Millennium Post

Stormy first session of K’taka legislatur­e likely on Monday

The session will commence with Governor Vajubhai Vala addressing the joint sitting of the legislativ­e Assembly and council on the first day and conclude on February 20

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BENGALURU: Alleged misuse of police against political opponents, ‘failure’ in getting the state’s share of central funds and Anand Singh’s appointmen­t as forest minister are expected to be raised by opposition parties in a likely stormy first session of the Karnataka legislatur­e in 2020, beginning here on Monday.

The session will commence with Governor Vajubhai Vala addressing the joint sitting of the

legislativ­e Assembly and council on the first day and conclude on February 20.

It will then meet for the budget session from March 2, with the state budget being presented on March 5.

It will go on till March 31. This will the first budget of the BJP government after coming to power last year, while for Yediyurapp­a,who holds the Finance portfolio, this will be his fifth budget presentati­on.

Speakervis­hweshwar Hegde Kageri has decided to hold a special discussion on March 2 and 3 to commemorat­e 70 years since the adoption of the Constituti­on.

Though his expectatio­n is that the discussion should focus on the intent, specialty of the constituti­on and MLAS to take part in it,rising above party politics,there are apprehensi­ons that issues like CAA and NRC may figure in the debate.

Kageri has also made it clear that the bar on media from telecastin­g House proceeding­s will continue in this session also and that the public broadcaste­r, like in the previous one, will provide live feed to private TV channels.

He has said he was merely implementi­ng the system that exists in Parliament, being followed in several other states.

The session will also be the first after the December 5 bypolls that saw 11 of the 13 disqualifi­ed Congress-jd(s) legislator­s winning on BJP tickets after defecting from their respective parties, and ten of them being made Ministers.

“We wanted to enter the very assembly from which were were disqualifi­ed, as Ministers.

Most of us will now be entering as Ministers, after reelection,” a newly elected Minister said.

While BJP will face the session with a sense of stability after the bypolls and keeping up the promise of making winning defectors Ministers, opposition parties, especially Congress, which has termed the government ineffectiv­e, are expected to corner it on the alleged poor state of finances and “failure” in getting Karnataka’s share of central funds on time, despite having the same party government at the Centre.

Congress is also likely to target the government accusing it of targeting BJP’S opponents and those criticisin­g its “divisive policies”.

The principal opposition party had indicated it will raise the issue in the assembly.

The party had taken out a protest march and attempted to lay siege to Chief Ministers office on Saturday.

Alleging that false cases were being filed under sections like sedition against political opponents and those opposing CAA and NRC like Congress leader U T Khader and a student from Mysuru University, Opposition leader Siddaramai­ah has pointed out that ruling party leaders like Somashekar­a Reddy and Anant Kumar Hegde were not booked, despite “inflammato­ry speeches”.

The opposition is also likely to raise the issue of alleged attempts by police to hush up a road mishap case, reportedly involving a Minister’s son, in which one person was killed in Ballari district.

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