[Deschler's Precedents] [From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access] [DOCID:52093c30_txt-7] [Page 11490-11492] CHAPTER 30 Voting A. GENERALLY Sec. 6. Finality of Votes Once Cast When a vote is cast by a system where there is human intervention in recording the result, such as a vote cast by a roll call or by [[Page 11491]] tellers with clerks, and there is an error in the recordation of the vote,(16) the Chair has the discretion to entertain a request to correct the vote if it does not change the result of the vote as previously announced from the Chair. Obviously, where a vote is taken by voice, and the Chair has heard the responses from the ``ayes'' and the ``noes,'' a Member cannot change his response. Similarly, when a vote is by division, and the Chair has counted those standing in the affirmative and the negative and has announced the result, a Member cannot change his mind. The same is true of all votes cast: a vote once given cannot be retracted or changed. A Member who casts a vote by mistake can admit his error and state for the Record how he intended to vote, and by unanimous consent such an explanation may be inserted in the Record following the vote in question. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16. See Sec. 38.1, infra. ------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sec. 6.1 A Member may not change a vote once cast, even by unanimous consent, after the result has been announced. On June 17, 1986,(17) Mr. Fernand J. St Germain, of Rhode Island, asked the Chair if he could change his vote from yea to nay ``because his attention was diverted at the time he voted and he did not understand the issue.'' --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 17. 132 Cong. Rec. 14038, 99th Cong. 2d Sess. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mr. St Germain: Mr. Speaker, on this vote, rollcall No. 168, my attention was diverted at the time I voted. By mistake or through distraction, I cast a ``nay'' vote, whereas I should have cast a ``yea'' vote. Subsequently I was called to the phones. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that my vote be changed in the permanent Record to reflect a ``yea'' vote on rollcall No. 168. The Speaker Pro Tempore: (18) The Chair would advise the gentleman that he cannot change his vote. The gentleman's statement will appear in the Record, immediately following the vote. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18. G. V. (Sonny) Montgomery (Miss.). --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sec. 6.2 The Speaker cannot permit voting corrections after the announcement of the result of a vote by electronic device, based upon the presumed infallibility of that device and upon the responsibility of each Member to correctly cast and verify his vote. On Apr. 18, 1973,(19) the Speaker declined to entertain a unanimous-consent request that the Record be corrected to indicate that a Member had voted by electronic device on a recorded vote in Committee of the Whole despite [[Page 11492]] assurances by that Member that he had verified his vote by reinserting his card. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19. 119 Cong. Rec. 13081, 93d Cong. 1st Sess. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mr. [Robert O.] Tiernan [of Rhode Island]: Mr. Speaker, yesterday here, on rollcall No. 100, the vote on the Roybal amendment to strike out the funds for the extension of the west front of the Capitol, I voted ``no'' Mr. Speaker, I placed my card in the box. It registered ``no.'' I actually took the card back out and put it back in, and it showed a red ``no'' again. Last night, to my chagrin, I was told that I was not recorded as voting. I was here. Other Members of the House were present with me and saw me vote and record my vote as ``no.'' I hope that the House committee which is in charge of this electronic voting system will check that out, because there is no question of it. The Speaker: (20) The Chair hopes the same thing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20. Carl Albert (Okla.). --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mr. Tiernan: Apparently there is no way of correcting the Record at this time. The Speaker: Not under the procedure which has been adopted. The Chair is powerless to act.