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                                                                                              December  18, 2024

Messages, Petitions, Communications, and Memorials to

Congress


The Constitution and the rules of the House of
Representatives and Senate identify various means that
citizens, other levels of government, and coordinate
branches of the national government may use to
communicate  formally with either or both houses of
Congress. The House and Senate use written messages to
communicate  with each other.

Messae s
The Constitution authorizes the President to recommend to
Congress such Measures as he shall judge necessary and
expedient. Presidents communicate formally with
Congress by written message. For many years, the
President's State of the Union message was sent to
Congress in writing only; in 1913, Woodrow Wilson
resumed Thomas  Jefferson's practice of giving this
message both in person and in writing.

Presidential messages are printed in full in both the
Congressional Record and the Journal of each House,
although any accompanying supplemental materials are not.
The Speaker of the House and the presiding officer of the
Senate may refer such messages to the appropriate
committees. For example, the House refers the State of the
Union message to the Committee of the Whole House on
the State of the Union; a veto message is not referred to a
committee if the House or Senate votes immediately on
overriding it.

The two houses also formally communicate with each other
by written message. The Senate may receive a message
from the President or the House anytime, unless the Senate
is voting, determining the presence of a quorum, having the
Journal read, or acting on a question of order or a motion to
adjourn. In the House, messages from the President and
from the Senate, except those regarding Senate action on
certain bills, are referred to the appropriate committees. If
the Senate has passed a bill that the House, under its rules,
will not consider in the Committee of the Whole, the House
may  act immediately on a message about that bill.

Pettons
The First Amendment  in the Bill of Rights guarantees that
Congress shall make no law respecting ... the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government  for a redress of grievances. Individuals,
groups, or organizations can petition Congress requesting it
to act or not to act on a specific subject.

Petitions may be addressed to Congress, the House or
Senate, or to individual Members of the House or Senators.
In the House, Members forward petitions they receive to the
Clerk of the House, and under House Rule XII, cl. 3, may


specify the reference or disposition to be made thereof.
House precedents indicate that petitions may be presented
to the House by the Speaker or by any other Member.
Under current practice, after they are received by the Clerk,
petitions are presented to the Speaker for referral to
committee. A summary  of the petition, the name of the first
signer, their general place of residence, and the committees
to which the petition is referred are printed in the Journal
and published in the Congressional Record. In the Senate,
petitions are presented from the floor or delivered to the
Secretary of the Senate and are referred to the appropriate
committee; Senate rules provide a rarely used procedure in
which the Senate may vote without debate on the question
of receiving a particular petition or memorial.

Communications
Narrowly defined, a communication is a written submission
from a federal government department, agency, or other
entity. Most are sent to Congress to comply with statutes, to
comply with a specific request from either or both
chambers, to suggest legislation to appropriate
congressional committees, or to comment on measures
already introduced. In both chambers, executive
communications  are numbered sequentially throughout
each Congress for identification and are referred to the
appropriate committee for possible further action.

Memorials
A memorial is a request, usually from a state legislature,
that Congress take some action, or refrain from taking
certain action. Memorials may be addressed to the House or
Senate as a whole, to the Speaker or presiding officer of the
Senate, or to individual Senators or Representatives. The
Senate prints the full text of memorials received from state
legislatures in its section of the Congressional Record, but
does not appear to print items sent by municipal
governments. The House appears to recognize as memorials
only those documents sent by state legislatures (items
submitted by municipal governments appear to be accepted
by the House as petitions), and only prints the title of a
memorial in the Congressional Record.

In the 18th and 19th centuries when state legislatures elected
Senators, many of them sent memorials to their Senators
instructing them how to vote on certain pending
controversial measures. Some Senators viewed instructions
as binding, but many did not. Since the popular election of
Senators in 1913, state legislatures have ceased issuing
instructions. Today, they use memorials or less formal
means of communication to urge congressional action
rather than demanding it.

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