After a bill has been introduced and referred to committee for 30 legislative days or more, any Member may file a motion with the Clerk of the House to discharge the committee from further consideration of the bill. A Member may also file a motion to discharge the Rules Committee from consideration of a special rule after the rule has been pending before the Rules Committee for at least 7 legislative days and the bill that is the subject of the special rule has been reported by a standing committee or has been referred to a standing committee for 30 legislative days.
A discharge petition may cover only a single introduced measure, not multiple bills. In addition, a discharge motion cannot waive the germaneness rule.
If a Member is successful in convincing a majority of the total membership of the House (218 Members) to sign a discharge petition and the motion to discharge has been on the calendar for at least seven legislative days, the Speaker must schedule the consideration of the motion within two legislative days after a Member who signed the petition announces to the House from the Floor an intention to offer the motion. The discharge motion is debatable for 20 minutes, equally divided between the proponents and an opponent. If the motion to discharge a bill is adopted, it is in order to move that the House immediately consider the bill itself. If the motion to discharge a rule is adopted, the House turns immediately to consideration of the rule.
NOTE: Signatures on a discharge petition must be made available to the public by the Clerk and are made available on the Internet. The names of new signatories are printed in the Congressional Record on the last legislative day of each week.