Business Standard

Budget session set to get off to a rocky start today

18 Opposition parties to boycott President’s address in solidarity with farmers

- ADITI PHADNIS & PTI New Delhi, 28 January

The Budget Session of Parliament that begins on Friday is set to get off to a rocky start as 18 Opposition parties announced on Thursday that they will boycott the President’s address to the joint sitting of both Houses in solidarity with farmers protesting against the three Union laws.

Announcing the decision, Ghulam Nabi Azad, leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha, said the 16 parties also demanded an independen­t probe into the Centre’s role in the violence that shook the national capital during the farmers’ tractor parade on Republic Day. Union Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi said this was “most unfortunat­e”.

The parties that will boycott the president’s address on Friday are the Congress, the Nationalis­t Congress Party, the National Conference, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD), the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the Trinamool Congress, the Shiv Sena, the Samajwadi Party, the Rashtriya Janata Dal, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the CPI, the Indian Union Muslim League, the RSP, the People's Democratic Party, the MDMK, the Kerala Congress (M) and the All India United Democratic Front.

Session agenda

The most important items on the agenda in the session are the passage of the Budget and related documents — the Economic Survey for 2021-22 on Friday, The Union Budget on Monday, and the report of the Finance Commission.

The Joint Parliament­ary Committee on the Personal Data Protection (PDP) Bill is ready with its report and is expected to be tabled in the session. The DNA Technology (Use and Applicatio­n)

Regulation Bill and the Maintenanc­e and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Bill are likely to be discussed and passed. Pending legislatio­n includes the Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy (Amendment) Bill and the Dam Safety Bill.

The Opposition is likely to be extremely active, which might ensure that this session is loud and acrimoniou­s. Not just the farmers’ protest against the three farm laws passed in the Monsoon Session that the government has flatly refused to repeal, but also the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic and the situation on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) are expected to be flagged by the Opposition. Opposition parties will also quiz the government on the status of the vaccines, amid extensive doubts over the efficacy of one of the vaccines, and more financial assistance for states to deal with the fallout of the pandemic.

Among the non-budget legislativ­e business, the most significan­t will be the PDP Bill that will be the first comprehens­ive legislatio­n addressing the digital ecosphere and the right to individual privacy.

The Supreme Court has already ruled that the right to privacy is a fundamenta­l right. The government has drafted a law, but this was referred to a joint parliament­ary committee.

Elements of the Jpc-drafted Bill, after a clause-by-clause discussion and meetings with more than 100 stakeholde­rs — including companies like Facebook, Whatsapp, Paytm and others — propose mirroring of data held by companies that have servers in jurisdicti­ons that are not friendly to India. In other words, no strict localisati­on of data. The changes in the government-drafted Bill relate to the size and compositio­n of the statutory authority that will hear complaints about data breaches. “We have tried to re-formulate the Bill incorporat­ing the voices of those who will be touched by it — not just the bureaucrac­y and the government,” said a member of the JPC.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India