Article 19 provides that any country that falls two years behind in its dues will lose its vote in the General Assembly. The United States, when it was withholding dues in protest over the slow pace of
United Nations reform, has historically paid just enough at the end of each year to avoid losing its vote under this provision. Rule 161 of the rules of procedure of the General Assembly states that the Committee on Contributions shall "advise the General Assembly … on the action to be taken with regard to the application of Article 19 of the Charter". According to the
New York Times, "The fact that a member is in arrears and thus not entitled to vote is, by established practice, determined by the Secretary-General through computation and reported to the Assembly by him or by the Committee on Contributions. Comparable situations in specialized agencies of the United Nations have shown that a member's loss of voting rights is mandatory and automatic and that the fact of his debt is a 'ministerial, mathematical calculation' rather than a political decision”. After a World Court ruling in the
Certain Expenses case made it clear that Soviet and Soviet bloc countries, France, and Latin American countries had defaulted on peacekeeping debts, during the 19th session (1964-1965), no votes at all were taken in the General Assembly. In 1963, an announcement of Haiti's arrears by the president of the General Assembly at the opening plenary meeting was considered unnecessary because a formal vote count in the presence of a representative of Haiti did not take place. Circa 1969, the
government of Haiti claimed it was unable to pay its dues due to cyclones Betty, Flora, and Ines, which over a period of seven years destroyed half its agriculture, its livestock, and its
light industry. Haiti also cited the negative effects on tourism of invasions such as the
20 May 1968 invasion. As of late April 1998, 29 UN member countries were in arrears by more than their preceding two years' assessments and thus were ineligible to vote in the General Assembly. In 1999, faced with the possibility of Article 19 sanctions, President
Bill Clinton agreed to withhold funding from organizations that supported abortion in exchange for Congress's agreement to repay U.S. arrears to the UN. In June 2021 Iran briefly lost voting rights due to non-payment, which Iran attributed to U.S. sanctions. Shortly after the loss of voting rights was announced negotiations with the United States led to money being released to pay the arrears and thus restore voting rights. ==Article 22==