Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Budget session may have 5-hr shifts, Question Hour to return

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: When President Ram Nath Kovind addresses a joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament in Central Hall on January 29, it will likely be a packed house, but with social distancing and other stringent health protocols in place to ward off the threat of the coronaviru­s disease.

A large number of lawmakers will be sitting in the Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha chambers to watch Kovind’s first speech to Parliament since the emergence of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has taken 150,000 Indian lives so far, including that of a Union minister and three MPs.

In 2020, two sessions were cut short, and the Winter session was scrapped entirely due to the pandemic. The upcoming Budget session, the first this year, will emulate the health and safety protocols used in the Monsoon session. The schedule, however, may be extended. In the last session, both houses were scheduled to work in shifts of four hours each. “This time, both Houses may be allotted at least five hours as the workload will be much more,” a senior Rajya Sabha official, who asked not to be named, told HT.

The longer hours are necessitat­ed by the Budget session’s heavy-duty schedule, which includes a debate on the President’s speech, the presentati­on and passage of the general Budget, separate discussion­s on the functionin­g of at least ten ministries, clearing the Finance Bill, and other items on the legislativ­e agenda. “We have made comprehens­ive preparatio­ns for the Budget session and it will be duly conducted,” Lok Saha Speaker Om Birla said at a function in Dehradun, on Thursday.

When asked about reports that Question Hour would be a part of the schedule -- it was left out of the Monsoon session, leading to a war of words between the government and the Opposition -- he confirmed that it would be. Officials involved in the planning of the Budget Session said on condition of anonymity that the “new normal” in Parliament’s seating arrangemen­t, which involves MPs of one House being spread over both Houses, is likely to remain in place because everyone, including Prime Minister Modi, health ministry officials, and health experts , are repeatedly emphasisin­g the need to continue wearing masks and maintainin­g social distance.

“The government has not told us to lower the guard against the pandemic. which means that we have to continue to take all possible safety precaution­s. including social distancing,” an official involved in the planning.

Giant TV screens in different corners of the chambers, plexiglass sheets in front of members’ seats, a blanket ban on the entry of visitors, hourly sanitisati­on, MPs sitting in chambers as well as galleries — these were some of the unique features of the last Monsoon session that will be replicated this time.

When asked if members of Parliament would be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s, Birla:“Our scientists and doctors have worked hard. Now, the government will decide how the vaccines would be given. The guidelines will be followed.”

 ?? PTI ?? The Rajya Sabha during the monsoon session last year.
PTI The Rajya Sabha during the monsoon session last year.

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