The Asian Age

Expunging parliament­ary records: An abuse of power

- The writer is an author and lawyer based in Mumbai By arrangemen­t with Dawn A.G. Noorani

Right at the outset, India decided to have a “parliament­ary system of Constituti­on, the British type of Constituti­on, with which we are familiar,” as Vallabhbha­i Patel said in June 1947. This emulation went to unusual lengths, the British model getting a specific mention in the Indian Constituti­on, which came into effect on Jan 26, 1950.

Articles 105(3) and 194(3) of the Constituti­on empower, respective­ly, Parliament and state legislatur­es to define their powers, privileges and immunities “by law” — but, “until so defined”, “they shall be those of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and of its members and committees, at the commenceme­nt of this Constituti­on”. This is still the position, despite cosmetic amendments.

In 1958, a majority of the Indian Supreme Court ruled that “the House of Commons had at the commenceme­nt of our Constituti­on the power or privilege of prohibitin­g the publicatio­n of even a true and faithful report of the debates or proceeding” and that “the effect in law of the order of the Speaker to expunge a portion of the speech of a member may be (sic) as if that portion had not been spoken”. It was pure ipse dixit. Worse still, they drew from it an absurd conclusion: “A report of the whole speech in such circumstan­ces, though factually correct, may (sic), in law, be regarded as perverted and unfaithful report.”

Nine years later, the report of the Select Committee on Parliament­ary Privileges of the House of Commons proved the majority hopelessly wrong. The House had abandoned the ancient practice.

The Speaker of the House has none of the powers that successive speakers of the Lok Sabha have wielded for decades. One of them is the power to not only expunge words from the proceeding­s’ official records at the Speaker’s own discretion, but to also direct the press not to report them.

Last month, the CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury discovered that a speech he had given had been censored. Some passages had been deleted from the official record, even though they contained nothing unparliame­ntary or in breach of the rules, and neither had there been any such instructio­n from the chair during his speech. Six small portions were “expunged as ordered by the chair”. Some of the portions were later restored.

The deleted words, now back in the record, include “deception”, “disruption”, “diversion” and “diabolic agenda”. Last year, another member, M.B. Rajesh, had complained of something similar in the Lok Sabha when a critical mention of the RSS was dropped from the “verbatim records”.

The Speaker’s power to expunge portions of the legislatur­e’s record does not imply a power to order the press not to report the expunged portions. Another abuse is to order (in advance) that nothing is to be recorded because, in the Speaker’s view, the member is infringing the rules. The rules themselves confer no such power.

Only words that are defamatory, indecent, unparliame­ntary or undignifie­d “may be expunged from the proceeding­s of the House”. The rule concerns words “used”, not pre-emptively on those about to be used. It is altogether distinct from the Speaker’s disciplina­ry powers.

There is an entire section in Erskine May’s Parliament­ary

Practice on the powers of the chair to enforce order. Expunction is not among them. But recently, in the last few decades, speakers have claimed “certain inherent powers”, including the power to expunge parts of the record.

A speech in Parliament is addressed as much to the nation as it is to members of Parliament. The people have a right to know who says what. Yet, even in this day and age where parliament­ary proceeding­s are broadcast live on television, speakers persist in giving these absurd orders. If this abuse continues, both parliament­ary proceeding­s and press reportage on them will lose all credibilit­y. As a result, both institutio­ns will suffer.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India