[Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and the Rules of the House of Representatives, 116th Congress]
[116th Congress]
[House Document 115-177]
[Provisions of the Legislative Reorganization Act]
[Pages 1037-1040]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 1037]]


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                     LEGISLATIVE REORGANIZATION ACTS

                       JOINT AND SELECT COMMITTEES

                              HOUSE OFFICES


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[[Page 1038]]


[[Page 1039]]

                     EARLY ORGANIZATION OF THE HOUSE


                     LEGISLATIVE REORGANIZATION ACTS


 provisions of the legislative reorganization act of 1946 applicable to 
                               __________


                               both houses


        section 132 of the legislative reorganization act of 1946


Sec. 132. (a) <> Unless 
otherwise provided by the Congress, the two Houses shall--
                             (2 U.S.C. 198)


          (1) adjourn sine die not later than July 31 of each year; or

          (2) in the case of an odd-numbered year, provide, not later 

        than July 31 of such year, by concurrent resolution adopted in 

        each House by rollcall vote, for the adjournment of the two 

        Houses from that Friday in August which occurs at least thirty 

        days before the first Monday in September (Labor Day) of such 


        year to the second day after Labor Day.


  (b) This section shall not be applicable in any year if on July 31 of 
such year a state of war exists pursuant to a declaration of war by the 
Congress.

  The present form of this section is derived from the Legislative 
Reorganization Act of 1970 (sec. 461; 84 Stat. 1140). Before that 
revision, the 1946 Act (60 Stat. 812) provided for adjournment sine die 
of the two Houses not later than the last day of July each year except 
during time of war or a national emergency proclaimed by the President. 
Presidentially declared emergencies of May 8, 1939, May 27, 1941, and 
December 16, 1950, negated operation of the provision (see Speaker 
Rayburn, Aug. 1, 1949, p. 10486; Aug. 2, 1949, p. 10591; Aug. 4, 1949, 
p. 10778).


  The Committee on Rules has jurisdiction of matters relative to 
recesses and final adjournment of Congress (clause 1(n)(2) of rule X).


[[Page 1040]]

Houses is called up as privileged, requires a yea and nay vote for 
adoption (July 30, 1973, p. 26657), and is not debatable (July 31, 1991, 
p. 20675); but the House may adjourn by simple motion on July 31 to meet 
on August 1 (e.g., July 31, 1991, p. 20677) or may adjourn by 
declaration of the Chair enabled by a special order of business on July 
31 to meet within the limits of article I, section 5, clause 4 of the 
Constitution (e.g., July 31, 2015, p. _). In even-numbered years, and 
some odd-numbered years, the House has agreed to concurrent resolutions 
waiving the provisions of this law to provide that the two Houses shall 
not adjourn for more than three days or sine die until they have adopted 
a concurrent resolution to that effect (July 25, 1972, p. 25145; July 
24, 1974, p. 25008; July 29, 1982, pp. 18562, 18563; July 30, 1986, p. 
18146; July 29, 1994, p. 18615; July 30, 1999, p. 18763). To obviate the 
necessity to adopt a concurrent resolution waiving the requirement in 
section 132 of Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, the House has 
included the language ``in consonance with section 132(a)'' in its 
concurrent resolutions providing for an August recess (e.g., July 31, 
1997, p. 17018; July 25, 2003, p. 19752).



Sec. 1106a. Not a statutory adjournment sine die.

  Under  this 
provision of law, a concurrent resolution providing in an odd-numbered 
year for an adjournment of the two Houses from the first Friday in 
August until the second day after Labor Day or until notified to 
reassemble pursuant to a joint agreement of the Leadership of the two



        section 141 of the legislative reorganization act of 1946


                             (2 U.S.C. 145a)




Sec. 1107. Preservation of committee 
hearings.

  Sec. 141. The  Librarian of the Library of Congress is authorized and 
directed to have bound at the end of each session of Congress the 
printed hearings of testimony taken by each committee of the Congress at 
the preceding session.



  This provision became effective on August 2, 1946.