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U.S. House to vote on remote proxy voting on Thursday

The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to vote as soon as Thursday on a major, but temporary, change to the chamber’s voting rules to allow for proxy voting.

This is because travel and large gatherings continue to pose public health risks during the coronavirus pandemic.

Lawmakers are expected to have to return to Washington this week to vote on an update to coronavirus pandemic aid for small businesses.

House leaders also planned to use the session to also approve an emergency proxy-voting procedure in response to the health crisis.

The change would allow an absent lawmaker to designate a colleague to vote on House floor matters on their behalf.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Democrat, announced late Monday that the House could meet as soon as Thursday, when a proxy-voting resolution may be brought for a vote.

House Rules Chairman Jim McGovern floated the proxy-voting and rule change proposal last week.

It was in response to calls from within his caucus for leadership to establish a system for remote voting to allow the House to continue pressing legislative business during the Covid-19 crisis.

Many lawmakers thought that technology could be the solution to allow remote voting.

However, concerns about cybersecurity, outside intrusion and lack of time for testing led McGovern and House leadership to move forward with a low-tech proxy solution.

House members who remained in their districts would send a letter, electronically, to the clerk to authorise another member to vote on their behalf and would provide exact instruction on how to vote.

The authorisation could be updated as procedural or other unexpected votes arise during the session.

Members able and willing to vote in person on their own behalf could still do so. Members physically present would be eligible to cast votes on behalf of their colleagues.

The procedure will be different from the proxy-voting description laid out in a March report from the Rules Committee.

The most recent proposal will not include a “general proxy” to allow minority and majority leaders to serve as proxies for members of their respective parties for a verbal roll call vote.

Illinois Representative Rodney Davis, the top Republican on the House Administration Committee, told CQ Roll Call in a statement that the changes to voting procedure should not be made in haste.

“A change of how Members of Congress vote cannot be made overnight, as we saw from the three-year process it took the House to implement the electronic voting system currently used in the House Chamber,” said Davis.

Davis serves on the Select Committee on Modernisation of Congress.

“We must first mitigate risks, test the process extensively, and consider the overall integrity of a vote by proxy system,” Davis said.

No legislative text for the rule change has been released. Davis said Democrats must keep their promise to ensure that changes to House voting practices be done in a bipartisan way.

“I hope they will stick to their word and work with us for a safe, bipartisan voting solution amid this pandemic,” he said.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told fellow Republicans on a conference call Sunday he had not yet taken a position on McGovern’s proxy-voting proposal, according to a member on the call.

 

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