Page:Pocket Manual of Rules of Order for Deliberative Assemblies (1876).djvu/41

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
§ 15]
INCIDENTAL MOTIONS.
41

of order, and proceeds as before. The Chairman can ask the advice of members when he has to decide questions of order, but the advice must be given sitting, to avoid the appearance of debate; or the Chair, when unable to decide the question, may at once submit it to the assembly.

15. Objection to the Consideration of a Question. An objection can be made to the consideration of any principal motion [§ 6], but only when it is first introduced, before it has been debated. It is similar to a question of order [§ 14], in that it can be made while another member has the floor, and does not require a second; and as the Chairman can call a member to order, so can he put this question, if he deems it necessary, upon his own responsibility. It cannot be debated [§ 35], or amended [§ 23], or have any other subsidiary motion [§ 7] applied to it. When a motion is made and any member “objects to its consideration,” the Chairman shall immediately put the question, “Will the assembly consider it?” or, “Shall the question be considered [or discussed]?” If decided in the negative by a two-thirds vote [§ 39], the whole matter is dismissed for that session