HOUSE COMMITTEE QUORUMSClause 1 of House rule XI states that "the Rules of the House are the rules of its committees and subcommittees so far as applicable." Committee procedures are governed by the rules of the House, the rules of the committees or subcommittees and relevant House precedents. One of the most important committee principles involve those governing Member attendance at committee meetings, hearings and markups. It is important for committees to ascertain the presence of the appropriate quorum before proceeding to the pending committee business. The current minimum quorum requirements for committees as set forth in the rules of the House (clause 2 of rule XI) are as follows:
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A standing committee cannot validly report a measure unless the report was authorized at a formal meeting of the committee with a quorum of the committee actually present at the time the vote is taken. This requirement means that a majority must be contemporaneously assembled when the question is put or at some point while the vote is taken. The absence of a quorum at the time a bill is ordered reported gives rise to a point of order on the House floor. Unless a point of order is raised, the House assumes that reports from committees are authorized with a quorum present. Quorum issues raised by a point of order are often determined on the basis of information in the committee report or supplied by the chairman of the committee in question, and the Speaker may question the chairman as to the circumstances of the meeting and the number of committee members present at that meeting. Where the chairman admits that the bill was reported when a quorum was not present, the point of order against the bill on that ground will be sustained. If the point of order is sustained, the bill is automatically recommitted. A point of order that a bill was reported from a committee in the absence of a quorum is properly raised in the House when the bill is called up for consideration or pending a vote on a motion that the House resolve itself into the Committee of the Whole for the consideration of the bill.
| Committee | Quorum for Testimony | Quorum for Reporting |
| Agriculture | Majority | |
| Appropriations | Majority | |
| Armed Services | Majority | |
| Banking | Majority | |
| Budget | Majority | |
| Commerce | Majority | |
| Education | Majority | |
| Government Reform | Majority | |
| House Administration | Majority | |
| International Relations | Majority | |
| Judiciary | Majority | |
| Resources | Majority | |
| Rules | Majority | |
| Science | Majority | |
| Small Business | Majority | |
| Standards | Majority | |
| Transportation | Majority | |
| Veterans Affairs | Majority | |
| Ways and Means | Majority | |
| Intelligence | Majority |
Note: Many committees have 1/3rd voting requirements to conduct business of the committee other than hearing testimony or reporting a measure.
Marking Up a Bill - The process by which a committee or subcommittee moves through the contents of a measure, debating and voting on amendments to its provisions by revising, adding or subtracting language prior to ordering the measure reported.