Standing orders of the Assembly
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.
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.
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, reserves 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. The Moderator may rule that a proposed amendment should be
treated as an alternative motion under Standing Order 3k.
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.
3k. Alternative (but not
directly negative) motions may be moved and seconded in competition with a
motion before the Assembly. After any amendments duly moved under Standing
Orders 3f, 3g and 3h have been dealt with and debate on the alternative motions
has ended, the movers shall reply to the debate in reverse order to that in
which they spoke initially. The first vote shall be a vote in favour of each of
the motions, put in the order in which they were proposed, the result not being
announced for one until it is announced for all. If any of them obtains a
majority of those voting, it becomes the sole motion before the Assembly. If
none of them does so, the motion having the fewest votes is discarded. Should
the lowest two be equal, the Moderator gives a casting vote. The voting process
is repeated until one motion achieves a majority of those voting. Once a sole
motion remains, votes for and against that motion shall be taken in the normal
way and in accordance with Standing Order 6. (3.9.2b)
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 matters. 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.
5. Closure of Debate
5a. A member of 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 that the General
Assembly, for the better consideration of a specified resolution and its related
documents, goes into a committee of the whole Assembly. Provided that the
Moderator, Clerk and General Secretary together decide that this rule may
appropriately be applied in the case of the said resolution, the motion shall be
presented immediately following the opening speeches in support of the primary
motion. For such a motion to be carried, two thirds of the votes cast must be
given in its favour. Committee procedure enables members to speak more than once
and exploratory votes to be taken on particular points or suggested changes. The
number and length of speeches shall be at the discretion of the Moderator. After
discussion in committee and decision on any proposed changes the Clerk shall
draw the attention of the Assembly to any changes to the original text which
have been agreed.
The Moderator shall then
declare the committee stage to be ended, and the Assembly shall proceed to hear
a closing speech from the mover of the motion under discussion and proceed to a
vote on the motion, subject to any further motion under Standing Order 5. The
decision of the Moderator with the Clerk and the General Secretary on the
application of this Standing Order shall be final.
5b. 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.
5c. 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.
5d. 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.
5e. The motions described
in Standing Orders 5b, 5c and 5d 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,5c and 5d 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.
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
indicates by a very close vote, and the Moderator decides, or a member of
Assembly proposes and the Assembly agrees, then a paper ballot shall 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
top
|