The Rules Committee was formed on April 2, 1789, during the first Congress. However, it had nowhere near the powerful role it has today. Instead, it merely proposed general rules for the House to follow when debating bills (rather than passing a special rule for each bill), and was dissolved after proposing these general rules. These general rules still have a great impact on the tone of the House floor today. The Rules Committee, for a long time, lay dormant. For the first fifty years of its existence, it accomplished little beyond simply reaffirming these rules, and its role was very noncontroversial. On June 16, 1841, it made a major policy change, reducing from to the
fraction of votes needed in the House to close debate and vote on a bill. In 1880, the modern Rules Committee began to emerge from the reorganization of the House Committees. When the
Republican Party took over the House in the election of 1880, they quickly realized the power that the Rules Committee possessed. One member,
Thomas Brackett Reed (
R-
Maine), used a seat on the Rules Committee to vault himself to the Speakership, and gained so much power that he was referred to as "
Czar Reed". In the 1890s and 1900s, Reed and his successor,
Joseph Gurney Cannon (R-
Illinois) used the Rules Committee to centralize the power of the Speakership. Although their power to place members in committees and perform other functions was limited by a forced rule change in 1910, the Rules Committee retained its power. However, it ceased to function as the personal project of the Speaker, as it had originally; instead, as the seniority system took root, it was captured by a coalition of
conservative Democrats and Republicans. This state of affairs would continue until the 1960s. In 1961, Speaker
Sam Rayburn (D-
Texas), acting on the wishes of the new
President John F. Kennedy and the
Democratic Study Group, introduced a bill to enlarge the committee from 12 members to 15, to decrease the power of the arch-conservative chair,
Howard W. Smith (D-
Virginia). The bill passed, 217 votes to 212. However, it was only partially successful; the Rules Committee continued to block legislation including
civil rights and
education bills. By 1975, however, the Rules Committee was firmly under the command of the Speaker once again. Under
Tip O'Neill (D-Mass.), the Speaker was given authority under
House Democratic Caucus rules to appoint all Rules Committee Democrats subject to caucus ratification, and in 1989 the
Republican Conference did the same. As before, its primary role is to come up with special rules, to help or obstruct the chances of legislation reported to it. ==General types of rules==