Recorded vote

Recorded vote

A recorded vote is a vote in which the names of those voting for and against a motion may be recorded.

In many deliberative bodies (e.g. the United States Congress), questions may be decided by voice vote, but the voice vote does not allow one to determine at a later date which members voted for and against the motion. Upon the demand of any member, a division may be held; the members supporting and opposing the motion stand successively and are counted. However, even in the rarely used division procedure, the names of the individuals voting on each side are not officially recorded. A recorded vote, under the Constitution, may be obtained upon the demand of one-fifth of the members present. Other methods may be provided by Rules of the Houses.

United States Congress

Senate

In the Senate, there is only one way to obtain a recorded vote on a pending question, and it is the roll call vote. The request for the roll call vote is known as the Yeas and Nays. The request will be granted, if it is seconded by one-fifth of the Senators present, assuming that a quorum (a majority of Senators) is present.

The granted "Yeas and Nays" does not mean the end of the current debate; it only means that whenever debate does end, a roll call vote will occur.

If the "Yeas and Nays" are granted and is about to happen, then a Senate Clerk proceeds to call the Roll of Senators in alphabetical order. Senators are technically required to vote from their seats, responding "Aye" or "No" upon the call of their names. In practice, however, Senators vote at the rostrum, sometimes by giving a "thumbs up" or "thumbs down" signal. The Senators vote from their desks only at the most formal times.

After the Clerk repeats the roll call, he waits at the rostrum for further Senators to vote. The vote remains open for at least fifteen minutes, but is normally kept open for up to thirty minutes, and sometimes for longer.

House of Representatives

The House of Representatives provides rules that are much more complicated than those of the Senate.

There are four ways in which a recorded vote may be demanded:

# Demand by one-fifth present: The Yeas and Nays may be demanded in the same way as in the Senate, by one-fifth of those present (but a quorum is not assumed present).
# Demand by one-fifth of quorum: A recorded vote may be demanded by forty-four members, or one-fifth of the quorum.
# Point of Order for lack of quorum: Recorded votes are automatically held when a member makes a point of order that a quorum is not present.
# Certain subjects: Recorded votes are automatically held when the House is voting on::* a general appropriations bill,:* a bill seeking to raise taxes, or:* the annual budget resolution.

However, when the House is meeting in the Committee of the Whole (a Committee consisting of every member of the House, meeting to consider a bill in detail), a recorded vote may be held only by the demand of twenty-five members, and for no other reason.

Regardless of how the House arrives at a recorded vote, it is taken in one of three ways:
# Calling the roll: The Speaker may ask the Clerk to call the Roll of members, as in the Senate. However, this procedure is reserved for formal votes, considering the amount of time consumed by calling over four-hundred names.
# Teller vote: The House may hold a teller vote, in which each member signs a green card for "Aye," a red card for "No," and an orange card for "Present" (an abstention), and hands it to a Clerk, who counts the votes.
# Vote by electronic device: The House may vote by electronic device. Members vote by inserting a plastic voting card, which doubles as a photo ID, into terminals located on the backs of seats in the House chamber. The member presses a red button to vote "No, "a green button to vote "Aye," and a yellow button to vote "Present." Members' names are displayed on a blue, backlit panel above the Speaker's chair, and when a member votes, a red, green, or yellow light appears adjacent to his or her name. Displays on the side walls of the chamber display a running vote total.

The recorded vote remains open for fifteen minutes, after which Members may vote in the same manner as in a teller vote, "i.e.", by signing a card and handing it to the Clerk, or by announcing their votes to the Clerk, but not by electronic device, until the Speaker announces the result. Sometimes an important vote will be held open by the presiding officer (the Speaker or the Speaker's delegate), for much longer, so party leaders can have time to convince members to change their votes. The longest ever recorded vote was held in the early hours of November 22, 2003, when the Republican Party held a vote on a Medicare bill open for approximately three hours, during which the President personally worked to convince two Republicans who had voted "No" to change their votes to "Aye."Fact|date=May 2007

United Nations General Assembly

Votes on substantive matters in the United Nations General Assembly are always recorded; the generally-accepted method of holding a recorded vote is by having each member nation, called upon in English alphabetical order, state "Yes", "No", or "Abstention", though variants are accepted.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • vote — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 choice/decision made by voting ADJECTIVE ▪ electoral ▪ majority ▪ huge, massive (esp. BrE), overwhelming, resounding (esp. BrE) …   Collocations dictionary

  • Vote for the Worst — Infobox Website name = VoteForTheWorst.com favicon = Vftwfav2.jpg caption = Accessed May 8, 2008 url = http://www.votefortheworst.com commercial = Yes type = Entertainment website registration = Optional owner = VoteForTheWorst.com author = Dave… …   Wikipedia

  • Vote Hezbollah — Infobox Album Name = Vote Hezbollah Type = studio Artist = Muslimgauze Released = 1993 June 15 Recorded = Genre = Length = Label = Soleilmoon SOL17CD Producer = Reviews = Last album = Red Crescent Part 3 (1993) This album = Vote Hezbollah (1993)… …   Wikipedia

  • Vote counting system — Election technology Certification of voting machines Independent Testing Authority (ITA) NVLAP VVSG End to end auditable voting systems Help America Vote Act Independent verific …   Wikipedia

  • Division (vote) — Division of the house is a parliamentary mechanism which calls for a rising vote, wherein the members of the house literally divide into groups indicating a vote in favour of or in opposition to a motion on the floor. This was the method used to… …   Wikipedia

  • Voice vote — A voice vote in a legislative body refers to a vote taken on a topic where the participants merely respond verbally to a question with a spoken yea (yes), nay (no), or present (abstain) vote. Typically the chairperson or speaker of the assembly… …   Wikipedia

  • All-Star Final Vote — 2007 National League All Star Final Vote winner Chris Young warming up in the Wrigley Field bullpen with a four seam fastball Awarded for …   Wikipedia

  • Last Vote — Infobox musical artist Name = Last Vote Img capt = Img size = Landscape = Background = group or band Alias = Origin = Basel Genre = Post rock Years active = 2002 present Label = Associated acts = URL = [http://www.lastvote.ch www.lastvote.ch]… …   Wikipedia

  • Thai vote of confidence referendum, 2008 — A vote of confidence on the government of Prime Minister of Thailand Samak Sundaravej in the form of a referendum was supposed to be held in Thailand later in 2008. [ [http://www.bangkokpost.net/topstories/topstories.php?id=130377 Referendum on… …   Wikipedia

  • Redeem the Vote — is a Christian right organization founded by Randy Brinson during the 2004 presidential campaign to register young evangelical Christians to vote, in the model of MTV s youth vote Rock the Vote campaign. The organization has since moved to issue… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”