Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Jairam calls for special session

- Indo Asian News Service letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: There is no doubt the complete washout has inflicted great damage to Parliament... and I think a special session may help retrieve some of its lost prestige.

JAIRAM RAMESH, Congress leader in a letter to Rajya Sabha chairman M Venkaiah Naidu

After half of parliament’s budget session was washed out due to disruption­s, Congress leader Jairam Ramesh has written to Rajya Sabha chairman M Venkaiah Naidu requesting a special two-week session in May-June to pass important legislatio­n and facilitate debate and discussion.

Ramesh’s suggestion came after the Congress proposed to the government for a short sitting of both the Houses of Parliament before the monsoon session, which usually starts in July, to discuss issues of national importance.

Saying he was making this suggestion in his personal capacity, Ramesh urged the chairman to convene the special session as the disruption­s have “inflicted great damage” to Parliament as an institutio­n and they might “help retrieve some of its lost prestige”.

Both the Upper House and the Lower House were adjourned sine die on Friday at the end of the budget session, half of which was washed out due to the disruption­s over the TDP’s demand for granting Andhra Pradesh special status, demonstrat­ions by the AIADMK for forming the Cauvery Management Board (CMB) demands by the Congress to discuss the multi-thousand crore PNB scam.

The vice-president on Friday wondered if the House “could justify its existence and the resources spent on it”.

In his letter, Ramesh wrote: “I wish to make a suggestion purely in my personal capacity. Why don’t you try and persuade the government to convene a special two-week session sometime in late May or early June to both pass important legislatio­n and also have debate and discussion on burning political, economic and social issues.”

“l am aware that the monsoon session will be called sometime in mid-July but a special session sends a different signal altogether. There is no doubt that the complete washout has inflicted great damage to Parliament as an institutio­n and I think a special session may help retrieve some of its lost prestige,” it stated.

Calling the washout session a collective failure, Ramesh said it is the responsibi­lity of the gov- ernment to communicat­e and engage in meaningful and serious dialogue with all political parties to ensure the smooth functionin­g of Parliament.

“That was very much in absence in recent weeks. In fact, it has been absent all through the past four years,” he added.

With Parliament passing only two laws outside Budgetrela­ted bills during the monthlong session, the Budget session that concluded on Friday was the least productive Budget session since 2000, data shows.

Besides the Finance Bill and the two Appropriat­ion Bills, the Lok Sabha could pass only the Payments of Gratuity (Amendment) Bill and the Specific Relief (Amendment) Bill in its overall 29 sittings, that too without a debate.

It was for the first time since 2000 that the two Houses spent almost no time on discussing the Budget and 100 per cent of the demand for grants were passed without discussion, data compiled by NGO PRS Legislativ­e Research showed.

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