Directs the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to begin an immediate investigation into the abuse of power surrounding the inaccuracies in the process and enrollment of the Budget Reconciliation legislation (S. 1932) cleared for the President on February 1, 2006.
[Congressional Bills 109th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 687 Laid on Table in House (LTH)]
109th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 687
Raising a question of the privileges of the House.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 16, 2006
Ms. Pelosi submitted the following resolution; which was laid on the
table
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Raising a question of the privileges of the House.
Whereas the Republican Leadership has engaged in a continuing pattern of
withholding accurate information vital for Members of the House of
Representatives to have before voting on legislation, and has inserted
numerous controversial provisions into completed conference reports in
the dead of night without notifying Democratic Members of the House, the
press, or the public;
Whereas on February 1, 2006, the Republican Leadership permitted a vote on House
Resolution 653 to concur in a Senate amendment to the conference
agreement on Budget Reconciliation, despite the inclusion of inaccurate
numbers in provisions that cost the Medicare program an additional $2
billion dollars;
Whereas although the Senate Enrolling Clerk had mistakenly changed critical
numbers which had a major financial significance for Medicare, and had
notified the House of those errors two weeks prior to the vote on
February 1, the Republican Leadership deliberately chose to ignore that
notification and instead allowed the House to vote on an incorrect
version of this legislation;
Whereas the conference agreement on Budget Reconciliation passed the House by
the narrowest of margins, 216-214, with every Democrat voting in
opposition, and knowledge of this mistake may have influenced the
outcome of this vote, which is why the Republican Leadership chose not
to pursue the proper course in correcting this legislation;
Whereas as a result of the concealment of these errors in the enrollment of the
bill, the law signed by the President of the United States on February
8, 2006, is not the same as the text cleared by the House on February 1,
2006;
Whereas the effect of these actions raises serious constitutional questions and
jeopardizes the legal status of this legislation and The Washington Post
has reported: ``Now there are questions about the legality of signing a
bill the House technically did not pass'' (The Washington Post, February
9, 2006);
Whereas Republican incompetence led to numerous errors in this legislation, and
two additional errors in the Senate amendment that was agreed to by
House Resolution 653 were found by the Congressional Budget Office in a
report dated January 27, 2006, five days before the House voted on the
final conference report: ``The (conference report on Budget
Reconciliation) contains two apparent errors in legislative language:
one in section 8006 regarding direct loans to parents of postsecondary
students, and one in section 10002 regarding bankruptcy fees.'' (CBO
Report on S. 1932, January 27, 2006);
Whereas in this ongoing pattern of abuse of power, the Republican Leadership on
December 17, 2005, deliberately misled Members of the House by inserting
into a completed conference report without debate or notification a
provision granting liability protection for drug companies from cases
involving consumers injured by avian flu vaccine (HR 2863, the Defense
Appropriations Conference Report);
Whereas the Republican Leadership inserted this liability vaccine provision at
midnight, after conferees signed what they understood to be the final
document seven hours earlier, thereby breaking their word and assurances
that ``Avian Flu shall be funded at the House level, and will not
include either indemnity or compensation provisions.'' (House
Appropriations Committee Summary, December 17, 2005, 4:40 p.m.);
Whereas during passage of the Prescription Drug bill in 2003, the Republican
Leadership and the committees of jurisdiction ignored the warnings from
knowledgeable experts that the true cost of the legislation was
potentially hundreds of billions of dollars higher than the official
estimate, and intentionally misled Members of the House by withholding
information for the sole purpose of winning passage of this extremely
controversial bill by a single vote in the middle of the night; and
Whereas the Republican Leadership's culture of corruption and its repeated
efforts to thwart the normal legislative process by cutting corners,
inserting hand-written provisions into completed conference reports in
the dead of night, and rushing through legislation with major errors,
forces Members to vote on controversial legislation without thorough
time for review and must be denounced: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct shall
begin an immediate investigation into the abuse of power surrounding
the inaccuracies in the process and enrollment of the Budget
Reconciliation legislation cleared for the President on February 1,
2006.
<all>
Introduced in House
Introduced in House
QUESTION OF PRIVILEGE - Under Rule IX, Ms. Pelosi rose to a question of the privileges of the House and submitted for immediate consideration, H. Res. 687.
Considered as privileged matter. (consideration: CR H351-353; text of measure as introduced: CR H351-352)
Mr. Boehner moved to table the measure.
On motion to table the measure Agreed to by recorded vote: 219 - 187, 6 Present (Roll no. 13).
Roll Call #13 (House)Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
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