Business Standard

Cong, BJP spar over delay in House session

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA New Delhi, 21 November

The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party on Tuesday sparred over the delay in convening Parliament’s winter session, with the Opposition party claiming that the government was doing so to avoid a debate on “scams”, including the Rafale deal, during the Gujarat polls.

The BJP, however, rejected the Congress’s tirade as a “chorus of baseless allegation­s” and insisted that previous government­s, including the UPA, had also scheduled sessions after state polls as politician­s were busy in campaign.

Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ananth Kumar said the winter session, which generally starts from November’s third week, would be convened in December.

Earlier at a press conference, senior Congress leaders Ghulam Nabi Azad, Mallikarju­n Kharge and Anand Sharma targeted the government, claiming that it did not want to face the Opposition over “scams” linked to Rafale deal, the GST and the note ban.

In a jibe at Modi, Kharge said the Prime Minister was like “Brahma the creator” and only he knew when the winter session will be held.

“I have talked to many ministers, the Speaker, Lok Sabha Secretary General, but no one knows the dates of Parliament session. Only one man knows and they call him Brahma, the creator. That's why till Brahma orders, we won't know the dates (of Parliament session),” Kharge told reporters.

Taking on the Congress, senior BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad asserted that Assembly polls have often played a role in fixing timing of sessions.

Addressing a press conference, Prasad said it had been an “establishe­d tradition” to schedule session so that its timing does not clash with state polls.

It had also happened when Indira Gandhi and Chandra Shekhar were prime ministers, he said, adding that the session had started twice after Christmas.

Kumar said that the Opposition party was suffering from “selective amnesia” as in 2008 and 2013 also, the winter session was held in December.

The Congress was already looking for an excuse for its impending defeat in the state polls, Prasad claimed.

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