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Code · BILL · 115th Congress · H.R. 5527 (Introduced in House) — To establish the Daniel Webster Congressional Clerkship Program. · Sec. 3

Sec. 3. Daniel Webster Congressional Clerkship Program

836 words·~4 min read·/bill/115/hr/5527/ih/section-3

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In this Act, the term Selection Committees means— the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate; and the Committee on House Administration of the House of Representatives. There is established the Daniel Webster Congressional Clerkship Program for the appointment of individuals who are graduates of accredited law schools to serve as Congressional Clerks in the Senate or House of Representatives. The Selection Committees shall select Congressional Clerks in the following manner:
The Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate shall select not less than 6 Congressional Clerks each year for a clerkship with an office of the Senate for a 1-year period. The Committee on House Administration of the House of Representatives shall select not less than 6 Congressional Clerks each year for a clerkship with an office of the House of Representatives for a 1-year period. In carrying out subsection (c), the Selection Committees shall select Congressional Clerks consistent with the following criteria:
Each Congressional Clerk selected shall be a graduate of an accredited law school as of the starting date of his or her clerkship. Each Congressional Clerk selected shall possess— an excellent academic record; a strong record of achievement in extracurricular activities; a demonstrated commitment to public service; and outstanding analytic, writing, and oral communication skills. After a Congressional Clerk is selected under this section, such Congressional Clerk may then interview for a clerkship in an office, and accept the clerkship if offered, as follows:
For a Congressional Clerk selected under subsection (c)(1), the Congressional Clerk may interview for, and accept if offered, a clerkship with— an office of any committee of the Senate, including a select or special committee; an office of a joint committee of Congress the pay of the employees of which is disbursed by the Secretary of the Senate; an office of any individual member of the Senate; a leadership office of the Senate; or the Office of the Parliamentarian of the Senate, the Office of Senate Legal Counsel, or the Office of the Legislative Counsel of the Senate.
For a Congressional Clerk selected under subsection (c)(2), the Congressional Clerk may interview for, and accept if offered, a clerkship with— an office of any committee of the House of Representatives, including any select or special committee; an office of a joint committee of Congress the pay of the employees of which is disbursed by the Chief Administrative Officer of the House of Representatives; an office of any individual Member of the House of Representatives; a leadership office of the House of Representatives; or the Office of General Counsel of the House of Representatives, the Office of the Parliamentarian of the House of Representatives, or the Office of the Legislative Counsel of the House of Representatives.
The Selection Committees shall, to the extent practicable, ensure that Congressional Clerks selected and placed under this section are apportioned equally between majority party and minority party offices. A Congressional Clerk shall be excluded in determining the number of employees of the office that employs the Clerk for purposes of— in the case of the office of a Member of the House of Representatives, section 104 of the House of Representatives Administrative Reform Technical Corrections Act ( 2 U.S.C. 5321 ); or in the case of any other office, any applicable provision of law or any rule or regulation which imposes a limit on the number of employees of the office.
It is the sense of the Senate that— the amount of financial assistance provided to a Congressional Clerk under paragraph
(3)should, if practicable, be comparable to the compensation and benefits provided for similar clerkships offered through the Federal judiciary and executive branches; and any financial assistance provided to a Congressional Clerk under such paragraph should not result in a net increase in the amounts appropriated for the legislative branch for any fiscal year. The amount of any financial assistance provided under paragraph
(3)for a Congressional Clerk shall be— determined or approved by the office hiring the Congressional Clerk; and based on the office's determination of the duties and responsibilities for such Congressional Clerk. A Congressional Clerk that is placed with an office described in subsection
(e)may accept a fellowship through an institution of higher education (as defined in section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 ( 20 U.S.C. 1001(a) )) for the term of the clerkship with the approval of the office in accordance with paragraph (2). An office described in subsection
(e)may use amounts otherwise available to the office to provide compensation to a Congressional Clerk of the office for the term of the clerkship. A Congressional Clerk that obtains a clerkship under this section shall be subject to all laws, regulations, and rules in the same manner and to the same extent as an individual serving in a similar position in the Senate or the House of Representatives, as the case may be. The Selection Committees shall develop and promulgate rules regarding the administration of the Congressional Clerkship program established under this section.
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Sec. 3
Daniel Webster Congressional Clerkship Program
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