Copyright 2005 Roll Call, Inc.
Roll Call,  November 16, 2005 Wednesday

Two weeks ago, Congress finished work on this year's Agriculture appropriations bill and sent it to
the White House for the president's signature. Contained in the legislation was a provision that had
not been present in either the House or Senate bill and which had nothing to do with funding the
Department of Agriculture or any other agency whose budget is contained in the bill. The language
was not discussed during any formal meeting of the conferees. When the final report surfaced, the
question was raised, "Who among the conferees had insisted on that language?" But no one stepped
forward.

The provision rewrites the legal definition of "organic food" and consequently guides the development
of a $12 billion-a-year industry that is growing by 20 percent annually.

Joseph Mendelson, legal director at the Center for Food Safety, told The New York Times that the
proposed legislation will open the door to a range of other chemicals and artificial materials. James
Riddle, chairman of the National Organic Standards Board, stated, "We don't want organic food
manufacturers having carte-blanche use of the same kind of synthetics that conventional food
processors use, especially when it involves things that do not appear on the ingredient panels."

Whatever the merits of the language in question, the manner in which it became the law of the land
should be a matter of grave concern to anyone who believes that debate, deliberation and the votes of
elected representatives should determine what becomes law. While some amount of skulduggery has
always been a part of the legislative process, it seems in recent years that skulduggery has all but
become the legislative process.

In 1920, the House adopted a rule that prohibited House managers from agreeing to an amendment in
an appropriations conference that constituted "legislating" under House rules. In other words,
appropriators were to stick to funding government programs and not write permanent laws either in
the House or when they reached conference. That job was preserved for authorizing committees - and
there's a formal process those committees must follow under House rules if changes in the
permanent laws of the nation are contemplated.

As a result of the 1920 rules change, any provision contained in a Senate appropriations bill that went
beyond the normal scope of funding federal agencies could only be agreed to if the provision were
brought back from the conference as "an amendment in disagreement," and the full House voted on
whether that item should become part of the package. That system remained in place for 76 years.

A paper by Don Wolfensberger of the Woodrow Wilson Center indicates that as recently as 1994, all
Senate-added legislative provisions were either stripped from the 13 regular appropriation bills in
conference or taken back to the House so that separate votes could be demanded after a vote on the
conference report.

But in the years that followed, that process has been abandoned. The Senate has ceased making
individual amendments to House appropriations bills and now simply offers a single substitute to the
entire House-passed bill. House leaders have accommodated that move by directing the Rules
Committee to simply waive the violations of House rules with respect to legislative provisions,
thereby allowing the package to come to the floor for a single up-or-down vote.

While all of this may seem very technical to anyone who doesn't spend much of his or her life
engrossed in the movement of legislation, its implications for the health of our representative
democracy are enormous. Ultimately, the new practice offers virtually unlimited latitude for leaders
in either chamber to circumvent virtually all of the normal steps of established legislative process and
insert permanent changes into the U.S. Code based solely on the request of favored interests.

It does not matter how unjustly a provision benefits a small group of well-connected favor-seekers,
how much violence it does to the public good or how little support it has beyond a narrow band of
House leaders. The ability to use the Rules Committee to block separate votes gives those who run
the House the unilateral power to rewrite the laws of the nation unless a majority of the House is
willing to bring down an entire annual spending measure in order to block them.

Yes, the legislative process that evolved in Congress over the better part of two centuries, and that
was still being practiced in the mid-1990s, had many imperfections. But it did allow all parties to a
dispute to be forewarned when Congress was considering a change in policy. It provided them with an
opportunity to present testimony; to hear the arguments of the other side in an open hearing; to
press their case with individual committee members and to insist on a vote in both chambers of
Congress if, after deliberation, the House and Senate committees of jurisdiction did not agree with
their arguments.

That may be a lot of work for a Congress that likes to arrive late on Tuesday afternoons and leave by
noon on Thursdays, for those weeks during the year that it is actually in session. But unless decisions
about what is to become law are made by a majority of the elected representatives in both houses,
there is no real reason to have a Congress in the first place.

Scott Lilly is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and an adjunct professor of public policy at
Georgetown University. He worked on Capitol Hill for more than 30 years, most recently as the House
Appropriations Committee minority staff director.
Roll Call
A few specifics to flesh out the following:  The amendment was drafted by the
OTA attorney Jay Friedman, who then worked with the temporary majority leader
in the House, Roy Blunt, to get the OTA draft attached to the ag approp
conference report.  Probably none of those voting on the rider had much, if
any, idea of its
impact, other than it was desired by OTA.  Blunt's wife is a lobbyist for
Kraft, a major organic manufacturer.  Although the Democrats were excluded from
the process by which #797 was added to the conference report, they still signed
the report.  Had they not signed it, it could have been challenged on a point
of order by the Democratic leaders in Congress.  But one may assume the
Democrats got some favors in the report, which they might lose if the whole
package was challenged.    -A.H.

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