Laying before the house

In parliamentary procedure, especially the Westminster system, a document is laid before the house or Laid on the Table of the House when it is formally recognised as having been made available for members of a deliberative assembly to read.[1] Documents produced by official bodies or in response to orders from parliament are required to be laid before the house.[1] These documents inform members in their deliberations.

Originally, a physical copy of the document was placed on the table in the assembly chamber.[1] This is no longer the case, with statutes and rules of order determining the mode by which a document is recognised as having been laid.[2][3][4] Some such documents are published, as for example the command papers issued by the UK Parliament.[2] Others may not be published.[2] Electronic publishing is common for documents laid in recent decades.[5] Parliamentary privilege may extend to documents published.[2][6]

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