After the Committee completes its examination of the election, it issues a report to the full House, in the form of a resolution with recommendations. The House then adopts or rejects this resolution by a majority vote. The precedents of the House state that the resolution can: • dismiss the challenge • declare which candidate is entitled to the seat • assert that no one should be seated pending the completion of an investigation • call for a new election to be held • refute the challenger as not qualified to contest the election • provide reimbursement for the contestants from the contingency fund of the House for costs incurred in the contested election process. Recounts are undertaken if the election loser can show he has exhausted all appeals in the state courts under state law. However, the House has sometimes declined to order a recount if the state supreme court has already conducted one. The resolution containing the Committee's recommendations is debated in the House. Amending is possible, but difficult. The resolution is subject to a motion to recommit (sending it back to committee) with instructions from the House to take further action. Adoption or defeat is by a majority vote of those present. Prior to the
Dornan v. Sanchez contest of a 1996 election, the House last considered a contested election in 1985:
McIntyre v. McCloskey in the
Indiana's 8th congressional district. While the State of Indiana certified the Republican, McIntyre, as the winner of the election, the House voted to seat the Democratic challenger, Frank McCloskey. A House-ordered recount gave McCloskey a 4-vote margin of victory. ==Standards of adjudication==