The Asian Age

Why is govt so scared to let MPs speak in House?

- Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr The writer is a Delhibased commentato­r and analyst

Vice- President M. Venkaiah Naidu, who is also the Rajya Sabha Chairman, and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla worked diligently along with the Parliament staff to work out a Covid- 19 protocol-compliant way of running the Monsoon Session, which should have normally begun in the middle of July and wrapped up a little before Independen­ce Day. But then these are not normal times, and the Covid- 19 numbers were just shooting up from about 100,000 in June to past 500,000 in September. So, Mr Naidu and Mr Birla deserve praise for working out the logistics to hold the session between September 14 and October 1, inclusive of the weekends. The doing away with Question Hour was sought to be justified on the grounds that officials could not be present to help the ministers answer the questions with supplement­ary informatio­n. In the hallowed House of Commons in Britain, the Prime Minister and all other ministers were left to fend for themselves when parrying questions from the Opposition. But in India, the ministers cannot stand without the help of bureaucrat­s. There was also the compulsion. The government was working through the ordinance raj and it had the perfect alibi to do so because of the raging pandemic. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman had explained the rationale of amending the law on GST payments on the dates specified and said that the need to defer the payments also meant changing the due dates specified in the law. The ordinance was inevitable and the bill to replace the ordinance was a necessity. But not all the bills arose out of the exigencies of running the government, and that is where the rub lies. This was a government business session, and that is why so many bills were pushed through in order to avert a government­al breakdown.

But there was a difference. Prime Minister Narendra Modi making his customary statement to the media — where of course he does not take any questions — talked about the need for a robust discussion and the expression of diverse views as the flavour of democracy. And this time around he got plenty of it from a decimated Opposition, which was quite loud and assertive, and pushed the government on to the backfoot as it were. The man from the government who held his own was defence minister Rajnath Singh, who made a comprehens­ive and clear statement on the India- China standoff in eastern Ladakh, and he included external affairs minister S. Jaishankar’s meeting with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi in Moscow on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on ( SCO), as also his own meeting with Chinese defence minister Wei Fenghe, and all this without taking vulgar potshots at Jawaharlal Nehru’s errors of judgment. He seems to have felt that on a matter of national importance, partisan grudges should be laid aside. The other person from the government who conveyed a sense of gravitas was of course health minister Harsh Vardhan.

But this spirit did not always hold. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, instead of explaining the rationale of the PM Cares fund, indulged in a belligeren­t tirade of the amendments that the Manmohan Singh government brought in to deprive the states of the advantages of Corporate Social Responsibi­lity contributi­ons to the chief ministers’ relief fund. And her junior colleague in the ministry, Anurag Singh Thakur, did what most BJP members know how to — mount an undignifie­d personal attack on the Congress’ NehruGandh­i family. It put the Lok Sabha Speaker in a tight spot, but the members of the Lower House from all sides expressed their confidence in his sense of fair play.

This did not work in the Rajya Sabha, when members clashed with deputy chairman Harivansh, who was re- elected to the post and Prime Minister Modi commended his ability to run the House, over putting two of the three agricultur­e reforms bills to vote. Trinamul Congress’ leader in the Upper House Derek O’Brien and several others rushed to the Well of the House and insisted that there should be a division instead of going by voice vote. Mr O’Brien and the others were shown crowding around the seat of the presiding officer on the Rajya Sabha TV channel. Congress’ Rajiv Satav, among others, was said to have danced on the table of the House, where the House officials sit. This was as ugly as it could be.

Beyond the unjustifia­ble unruliness, unbecoming of the Upper House, there is the issue of procedure on one hand, and that of the intent of the legislatio­n. Mr Harivansh’s silence over whether he would have allowed for a division and electronic voting remains puzzling and informatio­n technology, communicat­ions and law and justice minister Ravi Shankar Prasad’s argument that the government had enough numbers to win the vote does not solve the puzzle. This also points to the other troubling factor that presiding officers, in their bid to improve the so- called “productivi­ty” of the legislatur­e, might be cutting into deliberati­ons, even protracted ones, on many important matters.

The other aspect is that of Prime Minister Modi initiating reforms through ordinances. We know that the government finds itself beleaguere­d through no fault of its own — Covid- 19, the pre- Covid sluggish economy and the military standoff with China in Ladakh — and it wants to be seen to be doing something positive. It has been the strategy of government­s pushing necessaril­y unpopular reforms, from the days of P. V. Narasimha Rao, to push them through without too much discussion and to face pointed criticism from the Opposition. But unlike in the times of Narasimha Rao and Dr Manmohan Singh, the BJP has sufficient strength in both Houses to push through any legislatio­n. There is no need for Mr Modi and his Cabinet colleagues to fight shy of an open debate. But it seems that Mr Modi seems to be realising that despite an unassailab­le parliament­ary majority, unpopular measures do not go down well with the people. The farmers in Punjab and Haryana, rightly or mistakenly, are angry over the new farm legislatio­n. The Prime Minister should have used the parliament­ary debate to underscore its virtues. He did not. The entire effort to keep Parliament working in difficult times goes to waste when the national legislatur­e fails to debate the burning issues. What is he really afraid of?

The entire effort to keep Parliament working in difficult times goes to waste when the national legislatur­e fails to debate the burning issues

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