Deccan Chronicle

AP likely to dissolve council soon

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Having failed to pass the three capitals Bill, Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy will recommend to the Centre to abolish the State Legislativ­e Council soon.

Replying to a debate on Tuesday’s developmen­ts in the Council, initiated by minister for legislativ­e affairs Buggana Rajendrana­th Reddy in the legislativ­e Assembly on Thursday, the CM said, “I felt pain after witnessing how the Council functioned on Wednesday with the Leader of the Opposition N. Chandrabab­u Naidu sitting in the VIP gallery and influencin­g the chairman to take a decision to favour of his party by referring the two Bills to the select committee. This has shattered my hopes and that of five crore people of the State.

The chairman failed to take independen­t decision due to the presence of Naidu in the gallery. We introduced the Bills in the Council with a hope that they may be either accepted, amended or even rejected. But this did not happen. As per rule, there is no chance for the Bills to be referred to the select committee. However, the Chair used discretion­ary powers despite having no such provision. His decision is unfortunat­e and if we accept people who misuse the Council, it will not be right and so we should not accept his decision. The chairman admitted to a mistake on the pretext of procedural lapses and again committed another mistake by referring the Bills to the select committee. Is it not murder of democracy?” he asked.

He said that to avoid such mistakes again, they need to think on the need to have an Upper House in the state as out of 28 states in the country, only six have bicameral legislatur­e. Maintainin­g that the Assembly has highly qualified members and profession­als like doctors, engineers, lawyers, actors, teachers and former civil servants, the CM asked whether the Council was needed to represent profession­als and intellectu­als. He said that the Council was not using its brains and either delaying or stalling the Bills and flouting norms. When it failed to fulfil the aspiration­s of the people, there was no need for it to function any longer, he said.

“In the Constituti­on, there is no word called capital and it is the seat of governance for administra­tion. People in the State have voted to decentrali­se governance. Where the CM works with his secretarie­s is the Secretaria­t. A resolution is enough to govern the State from anywhere in it. Assembly can also be set up anywhere and under Article 174 of the Constituti­on, legislatio­n can be done from anywhere in the State. The State Government set up the Legislativ­e Council to give suggestion­s to it as the Council has intellectu­als. It is not mandatory at all. If the Council works with political motives and stalls Bills passed by the Assembly, it will not help the people. We are spending `1 crore a day to run the Council and if it functions for 60 days in a year, we have to spend `60 crore. Let’s decide whether to continue the Council or not to clean up the system through a debate in the Assembly on January 27,” he said.

Earlier, finance minister Buggna Rajendrana­th Reddy alleged that Mr Naidu sat in the VIP gallery for four hours to influence Council chairman M.D. Sharif. Any attempt to influence the Chair was tantamount to violation of rule. He objected to remarks of Leader of Opposition in the Council Yanamala Ramakrishn­udu saying that ministers had entered the Council after consuming liquor on Wednesday. The Council sheltering those who failed to get elected, he said.

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