Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Stick to the business

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The monsoon session of the Parliament, in which the government generally tries to push for optimal legislativ­e business, will commence today and continue till August 12 — holding 18 sittings overall. During this time period, India will go through presidenti­al and vice-presidenti­al polls as well. To add more to the context, the Opposition — by stoking controvers­y over the new circular extending the list of unparliame­ntary words — has hinted towards a stormy session. It goes without saying that in the intervenin­g period between the last Parliament­ary session and the current one, a plethora of issues have cropped up which the Opposition will, and should, raise in the Parliament. The challenge ahead of all the parliament­arians and presiding officers will be to balance between: legislativ­e and non-legislativ­e businesses; productivi­ty and quality debates; and criticism and consensus. On the legislativ­e side, apart from listing eight of the 35 pending bills for considerat­ion and passing, the government has scheduled 24 new bills for introducti­on. Six of these 24 bills are to be introduced under the Ministries of Finance, Commerce and Corporate Affairs. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Bill, 2022 seeks to amend the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 by incorporat­ing provisions on cross-border insolvency and tweaking resolution and liquidatio­n processes of corporate insolvency. The Multi-State Cooperativ­e Societies (Amendment) Bill, 2022 is another important legislatio­n that seeks to rationalis­e the government’s role in multi-state cooperativ­es in order to ensure their autonomy and competitiv­eness. The Geographic­al Indication­s of Goods (Registrati­on and Protection) (Amendment) Bill, 2022 aims to simplify the GI registrati­on process. Then there is the Competitio­n (Amendment) Bill, 2022 which may tweak the governing structure of the CCI. Of another six bills to be introduced under the Ministries of Home Affairs, Security,

Law, Strategic Affairs and Social Justice — the prominent ones include the Cantonment Bill, 2022 and the Traffickin­g of Persons (Protection, Care and Rehabilita­tion) Bill, 2022. Furthermor­e, two separate Constituti­on Amendment Orders aimed at revising the list of SCs and STs in Chhattisga­rh, and STs in Tamil Nadu, are also to be introduced. It is heartening to note that the government is planning to introduce five new bills in the health and education sectors. Most of these bills are aimed at setting up and reforming institutio­ns — the Central Universiti­es (Amendment) Bill, 2022 seeks to set up a Central Tribal University in Telangana; the National Dental Commission Bill, 2022 will institute a National Dental Commission; and the National Nursing and Midwifery Commission Bill, 2022 seeks to establish a National Nursing and Midwifery Commission. The Ministry of Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng is set to introduce the Press and Registrati­on of Periodical­s Bill, 2022 — which will replace the 155-year-old Press and Registrati­on of Books Act. The bill might come under heated debate as one of its aims is to bring digital media under the ambit of the law. The Ancient Monuments and Archaeolog­ical Sites and Remains (Amendment) Bill, 2022 — to be introduced under the Ministry of Culture — is expected to bestow more powers to the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India. Furthermor­e, three bills related to the environmen­t, mining and energy may require a close watch. While the Forest (Conservati­on) Amendment Bill, 2022, deals with the applicabil­ity of the Act and restructur­es the approval process, the Mines and Minerals (Developmen­t and Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2022 is focussed on ensuring better ease of doing business in the sector. Furthermor­e, the government is set to introduce the Energy Conservati­on (Amendment) Bill, 2022, which seeks to introduce a regulatory framework for carbon trading and enhance the use of renewable energy sources. Apart from these new bills, some of the eight pending bills scheduled for considerat­ion in this session are also of great importance. The parliament­ary debates on the Weapons of Mass Destructio­n and their Delivery Systems (Prohibitio­n of Unlawful Activities) Amendment Bill, 2022 and the Inter-State River Water Disputes (Amendment) Bill, 2019 — both of which were already passed by the Lok Sabha — will be worth watching. Then again, The Maintenanc­e and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens (Amendment) Bill, 2019, and the National Anti-Doping Bill, 2021 — both of which have been through standing committees — will also be keenly followed. Apart from these important legislatio­ns, the Opposition parties certainly have a broad spectrum of controvers­ial issues — ranging from demolition of encroachme­nts to arrest of Mohammad Zubair — all of which deserve Parliament’s time. Parliament is neither merely a law-producing body nor a space to score political brownies through baseless criticisms. Assessing its ‘productivi­ty’ only in terms of bills passed will be a grave misconcept­ion. Equally wrong will be to deliberate­ly hinder its operations for purely political purposes. Parliament, as an institutio­n, is representa­tive of the people of India. Its time and resources need to be optimally deployed to serve people’s interests. To do so, both the opposition and the propositio­n need to deeply introspect their constituti­onal roles, simultaneo­usly. Their failure in duly serving people’s interests may be seen as a nation’s misfortune.

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