United States congressional subcommittee
A Congressional subcommittee in the United States Congress is a subdivision of a standing committee that considers specified matters and reports back to the full committee.
Subcommittees are formed by most committees to share specific tasks within the jurisdiction of the full committee. Subcommittees are responsible to, and work within the guidelines established by, their parent committees. In particular, standing committees usually create subcommittees with legislative jurisdiction to consider and report bills. They may assign their subcommittees such specific tasks as the initial consideration of measures and oversight of laws and programs in the subcommittees’ areas.[1]
Service on subcommittees enables members to develop expertise in specialized fields. Subcommittees diffuse the legislative process. For the most part, they are independent, autonomous units with written jurisdictions, and, pursuant to longstanding practice, most bills are referred by a full committee to them.[2]
General requirements for establishing subcommittees are established in House or Seante rules, but specifics with respect to subcommittee assignemnts and their jurisdication are left up to the parent committees.[3] Committees have wide latitude to increase or decrease the number of subcommittees from one congress to the next, including renaming or reassigning jurisdication among previous subcommittees. Some committees, like the House and Senate Appropriations Committeess, often retain a predictible subcommittee structure from year to year, due to the set duties of each subcommitttee in drafting annual spending bills. However, even these committees are not immune to organizational changes. New subcommittees on Homeland Security were created in 2003 to handle funding for the Department of Homeland Security, and underwent a joint reorganization during the 110th Congress to better coordinate annual appropriations between the House and Senate.[4]
The respective party conferences in both the House and Senate also provide their own rules, traditions, and precedents with repsect to the subcommittee assignments, chairmanship of subcommittees, and even the number of subcommittees on which members can serve.
See also
- List of United States House committees, for a complete list of current House committees and subcommittees
- List of United States Senate committees, for a complete list of current Senate committees and subcommittees
- United States Congressional committee#Defunct_Committees, for an incomplete list of defunct committees and subcommittees
- House Democratic Caucus
- House Republican Conference
- Senate Democratic Caucus
- Senate Republican Conference
References
- ^ Committee Types and Roles, Congressional Research Service, February 14, 2002
- ^ Subcommittees in the House of Representatives, Congressional Research Service, March 9, 2001
- ^ House Committee Organization and Process: A Brief Overview, Congressional Research Service, April 20, 2004
- ^ Senate and House Appropriations Set Subcommittee Plans for New Congress