Everything about Secret Hold totally explained
A
secret hold is a
parliamentary procedure within the
Standing Rules of the Senate within the
United States Senate that allows one or more Senators to prevent a
motion from reaching a vote on the Senate floor. Current Senate rules allow the hold to be only temporarily anonymous.
Origin and intent
Sections 2 and 3 of Rule VII (Morning Business) of the Standing Rules of the Senate outline the procedure for bringing motions to the floor of the Senate. Under these rules, "no motion to proceed to the consideration of any bill...shall be entertained...unless by unanimous consent". In practice, this means that a Senator may privately provide notice to their
party leadership of their intent to object to a motion. At that point, the motion can't proceed because unanimous consent hasn't been reached, even though the Senator hasn't publicly announced their intent to object. This allows a Senator to remain anonymous while preventing the motion from going forward.
The original intent of these sections were to protect a Senator's right to be consulted on legislation that affected the Senator's state or that they'd a great interest in. The ability to place a hold would allow that Senator an opportunity to study the legislation and to reflect on what it means before moving forward with further debate and voting.
Controversy
In August 2006, the
Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 was put on secret hold. This bill, intended to encourage transparency within government, was considered by political pundits to be an especially ironic target of a secret hold and much attention was drawn to the bill and to the procedure itself. Bloggers and political activists sought to identify the Senator or Senators responsible by process of elimination, by having constituents contact each Senator and requesting a specific on-the-record denial of placing the secret hold. Within 24 hours, 96 Senators had explicitly denied that they'd placed the secret hold, leaving only 4 Senators still suspected and under growing public scrutiny as a result. On
August 30, a spokesperson for
Senator Ted Stevens of
Alaska announced that Stevens had placed a hold on the bill. On August 31, 2006,
Sen. Byrd also admitted placing a hold on the bill. Ultimately, the bill passed the Senate unanimously.
In
April 2007, the practice received media attention again when an anonymous senator placed a hold on the
Senate Campaign Disclosure Parity Act, another bill intended to increase transparency in government. The
Sunlight Foundation government watchdog group attempted to "ferret out" the senator who placed the hold.
Again in May 2007, an anonymous senator, later discovered to be Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., placed a secret hold on the OPEN Government Act, S. 849 before the Senate adjourned for Memorial Day recess.
Attempts to amend this rule
Throughout the history of the Senate, multiple unsuccessful attempts have been made to abolish this practice. The practice was successfully banned in 1997, but only temporarily. Majority leader
Trent Lott and minority leader
Tom Daschle altered the rule so that anyone intending to hold a bill had to notify the bill's sponsor and the chair of the appropriate committee. That year, the result was that opponents of a bill would wait until the bill was before the entire Senate before announcing their opposition, wasting time and ultimately delaying other popularly-supported legislation in the process. The practice was soon re-instituted.
Enacted on September 14, 2007, the "Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007" amended the Senate rules to require public notice of holds within 6 session days.
Loss of Anonymity/Attempts to Evade
Although a hold is placed anonymously, the identity of the senator placing the hold can quickly become common knowledge. Under traditional dictates of Senate courtesy, the identity of the holder isn't made public. However, senators have become increasingly brazen in identifying colleagues who place holds, in all but name.
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