Loading AI tools
Chief record-keeper of the House From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The clerk of the United States House of Representatives is an officer of the United States House of Representatives, whose primary duty is to act as the chief record-keeper for the House.
Clerk of the United States House of Representatives | |
---|---|
United States House of Representatives | |
Type | Clerk |
Nominator | Speaker of the House |
Appointer | Elected by the House |
Term length | Pleasure of the House (nominally a two-year Congress) |
First holder | John Beckley |
Deputy | Reading Clerk of the United States House of Representatives |
Website | clerk |
Along with the other House officers, the clerk is elected every two years when the House organizes for a new Congress. The majority and minority caucuses nominate candidates for the House officer positions after the election of the Speaker. The full House adopts a resolution to elect the officers, who will begin serving after they have taken the oath of office.[1] The House Officers and Impeachment Clause of Article I, Section II states "The House of Representatives shall chuse their Speaker and other Officers".[2] The Oath or Affirmation Clause of Article VI provides that "all ... Officers ... of the United States ... shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution",[3] and pursuant to Article VI, the 1st United States Congress passed the Oath Administration Act (that remains in effect) which provides that "...the oath or affirmation [required by the sixth article of the Constitution of the United States]… shall be administered ... to the [C]lerk".[4]
The incumbent clerk is Kevin McCumber. He was elected to replace Cheryl Johnson following her resignation on June 30, 2023, during the 118th Congress.[5] Lisa Grant is a deputy clerk of the House.[6]
The Constitution of the United States[7] states in Article 1, Section 2, “The House of Representatives shall choose their Speaker and other Officers...” On April 1, 1789, when the House of Representatives convened with its first quorum,[8] its initial order of business was the election of the speaker, Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg, a representative from Pennsylvania. The next order of business was the election of the clerk, John Beckley of Virginia.
The first five clerks of the House also served as Librarian of Congress, which became a separate position in 1815. South Trimble, a former Representative from Kentucky, who served as clerk from 1911 to 1919 and again from 1931 to 1946, is the longest-tenured clerk in House history.[9]
When the newly elected members of the House gather on January 3, it is the clerk of the House who summons Representatives and convenes the new Congress for the first time. Accordingly, the clerk calls the House to order by gaveling it into session. After a prayer and the Pledge of Allegiance, the clerk then calls the roll of representatives-elect, which is done as an electronic quorum call in the modern era, and then oversees the election of a speaker. During these processes, the clerk must "preserve order and decorum and decide all questions of order," which is subject to appeal.[10]
The Speaker is then sworn in, takes the chair, administers oaths to the rest of the members-elect, and the House then proceeds with other business.
In the 19th century, the power of the preceding House clerk to organize the House played a significant role at the beginning of several congresses.[11] Following the 1838 elections, at the first meeting of the 26th Congress in December 1839, House Clerk Hugh Garland omitted the names of five Whigs from New Jersey from the roll call. After days of debate, the Whigs were not seated, effectively creating a Democratic majority in a closely divided House. Only then was the roll call completed and a Speaker elected.[11]: 15–17
In 1863, at the beginning of the 38th Congress during the Civil War, House Clerk Emerson Etheridge called the roll, excluding 16 members from five pro-Union states (Maryland, Missouri, West Virginia, Kansas, and Oregon) while including three members from Louisiana.[11]: 24 The effort failed, a motion was made to add the missing delegations, and a Speaker was then elected.[11]: 25 Edward McPherson was then elected to replace Etheridge as clerk for the 38th Congress.
Two years later, in December 1865 as the path of Reconstruction was being determined, McPherson omitted the names of members-elect from Tennessee, Virginia, and Louisiana from the roll for the 39th Congress, and allowed no interference or interruption during his call. After heated debate, in which a member-elect from Tennessee tried to gain floor recognition but was denied, a motion was made by Thaddeus Stevens to proceed to the election of Speaker, which was eventually agreed to.[11]: 26–27 This enabled the Radical Republicans to firmly control Congress, ultimately imposing stricter conditions on readmission of Southern states and enabling Congress to override many vetoes from President Andrew Johnson.
Federal law requires the clerk to notify each state government of the number of seats apportioned to the state no later than January 25 of the year immediately following each decennial census.
Rule II of the House Rules requires the clerk to:
In addition, the clerk:
On April 1, 1789, the House of Representatives convened with its first quorum. Its initial order of business was the election of the speaker, Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg, a representative from Pennsylvania. The next order of business was the election of the clerk, John Beckley of Virginia. Although the clerk's title is derived from that of the clerk of the British House of Commons, the duties are similar to those prescribed for the Secretary of the Continental Congress in March 1785.
In addition to the duties involved in organizing the House and presiding over its activities at the commencement of each Congress, the clerk is charged with a number of legislative functions; some of these, such as the constitutional requirement of maintaining the House Journal, have existed from the time of the first Congress, whereas others have been added over the years because of changes in procedure and organization.
No. | Name | State | Years |
---|---|---|---|
1a | John Beckley | Virginia | 1789–1797 |
2 | Jonathan Condy | Pennsylvania | 1797–1799 |
3 | John Holt Oswald | Pennsylvania | 1799–1801 |
1b | John Beckley | Virginia | 1801–1807 |
4 | Patrick Magruder | Maryland | 1807–1815 |
5 | Thomas Dougherty | Kentucky | 1815–1822 |
6a | Matthew Clarke | Pennsylvania | 1822–1833 |
7 | Walter Franklin | Pennsylvania | 1833–1838 |
8 | Hugh Garland | Virginia | 1838–1841 |
6b | Matthew Clarke | Pennsylvania | 1841–1843 |
9 | Caleb J. McNulty | Ohio | 1843–1845 |
10 | Benjamin Brown French | New Hampshire | 1845–1847 |
11 | Thomas Campbell | Tennessee | 1847–1850 |
12 | Richard M. Young | Illinois | 1850–1851 |
13a | John Weiss Forney | Pennsylvania | 1851–1856 |
14 | William Cullom | Tennessee | 1856–1857 |
15 | James C. Allen | Illinois | 1857–1860 |
13b | John Weiss Forney | Pennsylvania | 1860–1861 |
16 | Emerson Etheridge | Tennessee | 1861–1863 |
17a | Edward McPherson | Pennsylvania | 1863–1875 |
18 | George Adams | Kentucky | 1875–1881 |
17b | Edward McPherson | Pennsylvania | 1881–1883 |
19 | John Clark | Missouri | 1883–1889 |
17c | Edward McPherson | Pennsylvania | 1889–1891 |
20 | James Kerr | Pennsylvania | 1891–1895 |
21 | Alexander McDowell | Pennsylvania | 1895–1911 |
22a | South Trimble | Kentucky | 1911–1919 |
23 | William Tyler Page | Maryland | 1919–1931 |
22b | South Trimble | Kentucky | 1931–1946 |
24 | Harry Newlin Megill | Maryland | 1946–1947 |
25 | John Andrews | Massachusetts | 1947–1949 |
26a | Ralph Roberts | Indiana | 1949–1953 |
27 | Lyle Snader | Illinois | 1953–1955 |
26b | Ralph Roberts | Indiana | 1955–1967 |
28 | Pat Jennings | Virginia | 1967–1975 |
29 | Edmund Henshaw | Virginia | 1975–1983 |
30 | Benjamin Guthrie | Virginia | 1983–1987 |
31 | Donnald Anderson | California | 1987–1995 |
32 | Robin H. Carle | Idaho | 1995–1998 |
33 | Jeff Trandahl | South Dakota | 1999–2005 |
34a | Karen L. Haas | Maryland | 2005–2007 |
35 | Lorraine Miller | Texas | 2007–2011 |
34b | Karen L. Haas | Maryland | 2011–2019 |
36 | Cheryl L. Johnson | Louisiana | 2019–2023 |
37 | Kevin McCumber | Illinois | 2023–present |
In addition to the clerk's main office, located in H154 of the U.S. Capitol, there are nine offices that fall under the clerk's jurisdiction.
The Capitol Service Groups provide support services to the maintenance of the Republican and Democratic cloakrooms, the Lindy Claiborne Boggs Congressional Women's Reading Room, the Members and Family Committee Room, and the Capitol Prayer Room.
Pages were high school juniors who served as support staff for the U.S. House of Representatives, either for one of two school semester sessions or one of two summer sessions. The program was discontinued in 2011.
The Legislative Computer Systems office provides technical support for offices under the clerk and maintains the electronic voting system on the House floor.[13]
The Legislative Resource Center (LRC), a division of the Office of the Clerk, supports House legislative functions and keeps the public informed about the House and its legislative activities. LRC ensures that House-related information is accessible to all.[14]
LRC supplies House members with the documents under consideration on the House floor. LRC also gathers and verifies information on actions by House committees and the President of the United States regarding legislation. The data are stored in the Legislative Information Management System (LIMS), an in-house system that tracks all legislation from its introduction on the floor to its signing by the President.
Through two functions, the United States House of Representatives Library and the House Document Room, LRC serves as the repository and a disseminator of official House legislative documents and publications. The library's collection comprises more than 200,000 volumes, as well as legislative and legal databases. The House Document Room stores hard copies of legislative documents and publications from the current and two preceding congresses, and makes them available to the public upon request, free of charge.
In addition, LRC responds to inquiries from congressional staff and the public regarding legislative information about Congress.
LRC manages and serves as the customer service contact for lobbying disclosure filings, as well as public disclosure forms from all House officers, members, and staff. The center provides filers with forms and guidance on filing procedures, and responds to inquiries about disclosure from filers and others.
LRC gathers, organizes, and retains disclosure registrations and reports, and makes them accessible to the public, on-site and virtually.
LRC compiles and publishes these official lists and informational publications about the House:
LRC works with the Government Publishing Office to support congressional offices with orders for official stationery and envelopes and other print services.
The Office of Art and Archives & Office of the Historian collect, preserve, and interpret the artifacts and records of the House. The offices are responsible for the House's historical documentation, the House Collection of Fine Art and Artifacts, and the official records of the House from 1789 to the present. The House Curator and chief of the office, Farar Elliott, curates the House Collection of several thousand objects and oversees the records of the House. Together with the Historian of the House, the Office of Art and Archives oversees the institution's website.[15]
This office provides advice about employment practices and acts as legal representation for all employing authorities in the House.[13]
This office coordinates the services of the bill and enrolling clerks, the journal clerks, the tally clerks, the daily digests, and the floor action reporting.
The Office of Legislative Operations provides support pertaining to the clerk's legislative duties. Among the duties of this office are receiving and processing official papers; compiling and publishing the daily minutes of House proceedings; operating the electronic voting system and overseeing the recording of votes; preparing messages to the Senate regarding passed legislation; and reading the bills, resolutions, amendments, motions, and Presidential messages that come before the House. The Office of Legislative Operations also prepares the summaries and schedules of House activities published in the Daily Digest section of the Congressional Record.
A bill clerk receives and processes official papers including introduced bills and resolutions, amendments and additional co-sponsors.
A journal clerk compiles the daily minutes of House proceedings and publishes these in the House Journal at the end of each session. The House Journal is the official record of the proceedings maintained in accordance with Article I, Section 5 of the U.S. Constitution.[16]
A tally clerk operates the electronic voting system, oversees the recording of votes on the House floor, receives reports of committees, and prepares the Calendar of the United States House of Representatives and History of Legislation.
An enrolling clerk prepares all messages to the Senate regarding passed legislation, the official engrossed copy of all House-passed measures, and the official enrollment of all House-originated measures that have cleared both bodies of Congress.
A reading clerk is responsible for the reading of all bills, resolutions, amendments, motions and presidential messages that come before the House; reports formally to the Senate all legislative actions taken by the House.
This office processes official print orders, such as those for letterhead and envelopes, for the House and produces official House publications, including the Official List of Members, the Capitol Directory Card, and the House Telephone Directory.
This office also develops and maintains the clerk's official website and the Kids in the House web site.
This office transcribes House proceedings verbatim for publication in the Congressional Record and provides stenographic support to committees for all hearings, meetings, and mark-up sessions.[13]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.