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The
Examination of Bills
in Committee
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Key Points
The vast majority of Government
and Members’ bills tabled before the National Assembly are sent for
examination to one of the six standing committees of the National Assembly.
The other committees may then be consulted on part of the bill tabled. An
ad-hoc committee may also be set up, in particular to examine bills
dealing with subjects covering the remit of two or more standing committees.
The committee shall appoint a
rapporteur from amongst its own members whose brief is to throw light on
the work of the committee by presenting a report on the bill and, where
necessary, to produce the amendments which he considers necessary.
The committee may also organize
hearings of the relevant ministers or of experts in the field. Such hearings
may be open to the press or to the general public.
After a presentation by the
rapporteur, the committee holds a general discussion on the bill and then
moves to an examination of the articles and the amendments pertaining to them.
These deliberations are outlined in the report which in particular contains a
general presentation, an analysis of each article and the ensuing debates as
well as a comparative table.
Supplementary sittings may be
organized so that the committee may give its opinion, before the discussion of
the articles in plenary sitting, on the amendments which were not submitted to
it during the examination of the report.
Six months after the coming into
force of the law, the rapporteur must present an information report to
the committee upon the publishing of the necessary rules of application.
See also files
21
and
29
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I.
– deciding upon the competent committee
Government
bills and Members’ bills which are tabled before the National Assembly,
once they have been declared admissible, are sent for examination to the
relevant standing committee. Where necessary, standing committees other
than that deemed relevant, may give an opinion on the bill in question.
1. – The
Lead committee
This
committee may be either a committee especially set up in order to examine
a given bill or one of the six standing committees of the National
Assembly.
a) Setting-up
of an
Ad-hoc
Committee
Article 43
of the Constitution appears to make the setting-up of an ad-hoc
committee the rule and referral to a standing committee the exception.
However in practice, in the vast majority of cases, a bill is referred to
a standing committee and the creation of an ad-hoc committee generally
only takes place when the subject of a bill concerns several different
standing committees.
From a
formal point of view, article 30, paragraph 2, and article 31 of the Rules
of Procedure of the National Assembly state that an ad-hoc
committee may be set up, as of right, when the Government so requests or
when one or several chairmen of political groups representing an absolute
majority of M.P.s ask for it. It may also be requested by the chairman of
a standing committee, the chairman of a political group or by at least
thirty M.P.s. Such a request is deemed to be adopted if no objection has
been submitted by the Government, by the chairman of a standing committee
or by the chairman of a political group. When such an objection is
submitted, the National Assembly is required to vote on it after a short
debate.
The
membership of an ad-hoc committee is restricted to 57 M.P.s and the
number of its members belonging to the same standing committee may not be
more than 28 (article 33 of the Rules of Procedure of the National
Assembly).
b)
Referral to a Standing Committee
Unless an
ad-hoc committee is set up, the bill is sent to the relevant
standing committee.
The
President of the National Assembly decides upon the lead committee
according to the various remits laid down by article 36 of the Rules of
Procedure of the National Assembly.
It is rare
for a committee to contest such a decision. If there is a disagreement
over areas of competence, or if the committee appointed as the relevant
committee were to declare the bill beyond its remit, article 85, paragraph
2 of the Rules of Procedure of the National Assembly provides that the
President, after a debate during which only the Government or the proposer
of a bill and the chairmen of the committees concerned, may speak,
proposes to the National Assembly the setting-up of an ad-hoc
committee. If this motion is rejected, then the President submits the
question of the choice of the relevant standing committee to the National
Assembly.
2. –
The possibility of referral for consultation
Article 87
of the Rules of Procedure of the National Assembly enables standing
committees to present an opinion on all or part of a Government bill,
Members’ bill or budget appropriation. In the case of the initial finance
bill, it is customary that the five standing committees, other than the
Finance Committee, which is as of right the lead committee in accordance
with article 39 of the institutional law of August 1, 2001 (LOLF), are
consulted on the budget of the ministries which fall within their remit.
Thus logically, there is no referral for consultation in the case of the
setting-up of an ad-hoc committee.
It is
possible, in practice, that the lead committee may accept to refer a part
of the bill to the committee referred to for consultation. In this case
the former does not table any amendments on the part of the bill it has
‘sub-contracted out’ and adopts all amendments proposed by the latter. If
such an agreement is not forthcoming, then the amendments proposed by the
committee referred to for consultation are in competition with those of
the lead committee.
II. –
Examination procedure
1.
– The drawing-up of a report
Every
committee which has a bill referred to it, whether it be a standing
committee or an ad-hoc committee, a lead committee or a committee referred
to for consultation, first of all appoints a rapporteur from
amongst its members. The rapporteur’s role is to throw light upon
the work of a committee by presenting to it a report in which he lays down
his views on the bill and, where necessary, proposes amendments.
With the
assistance of one or more civil servants belonging to the secretariat of
the relevant committee, the rapporteur begins his work by compiling
information on the bill in question. This means that :
―
He organizes meetings with the
representatives of the relevant ministry or ministries (ministerial staff,
central administrative departments etc.) ;
―
He holds meetings, if he feels
it necessary, with representatives of the various associations and
socio-professional groups involved ;
―
He gathers a broad range of
documents on the subjects dealt with by the bill ;
The
special rapporteurs of the Finance Committee are the only
rapporteurs provided with legal powers of investigation concerning the
Executive. In practice, the other rapporteurs have no great difficulty in
obtaining the information they require.
When the
rapporteur deems it desirable that the committee hears other opinions
than his own on a particular bill, he may suggest the organization of
hearings with experts in the field. It is also customary that the
committee interviews the relevant minister(s). The committee’s bureau
may then, after having consulted the committee, publicize such
hearings as it so wishes, in particular by allowing the press or the
general public to attend them (article 46, paragraph 3 of the Rules of
Procedure of the National Assembly).
2. –
Examination of the report
Once the
preparatory work has been completed, the examination of the report is
included in the agenda of a sitting of the relevant committee.
a)
Attendance at Meetings
In addition
to the members of the committee, the meetings concerning the examination
of the report by the lead committee may be attended by interested members
of the Government (although they use this right only rarely), as well as
by members of other committees (in particular those who have tabled
amendments) and, where necessary, the initiator of the Members’ bill
(article 86, paragraph 5 of the Rules of Procedure) and the rapporteurs
of the committees referred to for consultation (article 87, paragraph
3 of the Rules of Procedure).
b) Procedure of the Meeting
The
examination phase begins with a general discussion which is opened by the
rapporteur’s presentation. However when the examination of the
report has been directly preceded by the hearing of a minister, the
committee may decide that such a hearing and the ensuing debates may be
considered as replacing the general discussion.
In all
other cases, after the general discussion opened by the rapporteur’s
presentation, the committee examines the articles of the bill along
with the amendments put forward by the rapporteur and the other
members of the committee as well as, if they have been tabled in time,
those of M.P.s from outside the committee and of the Government. The
committee concludes its work with a vote on the bill as a whole.
c) The
Effect of Committee Decisions
The effect
of committee decisions depends upon the nature of the bills submitted to
it for examination.
In fact,
although amendments adopted by the committee on a Members’ bill are
immediately included in the text which will be examined in plenary sitting
in its modified form, article 42 of the Constitution states that, for
Government bills, the National Assembly must not debate the text as
amended by the committee (which was the case during the previous
Republics) but that proposed by the Government or transmitted by the
Senate. The proposals made by the committees thus take the form of
amendments which are subject to the same rules of financial admissibility
and to the same conditions of examination as those of political groups or
individual M.P.s.
In
practice, “committee amendments” do gain special treatment in so far as
their adoption rate is very high and much higher than that of amendments
coming from the Chamber (the rate is around 60% whereas that for
amendments proposed by M.P.s of the governing majority is 15% and by M.P.s
of the opposition is 1%) as the Assembly is naturally inclined to follow
the conclusions of its own committee.
d) Rules
of Procedure
In
principle, the rules of procedure applied in committee are those,
mutatis mutandis, followed in the Chamber, including for procedural
motions (excepting “objection of inadmissibility” and “preliminary
question”) tabled during the general discussion of bills.
In practice
however these rules are applied in a more flexible manner. Discussions
generally take place in a relaxed atmosphere and decisions are taken with
a minimum of formality : a vote by ballot, which, because of the absence
of electronic voting machines, could not take place in the same conditions
as in the plenary sitting, is almost never requested. In addition, the
“quorum” (i.e. the presence of a majority of members of the committee) is
very rarely called for : article 43 of the Rules of Procedure states that
it may be called for by one third of the members present but will not
apply to the following sitting, which may not, in any case, be held within
less than three hours.
e) The
Drawing-up of the Report
The
deliberations of the committee are brought together in a report which is
distributed before the plenary debate. This document, which is often very
long, includes :
—
A general analysis of the bill,
of its place within the legal provisions to be modified along with
international comparisons, as well as an overall political judgement ;
—
An analysis of the content of
each article as well of the ensuing debates in the committee ;
—
A comparative table showing, in
separate columns, the legislation in force prior to the bill (or to the
existing reference texts), the provisions of the original bill (or of that
transmitted by the Senate) and the amendments adopted by the committee ;
—
The collection of the amendments
not adopted by the committee ;
—
Where necessary two information
annexes : one on the European law applicable or being drawn up,
which recalls the positions taken by the Assembly through motions,
and the other establishing the list of bills liable to be rescinded or
modified upon the examination of the new legislation.
3. –
The examination of amendments after the adoption of the report
Amendments
which could not be tabled in time to be examined at the same time as the
report, must be examined by the lead committee, the day before or the day
itself of the plenary sitting, during one or several meetings held in
accordance with article 88 of the Rules of Procedure of the National
Assembly.
During such
meetings the rapporteur may table amendments. If such amendments
are adopted they will however be considered as amendments tabled by an
individual M.P. and not as “committee amendments”.
If
necessary, a final amendment examination meeting may take place before the
opening of the discussion of the articles (article 91, paragraph 10 of the
Rules of Procedure of the National Assembly).
4. –
Other meetings after the adoption of a report
There are
three other cases in which the committee may be reconvened when dealing
with a bill under discussion :
—
The adoption of a motion of
referral to committee. In this case the committee must produce a new
report within a time limit set down by the Government (if the bill is
included on the priority agenda) or by the National Assembly (in the
opposite case) (article 91, paragraph 8 of the Rules of Procedure) ;
—
In the interest of debate and,
if necessary upon the request of the lead committee, the chairman of the
plenary sitting may decide to return one or several articles and the
relevant amendments to the committee (article 95, paragraph 6 of the Rules
of Procedure) ;
—
Before the “explanations of
voting”, the National Assembly may decide a second deliberation on all or
part of the bill if the Government or the committee request such a
procedure or if the committee accepts such a request from an individual
M.P. The committee must then produce a new report, usually verbal, on the
provisions which have been returned.
5. –
The public nature of committee work
Detailed
minutes of a committee’s debates and votes are written for each committee
meeting. These minutes are now available on the internet site of the
National Assembly in the “Work in Committee” section.
Committees
may also organize hearings open to the press or to the general public.
III.
– the role of committes in the implementation of the laws
M.P.s who
had been rapporteurs to their committee on a bill were naturally
inclined to follow the implementation of such a bill personally and it
happened quite frequently that information reports on the application of
the bill were published several months after the law was passed.
Article 86,
paragraph 8 of the Rules of Procedure, which was introduced in 2004,
provides such assessment with a statutory framework. Six months after the
coming into force of a law, the rapporteur, or failing this,
another member of the committee, must produce a report detailing the
implementation decrees and directives which have been introduced. If
implementation instruments have not yet been applied, the rapporteur
must reappear before the committee before the end of a second period
of six months. |