more than four Congresses in a period of six 
successive Congresses (disregarding for this purpose any 
service for less than a full session in a Congress).
    (B) In the case of a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner appointed to serve as the chair or the ranking 
minority member of the select committee, tenure on the select 
committee shall not be limited.
    (b)(1) There shall be referred to the select committee 
proposed legislation, messages, petitions, memorials, and other 
matters relating to the following:
          (A) The Central Intelligence Agency, the Director of 
        National Intelligence, and the National Intelligence 
        Program as defined in section 3(6) of the National 
        Security Act of 1947.
          (B) Intelligence and intelligence-related activities 
        of all other departments and agencies of the 
        Government, including the tactical intelligence and 
        intelligence-related activities of the Department of 
        Defense.
          (C) The organization or reorganization of a 
        department or agency of the Government to the extent 
        that the organization or reorganization relates to a 
        function or activity involving intelligence or 
        intelligence-related activities.
          (D) Authorizations for appropriations, both direct 
        and indirect, for the following:
                  (i) The Central Intelligence Agency, the 
                Director of National Intelligence, and the 
                National Intelligence Program as defined in 
                section 3(6) of the National Security Act of 
                1947.
                  (ii) Intelligence and intelligence-related 
                activities of all other departments and 
                agencies of the Government, including the 
                tactical intelligence and intelligence-related 
                activities of the Department of Defense.
                  (iii) A department, agency, subdivision, or 
                program that is a successor to an agency or 
                program named or referred to in (i) or (ii).
    (2) Proposed legislation initially reported by the select 
committee (other than provisions solely involving matters 
specified in subparagraph (1)(A) or subparagraph (1)(D)(i)) 
containing any matter otherwise within the jurisdiction of a 
standing committee shall be referred by the Speaker to that 
standing committee. Proposed legislation initially reported by 
another committee that contains matter within the jurisdiction 
of the select committee shall be referred by the Speaker to the 
select committee if requested by the chair of the select 
committee.
    (3) Nothing in this clause shall be construed as 
prohibiting or otherwise restricting the authority of any other 
committee to study and review an intelligence or intelligence-
related activity to the extent that such activity directly 
affects a matter otherwise within the jurisdiction of that 
committee.
    (4) Nothing in this clause shall be construed as amending, 
limiting, or otherwise changing the authority of a standing 
committee to obtain full and prompt access to the product of 
the intelligence and intelligence-related activities of a 
department or agency of the Government relevant to a matter 
otherwise within the jurisdiction of that committee.
    (c)(1) For purposes of accountability to the House, the 
select committee shall make regular and periodic reports to the 
House on the nature and extent of the intelligence and 
intelligence-related activities of the various departments and 
agencies of the United States. The select committee shall 
promptly call to the attention of the House, or to any other 
appropriate committee, a matter requiring the attention of the 
House or another committee. In making such report, the select 
committee shall proceed in a manner consistent with paragraph 
(g) to protect national security.
    (2) The select committee shall obtain annual reports from 
the Director of National Intelligence, the Director of the 
Central Intelligence Agency, the Secretary of Defense, the 
Secretary of State, and the Director of the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation. Such reports shall review the intelligence and 
intelligence-related activities of the agency or department 
concerned and the intelligence and intelligence-related 
activities of foreign countries directed at the United States 
or its interests. An unclassified version of each report may be 
made available to the public at the discretion of the select 
committee. Nothing herein shall be construed as requiring the 
public disclosure in such reports of the names of persons 
engaged in intelligence or intelligence-related activities for 
the United States or the divulging of intelligence methods 
employed or the sources of information on which the reports are 
based or the amount of funds authorized to be appropriated for 
intelligence and intelligence-related activities.
    (3) Within six weeks after the President submits a budget 
under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, or at 
such time as the Committee on the Budget may request, the 
select committee shall submit to the Committee on the Budget 
the views and estimates described in section 301(d) of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974 regarding matters within the 
jurisdiction of the select committee.
    (d)(1) Except as specified in subparagraph (2), clauses 
8(a), (b), and (c) and 9(a), (b), and (c) of this rule, and 
clauses 1, 2, and 4 of rule XI shall apply to the select 
committee to the extent not inconsistent with this clause.
    (2) Notwithstanding the requirements of the first sentence 
of clause 2(g)(2) of rule XI, in the presence of the number of 
members required under the rules of the select committee for 
the purpose of taking testimony or receiving evidence, the 
select committee may vote to close a hearing whenever a 
majority of those present determines that the testimony or 
evidence would endanger the national security.
    (e) An employee of the select committee, or a person 
engaged by contract or otherwise to perform services for or at 
the request of the select committee, may not be given access to 
any classified information by the select committee unless such 
employee or person has--
          (1) agreed in writing and under oath to be bound by 
        the Rules of the House, including the jurisdiction of 
        the Committee on Ethics and of the select committee 
        concerning the security of classified information 
        during and after the period of the employment or 
        contractual agreement of such employee or person with 
        the select committee; and
          (2) received an appropriate security clearance, as 
        determined by the select committee in consultation with 
        the Director of National Intelligence, that is 
        commensurate with the sensitivity of the classified 
        information to which such employee or person will be 
        given access by the select committee.
    (f) The select committee shall formulate and carry out such 
rules and procedures as it considers necessary to prevent the 
disclosure, without the consent of each person concerned, of 
information in the possession of the select committee that 
unduly infringes on the privacy or that violates the 
constitutional rights of such person. Nothing herein shall be 
construed to prevent the select committee from publicly 
disclosing classified information in a case in which it 
determines that national interest in the disclosure of 
classified information clearly outweighs any infringement on 
the privacy of a person.
    (g)(1) The select committee may disclose publicly any 
information in its possession after a determination by the 
select committee that the public interest would be served by 
such disclosure.
    With respect to the disclosure of information for which 
this paragraph requires action by the select committee--
          (A) the select committee shall meet to vote on the 
        matter within five days after a member of the select 
        committee requests a vote; and
          (B) a member of the select committee may not make 
        such a disclosure before a vote by the select committee 
        on the matter, or after a vote by the select committee 
        on the matter except in accordance with this paragraph.
    (2)(A) In a case in which the select committee votes to 
disclose publicly any information that has been classified 
under established security procedures, that has been submitted 
to it by the executive branch, and that the executive branch 
requests be kept secret, the select committee shall notify the 
President of such vote.
    (B) The select committee may disclose publicly such 
information after the expiration of a five-day period following 
the day on which notice of the vote to disclose is transmitted 
to the President unless, before the expiration of the five-day 
period, the President, personally in writing, notifies the 
select committee that the President objects to the disclosure 
of such information, provides reasons therefor, and certifies 
that the threat to the national interest of the United States 
posed by the disclosure is of such gravity that it outweighs 
any public interest in the disclosure.
    (C) If the President, personally in writing, notifies the 
select committee of objections to the disclosure of information 
as provided in subdivision (B), the select committee may, by 
majority vote, refer the question of the disclosure of such 
information, with a recommendation thereon, to the House. The 
select committee may not publicly disclose such information 
without leave of the House.
    (D) Whenever the select committee votes to refer the 
question of disclosure of any information to the House under 
subdivision (C), the chair shall, not later than the first day 
on which the House is in session following the day on which the 
vote occurs, report the matter to the House for its 
consideration.
    (E) If the chair of the select committee does not offer in 
the House a motion to consider in closed session a matter 
reported under subdivision (D) within four calendar days on 
which the House is in session after the recommendation 
described in subdivision (C) is reported, then such a motion 
shall be privileged when offered by a Member, Delegate, or 
Resident Commissioner. In either case such a motion shall be 
decided without debate or intervening motion except one that 
the House adjourn.
    (F) Upon adoption by the House of a motion to resolve into 
closed session as described in subdivision (E), the Speaker may 
declare a recess subject to the call of the Chair. At the 
expiration of the recess, the pending question, in closed 
session, shall be, ``Shall the House approve the recommendation 
of the select committee?''.
    (G) Debate on the question described in subdivision (F) 
shall be limited to two hours equally divided and controlled by 
the chair and ranking minority member of the select committee.
    After such debate the previous question shall be considered 
as ordered on the question of approving the recommendation 
without intervening motion except one motion that the House 
adjourn. The House shall vote on the question in open session 
but without divulging the information with respect to which the 
vote is taken. If the recommendation of the select committee is 
not approved, then the question is considered as recommitted to 
the select committee for further recommendation.
    (3)(A) Information in the possession of the select 
committee relating to the lawful intelligence or intelligence-
related activities of a department or agency of the United 
States that has been classified under established security 
procedures, and that the select committee has determined should 
not be disclosed under subparagraph (1) or (2), may not be made 
available to any person by a Member, Delegate, Resident 
Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House except as 
provided in subdivision (B).
    (B) The select committee shall, under such regulations as 
it may prescribe, make information described in subdivision (A) 
available to a committee or a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner, and permit a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
Commissioner to attend a hearing of the select committee that 
is closed to the public. Whenever the select committee makes 
such information available, it shall keep a written record 
showing, in the case of particular information, which committee 
or which Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner received 
the information. A Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner 
who, and a committee that, receives information under this 
subdivision may not disclose the information except in a closed 
session of the House.
    (4) The Committee on Ethics shall investigate any 
unauthorized disclosure of intelligence or intelligence-related 
information by a Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, 
officer, or employee of the House in violation of subparagraph 
(3) and report to the House concerning any allegation that it 
finds to be substantiated.
    (5) Upon the request of a person who is subject to an 
investigation described in subparagraph (4), the Committee on 
Ethics shall release to such person at the conclusion of its 
investigation a summary of its investigation, together with its 
findings. If, at the conclusion of its investigation, the 
Committee on Ethics determines that there has been a 
significant breach of confidentiality or unauthorized 
disclosure by a Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, 
officer, or employee of the House, it shall report its findings 
to the House and recommend appropriate action.
    Recommendations may include censure, removal from committee 
membership, or expulsion from the House, in the case of a 
Member, or removal from office or employment or punishment for 
contempt, in the case of an officer or employee.
    (h) The select committee may permit a personal 
representative of the President, designated by the President to 
serve as a liaison to the select committee, to attend any 
closed meeting of the select committee.
    (i) Subject to the Rules of the House, funds may not be 
appropriated for a fiscal year, with the exception of a bill or 
joint resolution continuing appropriations, or an amendment 
thereto, or a conference report thereon, to, or for use of, a 
department or agency of the United States to carry out any of 
the following activities, unless the funds shall previously 
have been authorized by a bill or joint resolution passed by 
the House during the same or preceding fiscal year to carry out 
such activity for such fiscal year:
          (1) The activities of the Director of National 
        Intelligence and the Office of the Director of National 
        Intelligence.
          (2) The activities of the Central Intelligence 
        Agency.
          (3) The activities of the Defense Intelligence 
        Agency.
          (4) The activities of the National Security Agency.
          (5) The intelligence and intelligence-related 
        activities of other agencies and subdivisions of the 
        Department of Defense.
          (6) The intelligence and intelligence-related 
        activities of the Department of State.
          (7) The intelligence and intelligence-related 
        activities of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
          (8) The intelligence and intelligence-related 
        activities of all other departments and agencies of the 
        executive branch.
    (j)(1) In this clause the term ``intelligence and 
intelligence-related activities'' includes--
          (A) the collection, analysis, production, 
        dissemination, or use of information that relates to a 
        foreign country, or a government, political group, 
        party, military force, movement, or other association 
        in a foreign country, and that relates to the defense, 
        foreign policy, national security, or related policies 
        of the United States and other activity in support of 
        the collection, analysis, production, dissemination, or 
        use of such information;
          (B) activities taken to counter similar activities 
        directed against the United States;
          (C) covert or clandestine activities affecting the 
        relations of the United States with a foreign 
        government, political group, party, military force, 
        movement, or other association;
          (D) the collection, analysis, production, 
        dissemination, or use of information about activities 
        of persons within the United States, its territories 
        and possessions, or nationals of the United States 
        abroad whose political and related activities pose, or 
        may be considered by a department, agency, bureau, 
        office, division, instrumentality, or employee of the 
        United States to pose, a threat to the internal 
        security of the United States; and
          (E) covert or clandestine activities directed against 
        persons described in subdivision (D).
    (2) In this clause the term ``department or agency'' 
includes any organization, committee, council, establishment, 
or office within the Federal Government.
    (3) For purposes of this clause, reference to a department, 
agency, bureau, or subdivision shall include a reference to any 
successor department, agency, bureau, or subdivision to the 
extent that a successor engages in intelligence or 
intelligence-related activities now conducted by the 
department, agency, bureau, or subdivision referred to in this 
clause.
    (k) Clause 12(a) of rule XXII does not apply to meetings of 
a conference committee respecting legislation (or any part 
thereof) reported by the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence.

                                Rule XI


            PROCEDURES OF COMMITTEES AND UNFINISHED BUSINESS


                               IN GENERAL

    1. (a)(1)(A) The Rules of the House are the rules of its 
committees and subcommittees so far as applicable.
    (B) Each subcommittee is a part of its committee and is 
subject to the authority and direction of that committee and to 
its rules, so far as applicable.
    (2)(A) In a committee or subcommittee--
          (i) a motion to recess from day to day, or to recess 
        subject to the call of the Chair (within 24 hours), 
        shall be privileged; and
          (ii) a motion to dispense with the first reading (in 
        full) of a bill or resolution shall be privileged if 
        printed copies are available.
    (B) A motion accorded privilege under this subparagraph 
shall be decided without debate.
    (b)(1) Each committee may conduct at any time such 
investigations and studies as it considers necessary or 
appropriate in the exercise of its responsibilities under rule 
X. Subject to the adoption of expense resolutions as required 
by clause 6 of rule X, each committee may incur expenses, 
including travel expenses, in connection with such 
investigations and studies.
    (2) A proposed investigative or oversight report shall be 
considered as read in committee if it has been available to the 
members for at least 24 hours (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or 
legal holidays except when the House is in session on such a 
day).
    (3) A report of an investigation or study conducted jointly 
by more than one committee may be filed jointly, provided that 
each of the committees complies independently with all 
requirements for approval and filing of the report.
    (4) After an adjournment sine die of the last regular 
session of a Congress, an investigative or oversight report may 
be filed with the Clerk at any time, provided that a member who 
gives timely notice of intention to file supplemental, 
minority, additional, or dissenting views shall be entitled to 
not less than seven calendar days in which to submit such views 
for inclusion in the report.
    (c) Each committee may have printed and bound such 
testimony and other data as may be presented at hearings held 
by the committee or its subcommittees. All costs of 
stenographic services and transcripts in connection with a 
meeting or hearing of a committee shall be paid from the 
applicable accounts of the House described in clause 1(k)(1) of 
rule X.
    (d)(1) Not later than January 2 of each odd-numbered year, 
a committee shall submit to the House a report on the 
activities of that committee.
    (2) Such report shall include--
          (A) separate sections summarizing the legislative and 
        oversight activities of that committee under this rule 
        and rule X during the Congress;
          (B) a summary of the authorization and oversight 
        plans submitted by the committee under clause 2(d) of 
        rule X;
          (C) a summary of the actions taken and 
        recommendations made with respect to the authorization 
        and oversight plans specified in subdivision (B);
          (D) a summary of any additional oversight activities 
        undertaken by that committee and any recommendations 
        made or actions taken thereon; and
          (E) a delineation of any hearings held pursuant to 
        clauses 2(n), (o), or (p) of this rule.
    (3) After an adjournment sine die of the last regular 
session of a Congress, or after December 15 of an even-numbered 
year, whichever occurs first, the chair of a committee may file 
the report described in subparagraph (1) with the Clerk at any 
time and without approval of the committee, provided that--
          (A) a copy of the report has been available to each 
        member of the committee for at least seven calendar 
        days; and
          (B) the report includes any supplemental, minority, 
        additional, or dissenting views submitted by a member 
        of the committee.

                       ADOPTION OF WRITTEN RULES

    2. (a)(1) Each standing committee shall adopt written rules 
governing its procedure. Such rules--
          (A) shall be adopted in a meeting that is open to the 
        public unless the committee, in open session and with a 
        quorum present, determines by record vote that all or 
        part of the meeting on that day shall be closed to the 
        public;
          (B) may not be inconsistent with the Rules of the 
        House or with those provisions of law having the force 
        and effect of Rules of the House;
          (C) shall in any event incorporate all of the 
        succeeding provisions of this clause to the extent 
        applicable; and
          (D) shall include provisions to govern the 
        implementation of clause 4 as provided in paragraph (f) 
        of such clause.
    (2) Each committee shall make its rules publicly available 
in electronic form and submit such rules for publication in the 
Congressional Record not later than 60 days after the chair of 
the committee is elected in each odd-numbered year.
    (3) A committee may adopt a rule providing that the chair 
be directed to offer a motion under clause 1 of rule XXII 
whenever the chair considers it appropriate.

                          REGULAR MEETING DAYS

    (b) Each standing committee shall establish regular meeting 
days for the conduct of its business, which shall be not less 
frequent than monthly. Each such committee shall meet for the 
consideration of a bill or resolution pending before the 
committee or the transaction of other committee business on all 
regular meeting days fixed by the committee if notice is given 
pursuant to paragraph (g)(3).

                    ADDITIONAL AND SPECIAL MEETINGS

    (c)(1) The chair of each standing committee may call and 
convene, as the chair considers necessary, additional and 
special meetings of the committee for the consideration of a 
bill or resolution pending before the committee or for the 
conduct of other committee business, subject to such rules as 
the committee may adopt. The committee shall meet for such 
purpose under that call of the chair.
    (2) Three or more members of a standing committee may file 
in the offices of the committee a written request that the 
chair call a special meeting of the committee. Such request 
shall specify the measure or matter to be considered. 
Immediately upon the filing of the request, the clerk of the 
committee shall notify the chair of the filing of the request. 
If the chair does not call the requested special meeting within 
three calendar days after the filing of the request (to be held 
within seven calendar days after the filing of the request) a 
majority of the members of the committee may file in the 
offices of the committee their written notice that a special 
meeting of the committee will be held. The written notice shall 
specify the date and hour of the special meeting and the 
measure or matter to be considered. The committee shall meet on 
that date and hour. Immediately upon the filing of the notice, 
the clerk of the committee shall notify all members of the 
committee that such special meeting will be held and inform 
them of its date and hour and the measure or matter to be 
considered. Such notice shall also be made publicly available 
in electronic form and shall be deemed to satisfy paragraph 
(g)(3)(A)(ii). Only the measure or matter specified in that 
notice may be considered at that special meeting.

                       TEMPORARY ABSENCE OF CHAIR

    (d) A member of the majority party on each standing 
committee or subcommittee thereof shall be designated by the 
chair of the full committee as the vice chair of the committee 
or subcommittee, as the case may be, and shall preside during 
the absence of the chair from any meeting. If the chair and 
vice chair of a committee or subcommittee are not present at 
any meeting of the committee or subcommittee, the ranking 
majority member who is present shall preside at that meeting.

                           COMMITTEE RECORDS

    (e)(1)(A) Each committee shall keep a complete record of 
all committee action which shall include--
          (i) in the case of a meeting or hearing transcript, a 
        substantially verbatim account of remarks actually made 
        during the proceedings, subject only to technical, 
        grammatical, and typographical corrections authorized 
        by the person making the remarks involved; and
          (ii) a record of the votes on any question on which a 
        record vote is taken.
    (B)(i) Except as provided in item (ii) and subject to 
paragraph (k)(7), the result of each such record vote shall be 
made publicly available in electronic form within 48 hours of 
such record vote. Information so available shall include a 
description of the amendment, motion, order, or other 
proposition, the name of each member voting for and each member 
voting against such amendment, motion, order, or proposition, 
and the names of those members of the committee present but not 
voting.
    (ii) The result of any record vote taken in executive 
session in the Committee on Ethics may not be made publicly 
available without an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
members of the committee.
    (2)(A) Except as provided in subdivision (B), all committee 
records (including hearings, data, charts, and files) shall be 
kept separate and distinct from the congressional office 
records of the member serving as its chair. Such records shall 
be the property of the House, and each Member, Delegate, and 
the Resident Commissioner shall have access thereto.
    (B) A Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner, other 
than members of the Committee on Ethics, may not have access to 
the records of that committee respecting the conduct of a 
Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee 
of the House without the specific prior permission of that 
committee.
    (3) Each committee shall include in its rules standards for 
availability of records of the committee delivered to the 
Archivist of the United States under rule VII. Such standards 
shall specify procedures for orders of the committee under 
clause 3(b)(3) and clause 4(b) of rule VII, including a 
requirement that nonavailability of a record for a period 
longer than the period otherwise applicable under that rule 
shall be approved by vote of the committee.
    (4) Each committee shall make its publications available in 
electronic form to the maximum extent feasible.
    (5) To the maximum extent practicable, each committee 
shall--
          (A) provide audio and video coverage of each hearing 
        or meeting for the transaction of business in a manner 
        that allows the public to easily listen to and view the 
        proceedings; and
          (B) maintain the recordings of such coverage in a 
        manner that is easily accessible to the public.
    (6) Not later than 24 hours after the adoption of any 
amendment, or 48 hours after the disposition or withdrawal of 
any other amendment, to a measure or matter considered by a 
committee, the chair of such committee shall cause the text of 
each such amendment to be made publicly available in electronic 
form.

                    PROHIBITION AGAINST PROXY VOTING

    (f) A vote by a member of a committee or subcommittee with 
respect to any measure or matter may not be cast by proxy.

                       OPEN MEETINGS AND HEARINGS

    (g)(1) Each meeting for the transaction of business, 
including the markup of legislation, by a standing committee or 
subcommittee thereof (other than the Committee on Ethics or its 
subcommittees) shall be open to the public, including to radio, 
television, and still photography coverage, except when the 
committee or subcommittee, in open session and with a majority 
present, determines by record vote that all or part of the 
remainder of the meeting on that day shall be in executive 
session because disclosure of matters to be considered would 
endanger national security, would compromise sensitive law 
enforcement information, would tend to defame, degrade, or 
incriminate any person, or otherwise would violate a law or 
rule of the House. Persons, other than members of the committee 
and such noncommittee Members, Delegates, Resident 
Commissioner, congressional staff, or departmental 
representatives as the committee may authorize, may not be 
present at a business or markup session that is held in 
executive session. This subparagraph does not apply to open 
committee hearings, which are governed by clause 4(a)(1) of 
rule X or by subparagraph (2).
    (2)(A) Each hearing conducted by a committee or 
subcommittee (other than the Committee on Ethics or its 
subcommittees) shall be open to the public, including to radio, 
television, and still photography coverage, except when the 
committee or subcommittee, in open session and with a majority 
present, determines by record vote that all or part of the 
remainder of that hearing on that day shall be closed to the 
public because disclosure of testimony, evidence, or other 
matters to be considered would endanger national security, 
would compromise sensitive law enforcement information, or 
would violate a law or rule of the House.
    (B) Notwithstanding the requirements of subdivision (A), in 
the presence of the number of members required under the rules 
of the committee for the purpose of taking testimony, a 
majority of those present may--
          (i) agree to close the hearing for the sole purpose 
        of discussing whether testimony or evidence to be 
        received would endanger national security, would 
        compromise sensitive law enforcement information, or 
        would violate clause 2(k)(5); or
          (ii) agree to close the hearing as provided in clause 
        2(k)(5).
    (C) A Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner may not be 
excluded from nonparticipatory attendance at a hearing of a 
committee or subcommittee (other than the Committee on Ethics 
or its subcommittees) unless the House by majority vote 
authorizes a particular committee or subcommittee, for purposes 
of a particular series of hearings on a particular article of 
legislation or on a particular subject of investigation, to 
close its hearings to Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
Commissioner by the same procedures specified in this 
subparagraph for closing hearings to the public.
    (D) The committee or subcommittee may vote by the same 
procedure described in this subparagraph to close one 
subsequent day of hearing, except that the Committee on 
Appropriations, the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee 
on Homeland Security, and the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence, and the subcommittees thereof, may vote by the 
same procedure to close up to five additional, consecutive days 
of hearings.
    (3)(A) The chair of a committee shall announce the date, 
place, and subject matter of--
          (i) a committee hearing, which may not commence 
        earlier than one week after such notice; or
          (ii) a committee meeting, which may not commence 
        earlier than the third calendar day (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays except when the 
        House is in session on such a day) on which members 
        have notice thereof.
    (B) A hearing or meeting may begin sooner than specified in 
subdivision (A) in either of the following circumstances (in 
which case the chair shall make the announcement specified in 
subdivision (A) at the earliest possible time):
          (i) the chair of the committee, with the concurrence 
        of the ranking minority member, determines that there 
        is good cause; or
          (ii) the committee so determines by majority vote in 
        the presence of the number of members required under 
        the rules of the committee for the transaction of 
        business.
    (C) An announcement made under this subparagraph shall be 
published promptly in the Daily Digest and made publicly 
available in electronic form.
    (D) This subparagraph and subparagraph (4) shall not apply 
to the Committee on Rules.
    (4) At least 24 hours prior to the commencement of a 
meeting for the markup of legislation, or at the time of an 
announcement under subparagraph (3)(B) made within 24 hours 
before such meeting, the chair of the committee shall cause the 
text of such legislation to be made publicly available in 
electronic form.
    (5)(A) Each committee shall, to the greatest extent 
practicable, require witnesses who appear before it to submit 
in advance written statements of proposed testimony and to 
limit their initial presentations to the committee to brief 
summaries thereof.
    (B) In the case of a witness appearing in a non-
governmental capacity, a written statement of proposed 
testimony shall include--
          (i) a curriculum vitae;
          (ii) a disclosure of any Federal grants or contracts, 
        or contracts, grants, or payments originating with a 
        foreign government, received during the past 36 months 
        by the witness or by an entity represented by the 
        witness and related to the subject matter of the 
        hearing; and
          (iii) a disclosure of whether the witness is a 
        fiduciary (including, but not limited to, a director, 
        officer, advisor, or resident agent) of any 
        organization or entity that has an interest in the 
        subject matter of the hearing.
    (C) The disclosure referred to in subdivision (B)(ii) shall 
include--
          (i) the amount and source of each Federal grant (or 
        subgrant thereof) or contract (or subcontract thereof) 
        related to the subject matter of the hearing; and
          (ii) the amount and country of origin of any payment 
        or contract related to the subject matter of the 
        hearing originating with a foreign government.
    (D) Such statements, with appropriate redactions to protect 
the privacy or security of the witness, shall be made publicly 
available in electronic form 24 hours before the witness 
appears to the extent practicable, but not later than one day 
after the witness appears.
    (6)(A) Except as provided in subdivision (B), a point of 
order does not lie with respect to a measure reported by a 
committee on the ground that hearings on such measure were not 
conducted in accordance with this clause.
    (B) A point of order on the ground described in subdivision 
(A) may be made by a member of the committee that reported the 
measure if such point of order was timely made and improperly 
disposed of in the committee.
    (7) This paragraph does not apply to hearings of the 
Committee on Appropriations under clause 4(a)(1) of rule X.

                          QUORUM REQUIREMENTS

    (h)(1) A measure or recommendation may not be reported by a 
committee unless a majority of the committee is actually 
present.
    (2) Each committee may fix the number of its members to 
constitute a quorum for taking testimony and receiving 
evidence, which may not be less than two.
    (3) Each committee (other than the Committee on 
Appropriations, the Committee on the Budget, and the Committee 
on Ways and Means) may fix the number of its members to 
constitute a quorum for taking any action other than one for 
which the presence of a majority of the committee is otherwise 
required, which may not be less than one-third of the members.
    (4)(A) Each committee may adopt a rule authorizing the 
chair of a committee or subcommittee--
          (i) to postpone further proceedings when a record 
        vote is ordered on the question of approving a measure 
        or matter or on adopting an amendment; and
          (ii) to resume proceedings on a postponed question at 
        any time after reasonable notice.
    (B) A rule adopted pursuant to this subparagraph shall 
provide that when proceedings resume on a postponed question, 
notwithstanding any intervening order for the previous 
question, an underlying proposition shall remain subject to 
further debate or amendment to the same extent as when the 
question was postponed.

                    LIMITATION ON COMMITTEE SITTINGS

    (i) A committee may not sit during a joint session of the 
House and Senate or during a recess when a joint meeting of the 
House and Senate is in progress.

                  CALLING AND QUESTIONING OF WITNESSES

    (j)(1) Whenever a hearing is conducted by a committee on a 
measure or matter, the minority members of the committee shall 
be entitled, upon request to the chair by a majority of them 
before the completion of the hearing, to call witnesses 
selected by the minority to testify with respect to that 
measure or matter during at least one day of hearing thereon.
    (2)(A) Subject to subdivisions (B) and (C), each committee 
shall apply the five-minute rule during the questioning of 
witnesses in a hearing until such time as each member of the 
committee who so desires has had an opportunity to question 
each witness.
    (B) A committee may adopt a rule or motion permitting a 
specified number of its members to question a witness for 
longer than five minutes. The time for extended questioning of 
a witness under this subdivision shall be equal for the 
majority party and the minority party and may not exceed one 
hour in the aggregate.
    (C) A committee may adopt a rule or motion permitting 
committee staff for its majority and minority party members to 
question a witness for equal specified periods. The time for 
extended questioning of a witness under this subdivision shall 
be equal for the majority party and the minority party and may 
not exceed one hour in the aggregate.

                           HEARING PROCEDURES

    (k)(1) The chair at a hearing shall announce in an opening 
statement the subject of the hearing.
    (2) A copy of the committee rules and of this clause shall 
be made available to each witness on request.
    (3) Witnesses at hearings may be accompanied by their own 
counsel for the purpose of advising them concerning their 
constitutional rights.
    (4) The chair may punish breaches of order and decorum, and 
of professional ethics on the part of counsel, by censure and 
exclusion from the hearings; and the committee may cite the 
offender to the House for contempt.
    (5) Whenever it is asserted by a member of the committee 
that the evidence or testimony at a hearing may tend to defame, 
degrade, or incriminate any person, or it is asserted by a 
witness that the evidence or testimony that the witness would 
give at a hearing may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
the witness--
          (A) notwithstanding paragraph (g)(2), such testimony 
        or evidence shall be presented in executive session if, 
        in the presence of the number of members required under 
        the rules of the committee for the purpose of taking 
        testimony, the committee determines by vote of a 
        majority of those present that such evidence or 
        testimony may tend to defame, degrade, or incriminate 
        any person; and
          (B) the committee shall proceed to receive such 
        testimony in open session only if the committee, a 
        majority being present, determines that such evidence 
        or testimony will not tend to defame, degrade, or 
        incriminate any person.
    In either case the committee shall afford such person an 
opportunity voluntarily to appear as a witness, and receive and 
dispose of requests from such person to subpoena additional 
witnesses.
    (6) Except as provided in subparagraph (5), the chair shall 
receive and the committee shall dispose of requests to subpoena 
additional witnesses.
    (7) Evidence or testimony taken in executive session, and 
proceedings conducted in executive session, may be released or 
used in public sessions only when authorized by the committee, 
a majority being present.
    (8) In the discretion of the committee, witnesses may 
submit brief and pertinent sworn statements in writing for 
inclusion in the record. The committee is the sole judge of the 
pertinence of testimony and evidence adduced at its hearing.
    (9) A witness may obtain a transcript copy of the testimony 
of such witness given at a public session or, if given at an 
executive session, when authorized by the committee.

        SUPPLEMENTAL, MINORITY, ADDITIONAL, OR DISSENTING VIEWS

    (l) If at the time of approval of a measure or matter by a 
committee (other than the Committee on Rules) a member of the 
committee gives notice of intention to file supplemental, 
minority, additional, or dissenting views for inclusion in the 
report to the House thereon, all members shall be entitled to 
not less than two additional calendar days after the day of 
such notice (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays 
except when the House is in session on such a day) to file such 
written and signed views (including in electronic form) with 
the clerk of the committee.

                  POWER TO SIT AND ACT; SUBPOENA POWER

    (m)(1) For the purpose of carrying out any of its functions 
and duties under this rule and rule X (including any matters 
referred to it under clause 2 of rule XII), a committee or 
subcommittee is authorized (subject to subparagraph (3)(A))--
          (A) to sit and act at such times and places within 
        the United States, whether the House is in session, has 
        recessed, or has adjourned, and to hold such hearings 
        as it considers necessary; and
          (B) to require, by subpoena or otherwise, the 
        attendance and testimony of such witnesses and the 
        production of such books, records, correspondence, 
        memoranda, papers, and documents as it considers 
        necessary.
    (2) The chair of the committee, or a member designated by 
the chair, may administer oaths to witnesses.
    (3)(A)(i) Except as provided in subdivision (A)(ii), a 
subpoena may be authorized and issued by a committee or 
subcommittee under subparagraph (1)(B) in the conduct of an 
investigation or series of investigations or activities only 
when authorized by the committee or subcommittee, a majority 
being present. The power to authorize and issue subpoenas under 
subparagraph (1)(B) may be delegated to the chair of the 
committee under such rules and under such limitations as the 
committee may prescribe. Authorized subpoenas shall be signed 
by the chair of the committee or by a member designated by the 
committee.
    (ii) In the case of a subcommittee of the Committee on 
Ethics, a subpoena may be authorized and issued only by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of its members.
    (B) A subpoena duces tecum may specify terms of return 
other than at a meeting or hearing of the committee or 
subcommittee authorizing the subpoena.
    (C) Compliance with a subpoena issued by a committee or 
subcommittee under subparagraph (1)(B) may be enforced only as 
authorized or directed by the House.
    (D) Subpoenas for documents or testimony may be issued to 
any person or entity, whether governmental, public, or private, 
within the United States, including, but not limited to, the 
President, and the Vice President, whether current or former, 
in a personal or official capacity, as well as the White House, 
the Office of the President, the Executive Office of the 
President, and any individual currently or formerly employed in 
the White House, Office of the President, or Executive Office 
of the President.
    (n)(1) Each standing committee, or a subcommittee thereof, 
shall hold at least one hearing during each 120-day period 
following the establishment of the committee on the topic of 
waste, fraud, abuse, or mismanagement in Government programs 
which that committee may authorize.
    (2) A hearing described in subparagraph (1) shall include a 
focus on the most egregious instances of waste, fraud, abuse, 
or mismanagement as documented by any report the committee has 
received from a Federal Office of the Inspector General or the 
Comptroller General of the United States.
    (o) Each committee, or a subcommittee thereof, shall hold 
at least one hearing in any session in which the committee has 
received disclaimers of agency financial statements from 
auditors of any Federal agency that the committee may authorize 
to hear testimony on such disclaimers from representatives of 
any such agency.
    (p) Each standing committee, or a subcommittee thereof, 
shall hold at least one hearing on issues raised by reports 
issued by the Comptroller General of the United States 
indicating that Federal programs or operations that the 
committee may authorize are at high risk for waste, fraud, and 
mismanagement, known as the ``high-risk list'' or the ``high-
risk series.''

                          COMMITTEE ON ETHICS

    3. (a) The Committee on Ethics has the following functions:
          (1) The committee may recommend to the House from 
        time to time such administrative actions as it may 
        consider appropriate to establish or enforce standards 
        of official conduct for Members, Delegates, the 
        Resident Commissioner, officers, and employees of the 
        House. A letter of reproval or other administrative 
        action of the committee pursuant to an investigation 
        under subparagraph (2) shall only be issued or 
        implemented as a part of a report required by such 
        subparagraph.
          (2) The committee may investigate, subject to 
        paragraph (b), an alleged violation by a Member, 
        Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee 
        of the House of the Code of Official Conduct or of a 
        law, rule, regulation, or other standard of conduct 
        applicable to the conduct of such Member, Delegate, 
        Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee in the 
        performance of the duties or the discharge of the 
        responsibilities of such individual. After notice and 
        hearing (unless the right to a hearing is waived by the 
        Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or 
        employee), the committee shall report to the House its 
        findings of fact and recommendations, if any, for the 
        final disposition of any such investigation and such 
        action as the committee may consider appropriate in the 
        circumstances.
          (3) The committee may report to the appropriate 
        Federal or State authorities, either with the approval 
        of the House or by an affirmative vote of two-thirds of 
        the members of the committee, any substantial evidence 
        of a violation by a Member, Delegate, Resident 
        Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House, of a 
        law applicable to the performance of the duties or the 
        discharge of the responsibilities of such individual 
        that may have been disclosed in a committee 
        investigation.
          (4) The committee may consider the request of a 
        Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or 
        employee of the House for an advisory opinion with 
        respect to the general propriety of any current or 
        proposed conduct of such Member, Delegate, Resident 
        Commissioner, officer, or employee. With appropriate 
        deletions to ensure the privacy of the person 
        concerned, the committee may publish such opinion for 
        the guidance of other Members, Delegates, the Resident 
        Commissioner, officers, and employees of the House.
          (5) The committee may consider the request of a 
        Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or 
        employee of the House for a written waiver in 
        exceptional circumstances with respect to clause 4 of 
        rule XXIII.
          (6)(A) The committee shall offer annual ethics 
        training to each Member, Delegate, Resident 
        Commissioner, officer, and employee of the House. Such 
        training shall--
                  (i) involve the classes of employees for whom 
                the committee determines such training to be 
                appropriate; and
                  (ii) include such knowledge of the Code of 
                Official Conduct and related House rules as may 
                be determined appropriate by the committee.
          (B)(i) A new Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, 
        officer, or employee of the House shall receive 
        training under this paragraph not later than 60 days 
        after beginning service to the House.
          (ii) Not later than January 31 of each year, each 
        Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, and 
        employee of the House shall file a certification with 
        the committee that the Member, Delegate, Resident 
        Commissioner, officer, or employee attended ethics 
        training in the last year as established by this 
        subparagraph.
    (b)(1)(A) Unless approved by an affirmative vote of a 
majority of its members, the Committee on Ethics may not report 
a resolution, report, recommendation, or advisory opinion 
relating to the official conduct of a Member, Delegate, 
Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House, or, 
except as provided in subparagraph (2), undertake an 
investigation of such conduct.
    (B)(i) Upon the receipt of information offered as a 
complaint that is in compliance with this rule and the rules of 
the committee, the chair and ranking minority member jointly 
may appoint members to serve as an investigative subcommittee.
    (ii) The chair and ranking minority member of the committee 
jointly may gather additional information concerning alleged 
conduct that is the basis of a complaint or of information 
offered as a complaint until they have established an 
investigative subcommittee or either of them has placed on the 
agenda of the committee the issue of whether to establish an 
investigative subcommittee.
    (2) Except in the case of an investigation undertaken by 
the committee on its own initiative, the committee may 
undertake an investigation relating to the official conduct of 
an individual Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, 
or employee of the House only--
          (A) upon receipt of information offered as a 
        complaint, in writing and under oath, from a Member, 
        Delegate, or Resident Commissioner and transmitted to 
        the committee by such Member, Delegate, or Resident 
        Commissioner;
          (B) upon receipt of information offered as a 
        complaint, in writing and under oath, from a person not 
        a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner provided 
        that a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner 
        certifies in writing to the committee that such Member, 
        Delegate, or Resident Commissioner believes the 
        information is submitted in good faith and warrants the 
        review and consideration of the committee; or
          (C) upon receipt of a report regarding a referral 
        from the board of the Office of Congressional Ethics. 
        If a complaint is not disposed of within the applicable 
        periods set forth in the rules of the Committee on 
        Ethics, the chair and ranking minority member shall 
        establish jointly an investigative subcommittee and 
        forward the complaint, or any portion thereof, to that 
        subcommittee for its consideration. However, if at any 
        time during those periods either the chair or ranking 
        minority member places on the agenda the issue of 
        whether to establish an investigative subcommittee, 
        then an investigative subcommittee may be established 
        only by an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
        members of the committee.
    (3) The committee may not undertake an investigation of an 
alleged violation of a law, rule, regulation, or standard of 
conduct that was not in effect at the time of the alleged 
violation. The committee may not undertake an investigation of 
such an alleged violation that occurred before the third 
previous Congress unless the committee determines that the 
alleged violation is directly related to an alleged violation 
that occurred in a more recent Congress.
    (4) A member of the committee shall be ineligible to 
participate as a member of the committee in a committee 
proceeding relating to the member's official conduct. Whenever 
a member of the committee is ineligible to act as a member of 
the committee under the preceding sentence, the Speaker shall 
designate a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner from the 
same political party as the ineligible member to act in any 
proceeding of the committee relating to that conduct.
    (5) A member of the committee may seek disqualification 
from participating in an investigation of the conduct of a 
Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee 
of the House upon the submission in writing and under oath of 
an affidavit of disqualification stating that the member cannot 
render an impartial and unbiased decision in the case in which 
the member seeks to be disqualified. If the committee approves 
and accepts such affidavit of disqualification, the chair shall 
so notify the Speaker and request the Speaker to designate a 
Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner from the same 
political party as the disqualifying member to act in any 
proceeding of the committee relating to that case.
    (6) Information or testimony received, or the contents of a 
complaint or the fact of its filing, may not be publicly 
disclosed by any committee or staff member unless specifically 
authorized in each instance by a vote of the full committee.
    (7) The committee shall have the functions designated in 
titles I and V of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, in 
sections 7342, 7351, and 7353 of title 5, United States Code, 
and in clause 11(g)(4) of rule X.
    (8)(A) Except as provided by subdivisions (B), (C), and 
(D), not later than 45 calendar days or 5 legislative days, 
whichever is later, after receipt of a written report and any 
findings and supporting documentation regarding a referral from 
the board of the Office of Congressional Ethics or of a 
referral of the matter from the board pursuant to a request 
under paragraph (r), the chair of the Committee on Ethics shall 
make public the written report and findings of the board unless 
the chair and ranking member, acting jointly, decide or the 
committee votes to withhold such information for not more than 
one additional period of the same duration, in which case the 
chair shall--
          (i) upon the termination of such additional period, 
        make public the written report and findings; and
          (ii) upon the day of such decision or vote, make a 
        public statement that the matter, relating to the 
        referral made by the board of the Office of 
        Congressional Ethics regarding the Member, Delegate, 
        Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee of the 
        House who is the subject of the applicable referral, 
        has been extended. At least one calendar day before the 
        committee makes public any written report and findings 
        of the board, the chair shall notify such board and the 
        applicable Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, 
        officer, or employee of that fact and transmit to such 
        individual a copy of the statement on the committee's 
        disposition of, and any committee report on, the 
        matter.
    (B)(i) Notwithstanding subdivision (A)(i), if the committee 
votes to dismiss a matter which is the subject of a referral 
from the board of the Office of Congressional Ethics, the 
committee is not required to make public the written report and 
findings described in such subdivision unless the committee's 
vote is inconsistent with the recommendation of the board. For 
purposes of the previous sentence, a vote by the committee to 
dismiss a matter is not inconsistent with a report from the 
board respecting the matter as unresolved due to a tie vote.
    (ii) Notwithstanding subdivision (A)(ii), if the board 
transmits a report respecting any matter with a recommendation 
to dismiss or as unresolved due to a tie vote, and the matter 
is extended for an additional period as provided in subdivision 
(A), the committee is not required to make a public statement 
that the matter has been extended.
    (iii) Except as provided by subdivision (E), if the 
committee establishes an investigative subcommittee respecting 
any such matter, then the report and findings of the board 
shall not be made public until the conclusion of the 
investigative subcommittee process and the committee shall 
issue a public statement of the establishment of an 
investigative subcommittee, which statement shall include the 
name of the applicable Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, 
officer, or employee, and shall set forth the alleged 
violation. If any such investigative subcommittee does not 
conclude its review within one year after the board transmits a 
report respecting any matter, then the committee shall make 
public the report and upon the expiration of the Congress in 
which the report is made public, the committee shall make 
public any findings.
    (C)(i) If, after receipt of a written report and any 
findings and supporting documentation regarding a referral from 
the board of the Office of Congressional Ethics or of a 
referral of the matter from the board pursuant to a request 
under paragraph (r), the committee agrees to a request from an 
appropriate law enforcement or regulatory authority to defer 
taking action on the matter--
          (I) notwithstanding subdivision (A)(i), the committee 
        is not required to make public the written report and 
        findings described in such subdivision, except that if 
        the recommendation of the board with respect to the 
        report is that the matter requires further review, the 
        committee shall make public the written report but not 
        the findings; and
          (II) before the end of the first day (excluding 
        Saturdays, Sundays, and public holidays) after the day 
        that the committee agrees to the request, the committee 
        shall make a public statement that it is deferring 
        taking action on the matter at the request of such 
        authority.
    (ii) If, upon the expiration of the one-year period that 
begins on the date the committee makes the public statement 
described in item (i)(II), the committee has not acted on the 
matter, the committee shall make a new public statement that it 
is still deferring taking action on the matter, and shall make 
a new statement upon the expiration of each succeeding one-year 
period during which the committee has not acted on the matter.
    (D) The committee may not receive any referral from the 
board of the Office of Congressional Ethics within 60 days 
before a Federal, State, or local election in which the subject 
of the referral is a candidate. The committee may delay any 
reporting requirement under this subparagraph that falls within 
that 60-day period until the end of such period and in that 
case, for purposes of subdivision (A), days within the 60-day 
period shall not be counted.
    (E) If, at the close of any applicable period for a 
reporting requirement under this subparagraph with respect to a 
referral from the board of the Office of Congressional Ethics, 
the vote of the committee is a tie or the committee fails to 
act, the report and the findings of the board shall be made 
public by the committee, along with a public statement by the 
chair explaining the status of the matter.
    (9) Whenever a Member, Delegate, or the Resident 
Commissioner is indicted or otherwise formally charged with 
criminal conduct in a court of the United States or any State, 
the Committee on Ethics shall, not later than 30 days after the 
date of such indictment or charge--
          (A) empanel an investigative subcommittee to review 
        the allegations; or
          (B) submit a report to the House describing its 
        reasons for not empaneling such an investigative 
        subcommittee, together with the actions, if any, the 
        committee has taken in response to the allegations.
    (c)(1) Notwithstanding clause 2(g)(1) of rule XI, each 
meeting of the Committee on Ethics or a subcommittee thereof 
shall occur in executive session unless the committee or 
subcommittee, by an affirmative vote of a majority of its 
members, opens the meeting to the public.
    (2) Notwithstanding clause 2(g)(2) of rule XI, each hearing 
of an adjudicatory subcommittee or sanction hearing of the 
Committee on Ethics shall be held in open session unless the 
committee or subcommittee, in open session by an affirmative 
vote of a majority of its members, closes all or part of the 
remainder of the hearing on that day to the public.
    (d) Before a member, officer, or employee of the Committee 
on Ethics, including members of a subcommittee of the committee 
selected under clause 5(a)(4) of rule X and shared staff, may 
have access to information that is confidential under the rules 
of the committee, the following oath (or affirmation) shall be 
executed:

          ``I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will not 
        disclose, to any person or entity outside the Committee 
        on Ethics, any information received in the course of my 
        service with the committee, except as authorized by the 
        committee or in accordance with its rules.''

    Copies of the executed oath shall be retained by the Clerk 
as part of the records of the House. This paragraph establishes 
a standard of conduct within the meaning of paragraph (a)(2). 
Breaches of confidentiality shall be investigated by the 
Committee on Ethics and appropriate action shall be taken.
    (e)(1) If a complaint or information offered as a complaint 
is deemed frivolous by an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
members of the Committee on Ethics, the committee may take such 
action as it, by an affirmative vote of a majority of its 
members, considers appropriate in the circumstances.
    (2) Complaints filed before the One Hundred Fifth Congress 
may not be deemed frivolous by the Committee on Ethics.

                           COMMITTEE AGENDAS

    (f) The committee shall adopt rules providing that the 
chair shall establish the agenda for meetings of the committee, 
but shall not preclude the ranking minority member from placing 
any item on the agenda.

                            COMMITTEE STAFF

    (g)(1) The committee shall adopt rules providing that--
          (A) the staff be assembled and retained as a 
        professional, nonpartisan staff;
          (B) each member of the staff shall be professional 
        and demonstrably qualified for the position for which 
        hired;
          (C) the staff as a whole and each member of the staff 
        shall perform all official duties in a nonpartisan 
        manner;
          (D) no member of the staff shall engage in any 
        partisan political activity directly affecting any 
        congressional or presidential election;
          (E) no member of the staff or outside counsel may 
        accept public speaking engagements or write for 
        publication on any subject that is in any way related 
        to the employment or duties with the committee of such 
        individual without specific prior approval from the 
        chair and ranking minority member; and
          (F) no member of the staff or outside counsel may 
        make public, unless approved by an affirmative vote of 
        a majority of the members of the committee, any 
        information, document, or other material that is 
        confidential, derived from executive session, or 
        classified and that is obtained during the course of 
        employment with the committee.
    (2) Only subdivisions (C), (E), and (F) of subparagraph (1) 
shall apply to shared staff.
    (3)(A) All staff members shall be appointed by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the committee. 
Such vote shall occur at the first meeting of the membership of 
the committee during each Congress and as necessary during the 
Congress.
    (B) Subject to the approval of the Committee on House 
Administration, the committee may retain counsel not employed 
by the House of Representatives whenever the committee 
determines, by an affirmative vote of a majority of the members 
of the committee, that the retention of outside counsel is 
necessary and appropriate.
    (C) If the committee determines that it is necessary to 
retain staff members for the purpose of a particular 
investigation or other proceeding, then such staff shall be 
retained only for the duration of that particular investigation 
or proceeding.
    (D) Outside counsel may be dismissed before the end of a 
contract between the committee and such counsel only by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the committee.
    (4) In addition to any other staff provided for by law, 
rule, or other authority, with respect to the committee, the 
chair and ranking minority member each may appoint one 
individual as a shared staff member from the respective 
personal staff of the chair or ranking minority member to 
perform service for the committee. Such shared staff may assist 
the chair or ranking minority member on any subcommittee on 
which the chair or ranking minority member serves.

                         MEETINGS AND HEARINGS

    (h) The committee shall adopt rules providing that--
          (1) all meetings or hearings of the committee or any 
        subcommittee thereof, other than any hearing held by an 
        adjudicatory subcommittee or any sanction hearing held 
        by the committee, shall occur in executive session 
        unless the committee or subcommittee by an affirmative 
        vote of a majority of its members opens the meeting or 
        hearing to the public; and
          (2) any hearing held by an adjudicatory subcommittee 
        or any sanction hearing held by the committee shall be 
        open to the public unless the committee or subcommittee 
        by an affirmative vote of a majority of its members 
        closes the hearing to the public.

                           PUBLIC DISCLOSURE

    (i) The committee shall adopt rules providing that, unless 
otherwise determined by a vote of the committee, only the chair 
or ranking minority member, after consultation with each other, 
may make public statements regarding matters before the 
committee or any subcommittee thereof.

                 REQUIREMENTS TO CONSTITUTE A COMPLAINT

    (j) The committee shall adopt rules regarding complaints to 
provide that whenever information offered as a complaint is 
submitted to the committee, the chair and ranking minority 
member shall have 14 calendar days or five legislative days, 
whichever is sooner, to determine whether the information meets 
the requirements of the rules of the committee for what 
constitutes a complaint.

 DUTIES OF CHAIR AND RANKING MINORITY MEMBER REGARDING PROPERLY FILED 
                               COMPLAINTS

    (k)(1) The committee shall adopt rules providing that 
whenever the chair and ranking minority member jointly 
determine that information submitted to the committee meets the 
requirements of the rules of the committee for what constitutes 
a complaint, they shall have 45 calendar days or five 
legislative days, whichever is later, after that determination 
(unless the committee by an affirmative vote of a majority of 
its members votes otherwise) to--
          (A) recommend to the committee that it dispose of the 
        complaint, or any portion thereof, in any manner that 
        does not require action by the House, which may include 
        dismissal of the complaint or resolution of the 
        complaint by a letter to the Member, Delegate, Resident 
        Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House against 
        whom the complaint is made;
          (B) establish an investigative subcommittee; or
          (C) request that the committee extend the applicable 
        45-calendar day or five-legislative day period by one 
        additional 45-calendar day period when they determine 
        more time is necessary in order to make a 
        recommendation under subdivision (A).
    (2) The committee shall adopt rules providing that if the 
chair and ranking minority member jointly determine that 
information submitted to the committee meets the requirements 
of the rules of the committee for what constitutes a complaint, 
and the complaint is not disposed of within the applicable time 
periods under subparagraph (1), then they shall establish an 
investigative subcommittee and forward the complaint, or any 
portion thereof, to that subcommittee for its consideration. 
However, if, at any time during those periods, either the chair 
or ranking minority member places on the agenda the issue of 
whether to establish an investigative subcommittee, then an 
investigative subcommittee may be established only by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the committee.

 DUTIES OF CHAIR AND RANKING MINORITY MEMBER REGARDING INFORMATION NOT 
                        CONSTITUTING A COMPLAINT

    (l) The committee shall adopt rules providing that whenever 
the chair and ranking minority member jointly determine that 
information submitted to the committee does not meet the 
requirements of the rules of the committee for what constitutes 
a complaint, they may--
          (1) return the information to the complainant with a 
        statement that it fails to meet the requirements of the 
        rules of the committee for what constitutes a 
        complaint; or
          (2) recommend to the committee that it authorize the 
        establishment of an investigative subcommittee.

              INVESTIGATIVE AND ADJUDICATORY SUBCOMMITTEES

    (m) The committee shall adopt rules providing that--
          (1)(A) an investigative subcommittee shall be 
        composed of four Members, Delegates, or the Resident 
        Commissioner (with equal representation from the 
        majority and minority parties) whenever such a 
        subcommittee is established pursuant to the rules of 
        the committee;
          (B) an adjudicatory subcommittee shall be composed of 
        the members of the committee who did not serve on the 
        pertinent investigative subcommittee (with equal 
        representation from the majority and minority parties) 
        whenever such a subcommittee is established pursuant to 
        the rules of the committee; and
          (C) notwithstanding any other provision of this 
        clause, the chair and ranking minority member of the 
        committee may consult with an investigative 
        subcommittee either on their own initiative or on the 
        initiative of the subcommittee, shall have access to 
        information before a subcommittee with which they so 
        consult, and shall not thereby be precluded from 
        serving as full, voting members of any adjudicatory 
        subcommittee;
          (2) at the time of appointment, the chair shall 
        designate one member of a subcommittee to serve as 
        chair and the ranking minority member shall designate 
        one member of the subcommittee to serve as the ranking 
        minority member; and
          (3) the chair and ranking minority member of the 
        committee may serve as members of an investigative 
        subcommittee, but may not serve as non-voting, ex 
        officio members.

    STANDARD OF PROOF FOR ADOPTION OF STATEMENT OF ALLEGED VIOLATION

    (n) The committee shall adopt rules to provide that an 
investigative subcommittee may adopt a statement of alleged 
violation only if it determines by an affirmative vote of a 
majority of the members of the subcommittee that there is 
substantial reason to believe that a violation of the Code of 
Official Conduct, or of a law, rule, regulation, or other 
standard of conduct applicable to the performance of official 
duties or the discharge of official responsibilities by a 
Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee 
of the House of Representatives, has occurred.

                          SUBCOMMITTEE POWERS

    (o)(1) The committee shall adopt rules providing that an 
investigative subcommittee or an adjudicatory subcommittee may 
authorize and issue subpoenas only when authorized by an 
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the 
subcommittee.
    (2) The committee shall adopt rules providing that an 
investigative subcommittee may, upon an affirmative vote of a 
majority of its members, expand the scope of its investigation 
when approved by an affirmative vote of a majority of the 
members of the committee.
    (3) The committee shall adopt rules to provide that--
          (A) an investigative subcommittee may, upon an 
        affirmative vote of a majority of its members, amend 
        its statement of alleged violation anytime before the 
        statement of alleged violation is transmitted to the 
        committee; and
          (B) if an investigative subcommittee amends its 
        statement of alleged violation, the respondent shall be 
        notified in writing and shall have 30 calendar days 
        from the date of that notification to file an answer to 
        the amended statement of alleged violation.

                   DUE PROCESS RIGHTS OF RESPONDENTS

    (p) The committee shall adopt rules to provide that--
          (1) not less than 10 calendar days before a scheduled 
        vote by an investigative subcommittee on a statement of 
        alleged violation, the subcommittee shall provide the 
        respondent with a copy of the statement of alleged 
        violation it intends to adopt together with all 
        evidence it intends to use to prove those charges which 
        it intends to adopt, including documentary evidence, 
        witness testimony, memoranda of witness interviews, and 
        physical evidence, unless the subcommittee by an 
        affirmative vote of a majority of its members decides 
        to withhold certain evidence in order to protect a 
        witness; but if such evidence is withheld, the 
        subcommittee shall inform the respondent that evidence 
        is being withheld and of the count to which such 
        evidence relates;
          (2) neither the respondent nor the counsel of the 
        respondent shall, directly or indirectly, contact the 
        subcommittee or any member thereof during the period of 
        time set forth in paragraph (1) except for the sole 
        purpose of settlement discussions where counsel for the 
        respondent and the subcommittee are present;
          (3) if, at any time after the issuance of a statement 
        of alleged violation, the committee or any subcommittee 
        thereof determines that it intends to use evidence not 
        provided to a respondent under paragraph (1) to prove 
        the charges contained in the statement of alleged 
        violation (or any amendment thereof), such evidence 
        shall be made immediately available to the respondent, 
        and it may be used in any further proceeding under the 
        rules of the committee;
          (4) evidence provided pursuant to paragraph (1) or 
        (3) shall be made available to the respondent and the 
        counsel of the respondent only after each agrees, in 
        writing, that no document, information, or other 
        materials obtained pursuant to that paragraph shall be 
        made public until--
                  (A) such time as a statement of alleged 
                violation is made public by the committee if 
                the respondent has waived the adjudicatory 
                hearing; or
                  (B) the commencement of an adjudicatory 
                hearing if the respondent has not waived an 
                adjudicatory hearing; but the failure of 
                respondent and the counsel of the respondent to 
                so agree in writing, and their consequent 
                failure to receive the evidence, shall not 
                preclude the issuance of a statement of alleged 
                violation at the end of the period referred to 
                in paragraph (1);
          (5) a respondent shall receive written notice 
        whenever--
                  (A) the chair and ranking minority member 
                determine that information the committee has 
                received constitutes a complaint;
                  (B) a complaint or allegation is transmitted 
                to an investigative subcommittee;
                  (C) an investigative subcommittee votes to 
                authorize its first subpoena or to take 
                testimony under oath, whichever occurs first; 
                or
                  (D) an investigative subcommittee votes to 
                expand the scope of its investigation;
          (6) whenever an investigative subcommittee adopts a 
        statement of alleged violation and a respondent enters 
        into an agreement with that subcommittee to settle a 
        complaint on which that statement is based, that 
        agreement, unless the respondent requests otherwise, 
        shall be in writing and signed by the respondent and 
        respondent's counsel, the chair and ranking minority 
        member of the subcommittee, and the outside counsel, if 
        any;
          (7) statements or information derived solely from a 
        respondent or the counsel of a respondent during any 
        settlement discussions between the committee or a 
        subcommittee thereof and the respondent shall not be 
        included in any report of the subcommittee or the 
        committee or otherwise publicly disclosed without the 
        consent of the respondent; and
          (8) whenever a motion to establish an investigative 
        subcommittee does not prevail, the committee shall 
        promptly send a letter to the respondent informing the 
        respondent of such vote.

                    COMMITTEE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

    (q) The committee shall adopt rules to provide that--
          (1) whenever an investigative subcommittee does not 
        adopt a statement of alleged violation and transmits a 
        report to that effect to the committee, the committee 
        may by an affirmative vote of a majority of its members 
        transmit such report to the House of Representatives;
    (2) whenever an investigative subcommittee adopts a 
statement of alleged violation, the respondent admits to the 
violations set forth in such statement, the respondent waives 
the right to an adjudicatory hearing, and the respondent's 
waiver is approved by the committee--
          (A) the subcommittee shall prepare a report for 
        transmittal to the committee, a final draft of which 
        shall be provided to the respondent not less than 15 
        calendar days before the subcommittee votes on whether 
        to adopt the report;
          (B) the respondent may submit views in writing 
        regarding the final draft to the subcommittee within 
        seven calendar days of receipt of that draft;
          (C) the subcommittee shall transmit a report to the 
        committee regarding the statement of alleged violation 
        together with any views submitted by the respondent 
        pursuant to subdivision (B), and the committee shall 
        make the report together with the respondent's views 
        available to the public before the commencement of any 
        sanction hearing; and
          (D) the committee shall by an affirmative vote of a 
        majority of its members issue a report and transmit 
        such report to the House of Representatives, together 
        with the respondent's views previously submitted 
        pursuant to subdivision (B) and any additional views 
        respondent may submit for attachment to the final 
        report; and (3) members of the committee shall have not 
        less than 72 hours to review any report transmitted to 
        the committee by an investigative subcommittee before 
        both the commencement of a sanction hearing and the 
        committee vote on whether to adopt the report.
    (r)(1) Upon receipt of any written notification from the 
board of the Office of Congressional Ethics that the board is 
undertaking a review of any alleged conduct of any Member, 
Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee of the 
House and if the committee is investigating such matter, the 
committee may at any time so notify the board and request that 
the board cease its review and refer the matter to the 
committee for its consideration. If at the end of the 
applicable time period (including any permissible extension) 
the committee has not reached a final resolution of the matter 
or has not referred the matter to the appropriate Federal or 
State authorities, the committee shall so notify the board of 
the Office of Congressional Ethics in writing. The committee 
may not request the same matter from the board more than one 
time.
    (2) In addition to receiving written notifications from the 
Office of Congressional Ethics under subparagraph (1), the 
committee shall adopt rules providing for a process to receive 
from the public outside information offered as a complaint. The 
process shall include the establishment of a method for the 
submission of such information to the committee in electronic 
form.
    (s) The committee may not take any action that would deny 
any person any right or protection provided under the 
Constitution of the United States.

           AUDIO AND VISUAL COVERAGE OF COMMITTEE PROCEEDINGS

    4. (a) The purpose of this clause is to provide a means, in 
conformity with acceptable standards of dignity, propriety, and 
decorum, by which committee hearings or committee meetings that 
are open to the public may be covered by audio and visual 
means--
          (1) for the education, enlightenment, and information 
        of the general public, on the basis of accurate and 
        impartial news coverage, regarding the operations, 
        procedures, and practices of the House as a legislative 
        and representative body, and regarding the measures, 
        public issues, and other matters before the House and 
        its committees, the consideration thereof, and the 
        action taken thereon; and
          (2) for the development of the perspective and 
        understanding of the general public with respect to the 
        role and function of the House under the Constitution 
        as an institution of the Federal Government.
    (b) In addition, it is the intent of this clause that audio 
and video recordings of any coverage under this clause may not 
be used for any partisan political campaign purpose or be made 
available for such use.
    (c) It is, further, the intent of this clause that the 
general conduct of each meeting (whether of a hearing or 
otherwise) covered under authority of this clause by audio or 
visual means, and the personal behavior of the committee 
members and staff, other Government officials and personnel, 
witnesses, television, radio, and press media personnel, and 
the general public at the hearing or other meeting, shall be in 
strict conformity with and observance of the acceptable 
standards of dignity, propriety, courtesy, and decorum 
traditionally observed by the House in its operations, and may 
not be such as to--
          (1) distort the objects and purposes of the hearing 
        or other meeting or the activities of committee members 
        in connection with that hearing or meeting or in 
        connection with the general work of the committee or of 
        the House; or
          (2) cast discredit or dishonor on the House, the 
        committee, or a Member, Delegate, or Resident 
        Commissioner or bring the House, the committee, or a 
        Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner into 
        disrepute.
    (d) The coverage of committee hearings and meetings by 
audio and visual means shall be permitted and conducted only in 
strict conformity with the purposes, provisions, and 
requirements of this clause.
    (e) Whenever a hearing or meeting conducted by a committee 
or subcommittee is open to the public, those proceedings shall 
be open to coverage by audio and visual means. A committee or 
subcommittee chair may not limit the number of television or 
still cameras to fewer than two representatives from each 
medium (except for legitimate space or safety considerations, 
in which case pool coverage shall be authorized).
    (f) Written rules adopted by each committee pursuant to 
clause 2(a)(1)(D) shall contain provisions to the following 
effect:
          (1) If audio or visual coverage of the hearing or 
        meeting is to be presented to the public as live 
        coverage, that coverage shall be conducted and 
        presented without commercial sponsorship.
          (2) The allocation among the television media of the 
        positions or the number of television cameras permitted 
        by a committee or subcommittee chair in a hearing or 
        meeting room shall be in accordance with fair and 
        equitable procedures devised by the Executive Committee 
        of the Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries.
          (3) Television cameras shall be placed so as not to 
        obstruct in any way the space between a witness giving 
        evidence or testimony and any member of the committee 
        or the visibility of that witness and that member to 
        each other.
          (4) Television cameras shall operate from fixed 
        positions but may not be placed in positions that 
        obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing or 
        meeting by the other media.
          (5) Equipment necessary for coverage by the 
        television and radio media may not be installed in, or 
        removed from, the hearing or meeting room while the 
        committee is in session.
          (6)(A) Except as provided in subdivision (B), 
        floodlights, spotlights, strobelights, and flashguns 
        may not be used in providing any method of coverage of 
        the hearing or meeting.
    (B) The television media may install additional lighting in 
a hearing or meeting room, without cost to the Government, in 
order to raise the ambient lighting level in a hearing or 
meeting room to the lowest level necessary to provide adequate 
television coverage of a hearing or meeting at the current 
state of the art of television coverage.
    (7) If requests are made by more of the media than will be 
permitted by a committee or subcommittee chair for coverage of 
a hearing or meeting by still photography, that coverage shall 
be permitted on the basis of a fair and equitable pool 
arrangement devised by the Standing Committee of Press 
Photographers.
    (8) Photographers may not position themselves between the 
witness table and the members of the committee at any time 
during the course of a hearing or meeting.
    (9) Photographers may not place themselves in positions 
that obstruct unnecessarily the coverage of the hearing by the 
other media.
    (10) Personnel providing coverage by the television and 
radio media shall be currently accredited to the Radio and 
Television Correspondents' Galleries.
    (11) Personnel providing coverage by still photography 
shall be currently accredited to the Press Photographers' 
Gallery.
    (12) Personnel providing coverage by the television and 
radio media and by still photography shall conduct themselves 
and their coverage activities in an orderly and unobtrusive 
manner.

                            PAY OF WITNESSES

    5. Witnesses appearing before the House or any of its 
committees shall be paid the same per diem rate as established, 
authorized, and regulated by the Committee on House 
Administration for Members, Delegates, the Resident 
Commissioner, and employees of the House, plus actual expenses 
of travel to or from the place of examination. Such per diem 
may not be paid when a witness has been summoned at the place 
of examination.

                   UNFINISHED BUSINESS OF THE SESSION

    6. All business of the House at the end of one session 
shall be resumed at the commencement of the next session of the 
same Congress in the same manner as if no adjournment had taken 
place.

                               Rule XIII


                    CALENDARS AND COMMITTEE REPORTS


                               CALENDARS

    1. (a) All business reported by committees shall be 
referred to one of the following three calendars:
          (1) A Calendar of the Committee of the Whole House on 
        the state of the Union, to which shall be referred 
        public bills and public resolutions raising revenue, 
        involving a tax or charge on the people, directly or 
        indirectly making appropriations of money or property 
        or requiring such appropriations to be made, 
        authorizing payments out of appropriations already 
        made, or releasing any liability to the United States 
        for money or property.
          (2) A House Calendar, to which shall be referred all 
        public bills and public resolutions not requiring 
        referral to the Calendar of the Committee of the Whole 
        House on the state of the Union.
          (3) A Private Calendar as provided in clause 5 of 
        rule XV, to which shall be referred all private bills 
        and private resolutions.
    (b) There is established a Calendar of Motions to Discharge 
Committees as provided in clause 2 of rule XV.
    (c) There is established a Consensus Calendar as provided 
in clause 7 of rule XV.

                     FILING AND PRINTING OF REPORTS

    2. (a)(1) Except as provided in subparagraphs (2) and (3), 
all reports of committees (other than those filed from the 
floor) shall be delivered to the Clerk for printing and 
reference to the proper calendar under the direction of the 
Speaker in accordance with clause 1. The title or subject of 
each report shall be entered on the Journal and printed in the 
Congressional Record.
    (2) A bill or resolution reported adversely (other than 
those filed as privileged) shall be laid on the table unless a 
committee to which the bill or resolution was referred requests 
at the time of the report its referral to an appropriate 
calendar under clause 1 or unless, within three days 
thereafter, a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner makes 
such a request.
    (3) All reports of committees may be delivered to the Clerk 
in electronic form.
    (b)(1) It shall be the duty of the chair of each committee 
to report or cause to be reported promptly to the House a 
measure or matter approved by the committee and to take or 
cause to be taken steps necessary to bring the measure or 
matter to a vote.
    (2) In any event, the report of a committee on a measure 
that has been approved by the committee shall be filed within 
seven calendar days (exclusive of days on which the House is 
not in session) after the day on which a written request for 
the filing of the report, signed by a majority of the members 
of the committee, has been filed with the clerk of the 
committee. The clerk of the committee shall immediately notify 
the chair of the filing of such a request. This subparagraph 
does not apply to a report of the Committee on Rules with 
respect to a rule, joint rule, or order of business of the 
House, or to the reporting of a resolution of inquiry addressed 
to the head of an executive department.
    (c) All supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting 
views filed under clause 2(l) of rule XI by one or more members 
of a committee shall be included in, and shall be a part of, 
the report filed by the committee with respect to a measure or 
matter. When time guaranteed by clause 2(l) of rule XI has 
expired (or, if sooner, when all separate views have been 
received), the committee may arrange to file its report with 
the Clerk not later than one hour after the expiration of such 
time. This clause and provisions of clause 2(l) of rule XI do 
not preclude the immediate filing or printing of a committee 
report in the absence of a timely request for the opportunity 
to file supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
as provided in clause 2(l) of rule XI.

                           CONTENT OF REPORTS

    3. (a)(1) Except as provided in subparagraph (2), the 
report of a committee on a measure or matter shall be printed 
in a single volume that--
          (A) shall include all supplemental, minority, 
        additional, or dissenting views that have been 
        submitted by the time of the filing of the report; and
          (B) shall bear on its cover a recital that any such 
        supplemental, minority, additional, or dissenting views 
        (and any material submitted under paragraph (c)(3)) are 
        included as part of the report.
    (2) A committee may file a supplemental report for the 
correction of a technical error in its previous report on a 
measure or matter. A supplemental report only correcting errors 
in the depiction of record votes under paragraph (b) may be 
filed under this subparagraph and shall not be subject to the 
requirement in clause 4 or clause 6 concerning the availability 
of reports.
    (b) With respect to each record vote on a motion to report 
a measure or matter of a public nature, and on any amendment 
offered to the measure or matter, the total number of votes 
cast for and against, and the names of members voting for and 
against, shall be included in the committee report. The 
preceding sentence does not apply to votes taken in executive 
session by the Committee on Ethics.
    (c) The report of a committee on a measure that has been 
approved by the committee shall include, separately set out and 
clearly identified, the following:
          (1) Oversight findings and recommendations under 
        clause 2(b)(1) of rule X.
          (2) The statement required by section 308(a) of the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974, except that an 
        estimate of new budget authority shall include, when 
        practicable, a comparison of the total estimated 
        funding level for the relevant programs to the 
        appropriate levels under current law.
          (3) An estimate and comparison prepared by the 
        Director of the Congressional Budget Office under 
        section 402 of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 if 
        timely submitted to the committee before the filing of 
        the report.
          (4) A statement of general performance goals and 
        objectives, including outcome-related goals and 
        objectives, for which the measure authorizes funding.
          (5) On a bill or joint resolution that establishes or 
        reauthorizes a Federal program, a statement indicating 
        whether any such program is known to be duplicative of 
        another such program, including at a minimum an 
        explanation of whether any such program was included in 
        a report to Congress pursuant to section 21 of Public 
        Law 111-139 or whether the most recent Catalog of 
        Federal Domestic Assistance (published pursuant to 
        section 6104 of title 31, United States Code) 
        identified other programs related to the program 
        established or reauthorized by the measure.
          (6)(A) On a bill or joint resolution to be considered 
        pursuant to a special order of business reported by the 
        Committee on Rules--
                  (i) a list of related committee and 
                subcommittee hearings; and
                  (ii) a designation of at least one committee 
                or subcommittee hearing that was used to 
                develop or consider such bill or joint 
                resolution.
          (B) Subdivision (A) shall not apply to a bill or 
        joint resolution--
                  (i) continuing appropriations for a fiscal 
                year; or
                  (ii) containing an emergency designation 
                under section 251(b)(2) or section 252(e) of 
                the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
                Control Act of 1985.
    (d) Each report of a committee on a public bill or public 
joint resolution shall contain the following:
          (1)(A) An estimate by the committee of the costs that 
        would be incurred in carrying out the bill or joint 
        resolution in the fiscal year in which it is reported 
        and in each of the five fiscal years following that 
        fiscal year (or for the authorized duration of any 
        program authorized by the bill or joint resolution if 
        less than five years);
          (B) a comparison of the estimate of costs described 
        in subdivision (A) made by the committee with any 
        estimate of such costs made by a Government agency and 
        submitted to such committee; and
          (C) when practicable, a comparison of the total 
        estimated funding level for the relevant programs with 
        the appropriate levels under current law.
          (2)(A) In subparagraph (1) the term ``Government 
        agency'' includes any department, agency, 
        establishment, wholly owned Government corporation, or 
        instrumentality of the Federal Government or the 
        government of the District of Columbia.
          (B) Subparagraph (1) does not apply to the Committee 
        on Appropriations, the Committee on House 
        Administration, the Committee on Rules, or the 
        Committee on Ethics, and does not apply when a cost 
        estimate and comparison prepared by the Director of the 
        Congressional Budget Office under section 402 of the 
        Congressional Budget Act of 1974 has been included in 
        the report under paragraph (c)(3).
    (e)(1) Whenever a committee reports a bill or joint 
resolution proposing to repeal or amend a statute or part 
thereof, it shall include in its report or in an accompanying 
document (showing by appropriate typographical devices the 
omissions and insertions proposed)--
          (A) the entire text of each section of a statute that 
        is proposed to be repealed; and
          (B) a comparative print of each amendment to the 
        entire text of a section of a statute that the bill or 
        joint resolution proposes to make.
    (2) If a committee reports a bill or joint resolution 
proposing to repeal or amend a statute or part thereof with a 
recommendation that the bill or joint resolution be amended, 
the comparative print required by subparagraph (1) shall 
reflect the changes in existing law proposed to be made by the 
bill or joint resolution as proposed to be amended.
    (f)(1) A report of the Committee on Appropriations on a 
general appropriation bill shall include--
          (A) a concise statement describing the effect of any 
        provision of the accompanying bill that directly or 
        indirectly changes the application of existing law; and
          (B) a list of all appropriations contained in the 
        bill for expenditures not currently authorized by law 
        for the period concerned (excepting classified 
        intelligence or national security programs, projects, 
        or activities), along with a statement of the last year 
        for which such expenditures were authorized, the level 
        of expenditures authorized for that year, the actual 
        level of expenditures for that year, and the level of 
        appropriations in the bill for such expenditures.
    (2) Whenever the Committee on Appropriations reports a bill 
or joint resolution including matter specified in clause 
1(b)(2) or (3) of rule X, it shall include--
          (A) in the bill or joint resolution, separate 
        headings for ``Rescissions'' and ``Transfers of 
        Unexpended Balances''; and
          (B) in the report of the committee, a separate 
        section listing such rescissions and transfers.
    (g) Whenever the Committee on Rules reports a resolution 
proposing to repeal or amend a standing rule of the House, it 
shall include in its report or in an accompanying document-
          (1) the text of any rule or part thereof that is 
        proposed to be repealed; and
          (2) a comparative print of any part of the resolution 
        proposing to amend the rule and of the rule or part 
        thereof proposed to be amended, showing by appropriate 
        typographical devices the omissions and insertions 
        proposed.
    (h) It shall not be in order to consider a bill or joint 
resolution reported by the Committee on Ways and Means that 
proposes to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 unless--
          (1) the report includes a tax complexity analysis 
        prepared by the Joint Committee on Taxation in 
        accordance with section 4022(b) of the Internal Revenue 
        Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998; or
          (2) the chair of the Committee on Ways and Means 
        causes such a tax complexity analysis to be printed in 
        the Congressional Record before consideration of the 
        bill or joint resolution.

                        AVAILABILITY OF REPORTS

    4. (a)(1) Except as specified in subparagraph (2), it shall 
not be in order to consider in the House a measure or matter 
reported by a committee until the proposed text of each report 
(except views referred to in clause 2(l) of rule XI) of a 
committee on that measure or matter has been available to 
Members, Delegates, and the Resident Commissioner for 72 hours.
    (2) Subparagraph (1) does not apply to--
          (A) a resolution providing a rule, joint rule, or 
        order of business reported by the Committee on Rules 
        considered under clause 6;
          (B) a resolution providing amounts from the 
        applicable accounts described in clause 1(k)(1) of rule 
        X reported by the Committee on House Administration 
        considered under clause 6 of rule X;
          (C) a resolution presenting a question of the 
        privileges of the House reported by any committee;
          (D) a measure for the declaration of war, or the 
        declaration of a national emergency, by Congress; and
          (E) a measure providing for the disapproval of a 
        decision, determination, or action by a Government 
        agency that would become, or continue to be, effective 
        unless disapproved or otherwise invalidated by one or 
        both Houses of Congress. In this subdivision the term 
        ``Government agency'' includes any department, agency, 
        establishment, wholly owned Government corporation, or 
        instrumentality of the Federal Government or of the 
        government of the District of Columbia.
    (b) A committee that reports a measure or matter shall make 
every reasonable effort to have its hearings thereon (if any) 
printed and available for distribution to Members, Delegates, 
and the Resident Commissioner before the consideration of the 
measure or matter in the House.

                     PRIVILEGED REPORTS, GENERALLY

    5. (a) The following committees shall have leave to report 
at any time on the following matters, respectively:
          (1) The Committee on Appropriations, on general 
        appropriation bills and on joint resolutions continuing 
        appropriations for a fiscal year after September 15 in 
        the preceding fiscal year.
          (2) The Committee on the Budget, on the matters 
        required to be reported by such committee under titles 
        III and IV of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
          (3) The Committee on House Administration, on 
        enrolled bills, on contested elections, on matters 
        referred to it concerning printing for the use of the 
        House or the two Houses, on expenditure of the 
        applicable accounts of the House described in clause 
        1(k)(1) of rule X, and on matters relating to 
        preservation and availability of noncurrent records of 
        the House under rule VII.
          (4) The Committee on Rules, on rules, joint rules, 
        and the order of business.
          (5) The Committee on Ethics, on resolutions 
        recommending action by the House with respect to a 
        Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or 
        employee of the House as a result of an investigation 
        by the committee relating to the official conduct of 
        such Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, 
        or employee.
    (b) A report filed from the floor, pursuant to clause 
2(a)(3), or pursuant to clause 2(c), as privileged under 
paragraph (a) may be called up as a privileged question by 
direction of the reporting committee, subject to any 
requirement concerning its availability to Members, Delegates, 
and the Resident Commissioner under clause 4 or concerning the 
timing of its consideration under clause 6.

              PRIVILEGED REPORTS BY THE COMMITTEE ON RULES

    6. (a) A report by the Committee on Rules on a rule, joint 
rule, or the order of business may not be called up for 
consideration on the same day it is presented to the House 
except--
          (1) when so determined by a vote of two-thirds of the 
        Members voting, a quorum being present;
          (2) in the case of a resolution proposing only to 
        waive a requirement of clause 4 or of clause 8 of rule 
        XXII concerning the availability of reports;
          (3) when the proposed text of such a report has been 
        made available to Members, Delegates, and the Resident 
        Commissioner prior to the convening of that legislative 
        day; or
          (4) during the last three days of a session of 
        Congress.
    (b) Pending the consideration of a report by the Committee 
on Rules on a rule, joint rule, or the order of business, the 
Speaker may entertain one motion that the House adjourn but may 
not entertain any other dilatory motion until the report shall 
have been disposed of.
    (c) The Committee on Rules may not report a rule or order 
that would prevent the motion to recommit a bill or joint 
resolution from being made as provided in clause 2(b) of rule 
XIX, if offered by the Minority Leader or a designee, except 
with respect to a Senate bill or joint resolution for which the 
text of a House-passed measure has been substituted.
    (d) The Committee on Rules shall present to the House 
reports concerning rules, joint rules, and the order of 
business, within three legislative days of the time when they 
are ordered. If such a report is not considered immediately, it 
shall be referred to the calendar. If such a report on the 
calendar is not called up by the member of the committee who 
filed the report within seven legislative days, any member of 
the committee may call it up as a privileged question on the 
day after the calendar day on which the member announces to the 
House intention to do so. The Speaker shall recognize a member 
of the committee who seeks recognition for that purpose.
    (e) An adverse report by the Committee on Rules on a 
resolution proposing a special order of business for the 
consideration of a public bill or public joint resolution may 
be called up as a privileged question by a Member, Delegate, or 
Resident Commissioner on the second and fourth Mondays of a 
month.
    (f) If the House has adopted a resolution making in order a 
motion to consider a bill or resolution, and such a motion has 
not been offered within seven calendar days thereafter, such a 
motion shall be privileged if offered by direction of all 
reporting committees having initial jurisdiction of the bill or 
resolution.
    (g) Whenever the Committee on Rules reports a resolution 
providing for the consideration of a measure, it shall to the 
maximum extent possible specify in the accompanying report any 
waiver of a point of order against the measure or against its 
consideration.

                         RESOLUTIONS OF INQUIRY

    7. A report on a resolution of inquiry addressed to the 
head of an executive department may be filed from the floor as 
privileged. If such a resolution is not reported to the House 
within 14 legislative days after its introduction, a motion to 
discharge a committee from its consideration shall be 
privileged.

                     ESTIMATES OF MAJOR LEGISLATION

    8. (a) An estimate provided by the Congressional Budget 
Office under section 402 of the Congressional Budget Act of 
1974 for any major legislation shall, to the extent 
practicable, incorporate the budgetary effects of changes in 
economic output, employment, capital stock, and other 
macroeconomic variables resulting from such legislation.
    (b) An estimate provided by the Joint Committee on Taxation 
to the Director of the Congressional Budget Office under 
section 201(f) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 for any 
major legislation shall, to the extent practicable, incorporate 
the budgetary effects of changes in economic output, 
employment, capital stock, and other macroeconomic variables 
resulting from such legislation.
    (c) An estimate referred to in this clause shall, to the 
extent practicable, include--
          (1) a qualitative assessment of the budgetary effects 
        (including macroeconomic variables described in 
        paragraphs (a) and (b)) of such legislation in the 20-
        fiscal year period beginning after the last fiscal year 
        of the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on 
        the budget that set forth appropriate levels required 
        by section 301 of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974; 
        and
          (2) an identification of the critical assumptions and 
        the source of data underlying that estimate.
    (d) As used in this clause--
          (1) the term ``major legislation'' means any bill or 
        joint resolution--
                  (A) for which an estimate is required to be 
                prepared pursuant to section 402 of the 
                Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and that 
                causes a gross budgetary effect (before 
                incorporating macroeconomic effects) in any 
                fiscal year over the years of the most recently 
                agreed to concurrent resolution on the budget 
                equal to or greater than 0.25 percent of the 
                current projected gross domestic product of the 
                United States for that fiscal year; or
                  (B) designated as such by the chair of the 
                Committee on the Budget for all direct spending 
                legislation other than revenue legislation or 
                the Member who is chair or vice chair, as 
                applicable, of the Joint Committee on Taxation 
                for revenue legislation; and
          (2) the term ``budgetary effects'' means changes in 
        revenues, outlays, and deficits.