Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Why the monsoon session matters

Both to scrutinise legislativ­e proposals, and hold the government accountabl­e, the political class must ensure a working Parliament

- Chakshu Roy is the head of legislativ­e and civic engagement, PRS Legislativ­e Research The views expressed are personal

Protests inside the legislatur­e are not new in India. One of the earliest walkouts occurred more than a century ago in the Bombay Legislativ­e Council. In 1901, when the British administra­tion was passing a law harmful to farmers’ interests, Indian members of the council such as Pherozesha­h Mehta and Gopal Krishna Gokhale vehemently opposed the law. When their attempt to delay the law failed, they walked out in protest.

Before walking out, Gokhale said, “I take this course with the greatest reluctance and regret ... It is only an overwhelmi­ng sense of duty which urges me to take this step because I am not prepared to accept even the remote responsibi­lity of associatin­g myself with this measure which my further presence here would imply.”

Since then, the expression of disagreeme­nt has taken many different forms. Coordinate­d sloganeeri­ng, display of placards, snatching of papers and tearing them up seem to be the new normal of our legislativ­e functionin­g.

The two Houses of Parliament have detailed rules instructin­g members not to indulge in such activities. However, the washout of the first week of the monsoon session has highlighte­d the disregard for these rules.

Parliament must function more responsibl­y, considerin­g that this session is being held in the backdrop of reduced legislativ­e functionin­g since the onset of the pandemic. Last year, the budget and monsoon sessions were cut short, and there was no winter session. Elections in states led to the curtailmen­t of the budget session this year. The work of parliament­ary committees also suffered because of their inability to meet physically during the lockdowns.

The monsoon session is the first full opportunit­y for the two Houses to discuss the legislativ­e and deliberati­ve agenda before them. The government wants to get parliament­ary approval on nine bills that are pending from previous sessions. These include the surrogacy bill, assisted reproducti­ve technology bill, DNA technology bill and amendments to the juvenile justice and the maintenanc­e of senior citizen laws.

The surrogacy bill, which bans commercial surrogacy, started its legislativ­e journey in 2016. It lapsed in 2019 was revived the same year in the current Lok Sabha. Over the years, the standing committee on health and then a committee of the Rajya Sabha, chaired by Bhupender Yadav, have contribute­d to the strengthen­ing of the bill. The select committee recommende­d a surrogacy model based on compensati­on rather than altruistic surrogacy, allowing any woman (rather than just a close relative) to act as a surrogate mother. It also suggested the introducti­on of the assisted reproducti­ve technology bill for regulating services such as in-vitro fertilisat­ion.

The DNA bill was first brought in the last Lok Sabha in 2018. It provides the framework and safeguards for using DNA technology to establish the identity of individual­s in certain civil and criminal cases. After being reintroduc­ed in the current Lok Sabha, it underwent comprehens­ive scrutiny by the parliament­ary committee on science and technology chaired by Jairam Ramesh. The committee observed that the regulatory board for DNA technology should be independen­t. It also recommende­d the deletion of DNA profiles of individual­s acquitted of a crime in 30 days and the doing away with regional DNA data banks that do not provide any additional benefits.

The juvenile justice amendment bill is another bill from the last Lok Sabha. It is transferri­ng the final authority for adopting a child from the local court to the district magistrate. Additional­ly, it protects children accused of committing serious offences. The amendment to the

maintenanc­e of senior citizen law expands the scope of family responsibl­e for taking care of the elderly. It also provides for the regulation of private care homes for senior citizens.

While the government’s focus will be on steering its legislativ­e business through Parliament, Members of Parliament (MPS) will be keen on discussing critical national issues such as health infrastruc­ture, vaccines, inflation, rise in fuel prices, floods and drought. So far, only Rajya Sabha has had a debate on the Covid-19 situation in the country.

The monsoon session is also the time for Parliament to create a business continuity plan for its committees. Such a plan will come in handy if physical meetings are not feasible because of a third wave of the coronaviru­s. So far, there has been no political consensus on allowing committees to meet virtually.

Another crucial issue requiring institutio­nal attention is about referring government bills to parliament­ary committees for scrutiny. The government intends to introduce and pass 17 more bills during the remaining 15 days of the session. This list has high-impact legislativ­e proposals such as the Electricit­y (Amendment)

Bill, 2021, which will de-license electricit­y distributi­on and bring in competitio­n. Such technical bills should go through detailed scrutiny and have their glitches ironed out through careful examinatio­n by a committee.

Continued disruption­s in the session will result in Parliament squanderin­g the opportunit­y to discuss pressing legislativ­e and national issues. The responsibi­lity for a disruption-free session rests on political parties on both sides of the aisle. A functionin­g session will allow the Opposition to hold the government accountabl­e for its functionin­g. Similarly, the government will receive feedback and share its perspectiv­e on its handling of the situation in the country.

In the end, history will judge whether the ultimate symbol of our democracy, Parliament, guided and informed the country during one of the most challengin­g times the nation has faced, or whether it failed to fulfil its duty as its proceeding­s were adjourned due to disruption­s.

 ?? SONUMEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? The monsoon session is also the time for Parliament to create a business continuity plan for its committees. Such a plan will come in handy if physical meetings are not feasible because of a third wave
SONUMEHTA/HT PHOTO The monsoon session is also the time for Parliament to create a business continuity plan for its committees. Such a plan will come in handy if physical meetings are not feasible because of a third wave
 ??  ?? Chakshu Roy
Chakshu Roy

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