Business Standard

ECONOMY & PUBLIC AFFAIRS

- ARCHIS MOHAN

Govt-Cong standoff casts shadow on GST

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday met Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ananth Kumar and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who is also the Leader of the House in the Rajya Sabha, to discuss the government’s parliament­ary strategy in the wake of the standoff with the Congress, which has cast a shadow on the goods and services tax (GST) constituti­onal amendment Bill in the ongoing Monsoon session of Parliament.

Junior ministers, however, indicated that the government — both on the compensato­ry afforestat­ion Bill as well as GST Bill — might galvanise the regional parties in its favour and isolate the Congress in the Upper House. Both the Bills are currently pending in the Rajya Sabha, where the government is in minority. However, such a strategy is unlikely to work out smoothly, given the opposition’s unity in the first week of the session. Government PM Narendra Modi on Monday discussed govt’s parliament­ary strategy on GST Bill with party leaders in the wake of the standoff with the Congress strategist­s also said that none of the senior Congress leaders, particular­ly Leader of the Opposition Ghulam Nabi Azad, was available on Monday and they will reach out to Congress leadership on Tuesday. Azad and senior Congress leaders were busy with the party’s Uttar Pradesh campaign.

On Monday, the Congress didn’t let Rajya Sabha transact any legislativ­e business and the House could not take up the compensato­ry afforestat­ion Bill. The Congress accused the government of scuttling on Friday, along with ally Shiromani Akali Dal, a private member’s Bill by Congress MP KV P Ramachandr­a Rao to demand special package for Andhra Pradesh.

Congress threatened to not let the House function until the Bill was discussed. “What happened on Friday was by design. It was planned by the government to disrupt the proceeding­s,” Congress deputy leader Anand Sharma said. Deputy Chairman P J Kurien said the Bill can now only be taken up on August 5. Fridays are reserved for discussing private members’ Bills and resolution­s.

Congress received support from Samajwadi Party and the Left parties, and was also hopeful of support from BJP ally Telugu Desam Party. A vote on the Bill, as and when it’s taken up, could embarrass the government. However, government strategist­s maintained that Rao’s Bill was a ‘Money Bill’ and hence it could only be taken up in the Lok Sabha.

In further souring of relations, the Akalis moved a privilege notice against Congress members Jairam Ramesh and Renuka Chowdhury to the Rajya Sabha Chairman for < allegedly misbehavin­g with Union minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal during the proceeding­s on Friday.

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