September 27, 2007
This just infuriates me

Unanimous Non-Consent

September 26, 2007

Congress passes many bills without reading them. Some are prepared so close to the vote that not even their sponsors really know what's in them.

That's nothing. Now Congress can push through legislation no one reads even faster, lickety-split.

It's called "hotlining," and it was designed to get nitpicky business-y kinds of things done quickly. But recently the business has turned serious.

Here's what happens:

The Senate Majority and Minority Leaders agree to pass a bill without a vote.
They call all members of Congress on special hotlines installed in each office, giving a specified amount of time to object -- sometimes as little as 15 minutes.
If no objection is registered, the bill passes.

In a four-day period this summer, of the 153 hotline calls made, 75 were legislative measures, 61 were nominations, and 17 were post-office-naming bills. A few of these bills authorized hundreds of millions of dollars in new spending.

In a floor speech last year, Sen. Jeff Sessions from Alabama noted that these bills can be as long as 500 pages. Many staffs simply ignore the calls, he said, and "the Senator is deemed to have consented to the passage of some bill" without ever been told diddly or squat.We're not supposed to know how sausage is made.

Welcome to hotlining. Don't say "hot dog." Say "Yikes."

This is Common Sense. I'm Paul Jacob.

Sorry, no link. I get these through an email subscription

Posted by RagnarDanneskold at September 27, 2007 12:24 AM | Email This
Comments
1. These pass if no one objects? If a call isn't returned - i.e. no communication - it is treated as a "yea" vote? This is LUDICROUS!

Would they accept that on the floor? Set a time limit and if no one said anything, it would just pass and move on? I don't think so.

...According to the Library of Congress' legislative database THOMAS, of the 399 bills or resolutions passed by the Senate this year -- which range from recess adjournment resolutions to the Iraq War supplemental bill -- only 29 have been approved by a roll-call vote. The rest have been moved via unanimous consent agreements, the vast majority of which were brokered using the hotline process.

http://groups.google.com/group/openhouseproject/browse_thread/thread/acd2a72ccc95c73e

http://freegovinfo.info/node/1437

Posted by: SouthernRoots on September 27, 2007 08:37 AM
2. Where is the curmudgeonly Joel Connely now when you need him?

Posted by: swatter on September 27, 2007 04:27 PM
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