PSCI 106: Parliamentary Procedure: (Reference: Robert's Rules of Order, Newly Revised 10 Edition)
PSCI 106: Parliamentary Procedure: (Reference: Robert's Rules of Order, Newly Revised 10 Edition)
PSCI 106: Parliamentary Procedure: (Reference: Robert's Rules of Order, Newly Revised 10 Edition)
PARLIAMENTARY
PROCEDURE
(Reference: Robert’s Rules of Order, Newly Revised 10 th Edition)
Introduction
◦ Parliamentary Law – originally was the name given to the rules
and customs for carrying on business in the English Parliament
that were developed through a continuing process of decisions
and precedents somewhat like the growth of the common law.
◦ The kind of gathering in which parliamentary law is applicable is
known as deliberative assembly – the expression used by
Edmund Burke (1774) to describe the English Parliament; became
the basic term for a body of persons meeting to discuss and
determine upon common action.
Early Origin of the English Parliament
A. Germanic Anglo-Saxon tribe:
1. Village-moot – freemen who made “bye-laws” for their village
and to administer justice
2. Hundred-moot – district level, which acted as the court of
appeal and arbitrated intervillage disputes
3. Folk-moot – higher in authority and citizen army of the tribe
B. Anglo-Saxon England:
1. Folk-moot became “Shire-moot” was later on called the
“Shire-Court” – instrument of local government subject to crown
supervision, under a king advised by the national assembly, known as the
“witan” or “witenagemot”
The Evolution of “Parliament”
1. “witan”/”witenagemot” – freemen who held land; major land holders,
eldermen, king’s officers, bishops, abbot; influence in the choice of a
new king
2. “Great Council” – assembled by Norman kings composed of court
officials, barons, prelates; converted into Parliament
3. Parliament (1258) to discuss the “state of the realm”; “parliament” – to
describe any important meeting held for the purpose of discussion.
◦ - Commons - representatives of the communities, i.e, shires (knights)
and of boroughs (burgesses), approval for measures of taxation
◦ 1340 – completion of the separation of Parliament into two branches:
House of Commons and House of Lords
Development of Procedure in Parliament:
Present day principles and rules
◦ One subject at a time
◦ Alternation between opposite points of view in assignment of the
floor
◦ Requirement that the chair always call for the negative vote
◦ Decorum and avoidance of personalities in debate
◦ Confinement of debate to the merits of the pending question.
◦ Division of a question
Parliamentary Process brought to
America
◦ The colonists transplanted the rules and customs of Parliament. A.
Establishment of English colonies: Virginia in 1607
◦ B. First Continental Congress: Philadelphia 1774 – the grounding and
experience of the members in parliamentary methods
◦ C. Second Continental Congress - which 1) carried on the war; 2)
adopted the Declaration of Independence; 3) drafted state
constitutions which provided the material from which the US
Constitution was produced at the Constitutional Convention in 1787; 4)
use of parliamentary rules; application of practices; use of
parliamentary procedure for implementing the processes of
representative government.
◦ Development of: Jefferson Manual; Cushing’s Manual; Robert’s Rules of
Order
Development towards the
Rules of Order
A. Jefferson Manual (1801):
- Vice President Thomas Jefferson saw the need to codify the
parliamentary system of the young US republic; provided the
most practical model for Congress.
- “the first to define and interpret parliamentary procedures for the
democratic republic and to offer basic pattern of rules and a
measure of uniformity for the legislative processes of the US.
Development towards the
Rules of Order (2)
B. Cushing’s Manual (1845):
- By Luther S. Cushing (Manual of Parliamentary Practice: Rules of
Proceeding and Debate in Deliberative Assemblies) – intended for
assemblies of every description but more especially for those
which are not legislative in their character.”
C. Robert’s Rules of Order (1875): a parliamentary manual: “based,
in its general principles, upon the rules and the practice of
Congress, and adapted, in its details, to the use of ordinary
societies.”
Influence of Robert
◦ The crux of the RRO initial contribution was in making it
possible for assemblies and societies to free themselves
from confusion and dispute over rules governing the use
of the different motions of parliamentary law.
Principles Underlying Parliamentary Law