1. The Agenda
of the Assembly
1a. At its meetings the Assembly shall consider
reports and draft motions prepared by its Committees which include the
Mission Council or by synods, and motions and amendments of which due
notice has been given submitted by individual members of the Assembly.
1b. The Assembly Arrangements Committee shall
prepare before each meeting of the Assembly a draft order of business,
and submit it to the Assembly as early as convenient in the programme.
1c. Motions arising from a report which have
been duly seconded and submitted by individual members of Assembly
under rule 3b shall be taken at a point in the business determined by
the Moderator on the advice of the Convener of the Assembly
Arrangements Committee.
1d. If notice has been given of two or more
motions on the same subject, or two or more amendments to the same
motion, these shall be taken in the order decided by the Moderator on
the advice of the Clerk.
1e. The Convener of the Assembly
Arrangements Committee may, during the meeting of the Assembly,
propose that the order of business be changed.
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2. Presentation
of Business
2a. All reports of Committees, together with
the draft motions arising therefrom, shall be delivered to the General
Secretary by a date to be annually determined, so that they may be
printed and circulated to members in time for consideration before the
date of the Assembly meeting.
2b. A synod may deliver to the General
Secretary not less than twelve weeks before the commencement of the
annual meeting of the Assembly notice in writing of a motion for
consideration at the Assembly. This notice shall include the names of
those appointed to propose and second the motion at the Assembly.
2c. A local church or district council wishing
to put forward a motion for consideration by the General Assembly
shall submit the motion to its synod for consideration and, if the
synod so decides, transmission to the Assembly, at such time as will
enable the synod to comply with Standing Order 2b above. In the case
of a local church the motion must be submitted to the synod through
the district council.
2d. A member of the Assembly may deliver to the
General Secretary not less than 21 days before the date of the meeting
of the Assembly a notice in writing of a motion (which notice must
include the name of a seconder) to be included in the Assembly
agenda. If the subject matter of such a notice of motion appears to
the General Secretary to be an infringement of the rights of a synod
or a district council through which the matter could properly have
been raised, the General Secretary shall inform the member accordingly
and bring the matter before the Assembly Arrangements Committee which
shall advise the Assembly as to the procedure to be followed.
2e. Proposals for amendments to the Basis and
Structure of the URC, which may be made by the Mission Council or a
Committee of the General Assembly or a synod, shall be in the hands of
the General Secretary not later than 12 weeks before the opening of
the Assembly. The General Secretary, in addition to the normal advice
to members of the Assembly, shall, as quickly as possible, inform all
synod clerks of the proposed amendment.
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3. Motions and
Amendments
3a. A report presented to the Assembly by a
Committee or synod, under rule 1, shall be received for debate, unless
notice has been duly given under rule 2d of a motion to refer back to
that Committee or synod the whole or part of the report and its
attached motion(s). Such a motion for reference back shall be debated
and voted upon before the relevant report is itself debated. To carry
such a motion two-thirds of the votes cast must be given in its
favour. When a report has been received for debate, and before any
motions consequent upon it are proposed, any member may speak to a
matter arising from the report which is not the subject of a motion.
3b. During the meeting of the Assembly and on
the report of a Committee, notice (including the names of proposer and
seconder) shall be given to the Clerk of any new motions which arise
from the material of the report, and of any amendments which affect
the substance of motions already presented. The Moderator shall
decide whether such motion or amendment requires to be circulated in
writing to members before it is discussed by the Assembly. During the
course of the debate a new motion or amendment may be stated orally
without supporting speech in order to ascertain whether a member is
willing to second it.
3c. No motion or amendment shall be spoken to
by its proposer, debated, or put to the Assembly unless it is known
that there is a seconder, except that motions presented on behalf of a
Committee, of which printed notice has been given, do not need to be
seconded.
3d. A seconder may second without speaking and,
by declaring the intention of doing so, reserve the right of speaking
until a later period in the debate.
3e. It shall not be in order to move a motion
or amendment which:
(i) contravenes any part of the Basis of Union,
or
(ii) involves the church in expenditure without
prior consideration by the appropriate committee, or
(iii) pre-empts discussion of a matter to
be considered later in the agenda, or
(iv) amends or reverses a decision reached by the
Assembly at its preceding two annual meetings unless the Moderator,
Clerk and General Secretary together decide that changed circumstances
or new evidence justify earlier reconsideration of the matter, or
(v) is not related to the report of a Committee
and has not been the subject of 21 days' notice under 2d.
The decision of the Moderator (in the case of i,
ii, iii, and v) and of the Moderator with the Clerk and the General
Secretary (in the case of iv) on the application of this Standing
Order shall be final.
3f. An amendment shall be either to omit words
or to insert words or to do both, but no amendment shall be in order
which has the effect of introducing an irrelevant proposal or of
negating the motion.
3g. If an amendment is carried, the motion as
amended shall take the place of the original motion and shall become
the substantive motion upon which any further amendment may be moved.
If an amendment is rejected a further amendment not to the like effect
may be moved.
3h. An amendment which has been moved and
seconded shall be disposed of before any further amendment may be
moved, but notice may be given of intention to move a further
amendment should the one before the Assembly be rejected.
3i. The mover may, with the concurrence of the
seconder and the consent of the Assembly, alter the motion or
amendment proposed.
3j. A motion or amendment may be withdrawn by
the proposer with the concurrence of the seconder and the consent of
the Assembly. Any such consent shall be signified without
discussion. It shall not be in order for any member to speak upon it
after the proposer has asked permission to withdraw unless such
permission shall have been refused.
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4.
Timing of Speeches
and of Other Business.
4a. Save by prior agreement of the officers of
the Assembly, speeches made in the presentation of reports concerning
past work of Assembly Committees which are to be open to question,
comment or discussion shall not exceed 5 minutes.
4b. Save by the prior agreement of the officers
of the Assembly, speeches made in support of the motions from any
Assembly Committee, including the Mission Council, or from any synod
shall not in aggregate exceed 45 minutes, nor shall speeches in
support of any particular Committee or synod motion exceed 12 minutes,
(e.g. a Committee with three motions may not exceed 36 minutes). The
proposers of any other motion of which due notice has been given shall
be allowed an aggregate of 10 minutes, unless a longer period be
recommended by the officers of the Assembly or determined by the
Moderator. Each subsequent speaker in any debate shall be allowed 5
minutes unless the Moderator shall determine otherwise: it shall, in
particular, be open to the Moderator to determine that all speeches in
a debate or from a particular point in a debate shall be of not more
than 3 minutes.
4c. When a speech is made on behalf of a
Committee, it shall be so stated. Otherwise a speaker shall begin by
giving name and accreditation to the Assembly.
4d. Secretaries of Committees and full-time
Executive Secretaries who are not members of Assembly may speak on the
report of a Committee for which they have responsibility at the
request of the Convener concerned. They may speak on other reports
with the consent of the Moderator.
4e. In each debate, whether on a motion or on
an amendment, no one shall address the Assembly more than once, except
that at the close of each debate the proposer of the motion or the
amendment, as the case may be, shall have the right to reply, but must
strictly confine the reply to answering previous speakers and must not
introduce new matter. Such reply shall close the debate on the motion
or the amendment.
4f. The foregoing Standing Order (4e) shall not
prevent the asking or answering of a question which arises from the
matter before the Assembly or from a speech made in the debate upon
it.
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5. Closure of Debate
5a. In the course of the business any member
may move that the question under consideration be not put. This
motion takes precedence over every motion before the Assembly. As
soon as the member has given reasons for proposing it and it has been
seconded and the proposer of the motion or amendment under
consideration has been allowed opportunity to comment on the reasons
put forward, the vote upon it shall be taken, unless it appears to the
Moderator that an unfair use is being made of this rule. Should the
motion be carried the business shall immediately end and the Assembly
shall proceed to the next business.
5b. In the course of any discussion, any member
may move that the question be now put. This is sometimes described as
'the closure motion'. If the Moderator senses that there is a wish or
need to close a debate, the Moderator may ask whether any member
wishes so to move; the Moderator may not simply declare a debate
closed. Provided that it appears to the Moderator that the motion is
a fair use of this rule, the vote shall be taken upon it immediately
it has been seconded. When an amendment is under discussion, this
motion shall apply only to that amendment. To carry this motion, two
thirds of the votes cast must be given in its favour. The mover of
the original motion or amendment, as the case may be, retains the
right of reply before the vote is taken on the motion or amendment.
5c. During the course of a debate on a motion
any member may move that decision on this motion be deferred to the
next Assembly. This rule does not apply to debates on amendments
since the Assembly needs to decide the final form of a motion before
it can responsibly vote on deferral. The motion then takes precedence
over other business. As soon as the member has given reasons for
proposing it and it has been seconded and the proposer of the motion
under consideration has been allowed opportunity to comment on the
reasons put forward, the vote upon it shall be taken, unless it
appears to the Moderator that an unfair use is being made of this rule
or that deferral would have the effect of annulling the motion. To
carry this motion, two-thirds of the votes cast must be given in its
favour. At the discretion of the Moderator, the General Secretary may
be instructed by a further motion, duly seconded, to refer the matter
for consideration by other councils and/ or by one or more committees
of the Assembly. The General Secretary shall provide for the deferred
motion to be represented at the next Annual Meeting of the General
Assembly.
5d. The motions described in Standing Orders
5a, 5b and 5c above are exceptions to Standing Order 3c, in that they
may be moved and spoken to without the proposer having first obtained
and announced the consent of a seconder. They must, however, be
seconded before being put to the vote. Precedence as between motions
under 5a, 5b and 5c is determined by the fact that after one of them
is before the Assembly no other of them can be moved until that one
has been dealt with.
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6. Voting
6a. Voting on any motion whose effect is to
alter, add to, modify or supersede the Basis, the Structure and any
other form or expression of the polity and doctrinal formulations of
the United Reformed Church, is governed by paragraph 3(l) and (2) of
the Structure.
6b. Other motions before the Assembly shall be
determined by a majority of the votes of members of the Assembly
present and voting as indicated by a show of voting cards, except
(i) If the Assembly decides before the vote
that a paper ballot be the method of voting or
(ii) if, the show of cards indicating a very
close vote, the Moderator decides, or a member of Assembly proposes
and the Assembly agrees that a paper ballot be the method of voting.
6c. To provide for voting in the case of a
paper ballot, and to assist in taking a count of votes when the
Moderator decides this is necessary, the Nominations Committee shall
appoint tellers for each Assembly.
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7. Questions
7a. A member may, if two days' notice in
writing has been given to the General Secretary, ask the Moderator or
the Convener of any Committee any question on any matter relating to
the business of the Assembly to which no reference is made in any
report before the Assembly.
7b. A member may, when given opportunity by the
Moderator, ask the presenter of any report before the Assembly a
question seeking additional information or explanation relating to
matters contained within the report.
7c. Questions asked under Standing Orders 7a
and 7b shall be put and answered without discussion.
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8.
Points of
Order, Personal Explanations, Dissent
8a. A member shall have the right to rise and
call attention to a point of order, and immediately on this being done
any other member addressing the Assembly shall cease speaking until
the Moderator has determined the question of order. The decision on
any point of order rests entirely with the Moderator. Any member
calling to order unnecessarily is liable to censure of the Assembly.
8b. A member feeling that some material part of
a former speech by such member at the same meeting has been
misunderstood or is being grossly misinterpreted by a later speaker
may rise and request the Moderator's permission to make a personal
explanation. If the Moderator so permits, a member so rising shall be
entitled to be heard forthwith.
8c. The right to record in the minutes a
dissent from any decision of the Assembly shall only be granted to a
member by the Moderator if the reason stated, either verbally at the
time or later in writing, appears to the Moderator to fall within the
provisions of paragraph 10 of the Basis of Union.
8d. The decision of the Moderator on a point of
order, or on the admissibility of a personal explanation, or on the
right to have a dissent recorded, shall not be open to discussion.
9.
Admission of Public and Press
Members of the public and representatives of the
press shall be admitted to the Assembly unless the Assembly otherwise
decides, and they shall occupy such places as are assigned to them.
10. Circulation
of Documents
Only documents authorised by the General
Secretary in consultation with the Convener of the Assembly
Arrangements Committee may be distributed within the building in which
the Assembly is meeting.
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11. Records of the
Assembly
11a. A record of attendance at the meetings of
the Assembly shall be kept in such a manner as the Assembly
Arrangements Committee may determine.
11b. The minutes of each day's proceedings, in
duplicated form, shall be circulated on the following day and
normally, after any necessary correction, approved at the opening of
the afternoon or evening session. Concerning the minutes of the
closing day of the Assembly the Clerk shall submit a motion approving
their insertion in the full minutes of the Assembly after review and
any necessary correction by the officers of the Assembly. Before such
a motion is voted upon, any member may ask to have read out the
written minute on any particular item.
11c. A signed copy of the minutes shall be
preserved in the custody of the General Secretary as the official
record of the Assembly's proceedings.
11d. As soon as possible after the Assembly
meeting ends, the substance of the minutes together with any other
relevant papers shall be published as a 'Record of Assembly' and a
copy sent to every member of the Assembly, each synod, district
council and local church.
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12.
Suspension and
Amendment of Standing Orders
12a. In any case of urgency or upon motion made
on a notice duly given, any one or more of the Standing Orders may be
suspended at any meeting so far as regards any particular business at
such a meeting, provided that three-fourths of the members of the
Assembly present and voting shall so decide.
12b. Motions to amend the Standing Orders shall
be referred to the Clerk of the Assembly for report before being voted
on by the Assembly (or, in case of urgency, by the Mission Council).
The Clerk of the Assembly may from time to time suggest amendments to
the Standing Orders, which shall be subject to decision by the
Assembly.
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