Business Standard

Suspended animation

All MPS must observe parliament­ary etiquette

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The dramatic dharna by the 12 suspended members of the Rajya Sabha under a statue of Gandhi and further disruption in both Houses of Parliament on their behalf have only served to highlight a chronic problem in the conduct of legislativ­e business in recent decades. This is the rank bad behaviour of members cutting across party lines. Incidents involving interrupti­ng speakers, rushing to the well of the House, displaying placards, even using pepper spray — all violations of parliament­ary etiquette rules — by whichever party is in the Opposition have become so common during parliament­ary sessions that these incidents have stopped making headlines. All of this makes the controvers­y created by Rajya Sabha Chairman M Venkaiah Naidu’s ruling on the first day of the winter session to suspend 12 Opposition MPS for the rest of the session — the largest in the Rajya Sabha’s history — somewhat moot.

Mr Naidu’s ruling pertained to unruly conduct on the last day of the monsoon session of Parliament. The furore was over legislatio­n being passed without debate, among other issues. If their demands were valid, their actions made a mockery of parliament­ary etiquette with slogan-shouting and papers hurled at the deputy chairman. In that sense, the suspension­s were valid within the rules of parliament­ary etiquette. The leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Mallikarju­n Kharge, has written to Mr Naidu, saying the applicatio­n of the relevant rule, 256 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in the Council of States, did not permit expelling MPS from a previous session. A reading of the rules makes this unclear, but Mr Kharge’s objection misses the point just as much as Mr Naidu’s ruling may be akin to the proverbial relationsh­ip between pot and kettle.

If Parliament has been relatively productive since 2014, when the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance came to power, it is mostly on account of the brute parliament­ary majority that has enabled the government to ram through deeply controvers­ial legislatio­n — from the revocation of Jammu & Kashmir’s special status, the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act to the three farm Bills — without much debate. This enhanced productivi­ty should not, however, imply iron parliament­ary discipline on the part of BJP MPS. The data from PRS Legislativ­e Research shows that there were far more disruption­s in both Houses of Parliament during the second stint of the Congress-led United Progressiv­e Alliance when the BJP was in the Opposition.

The growing incidence of misbehavio­ur in Parliament is a symptom of the ever-narrowing space that parties in power allow for debate on contentiou­s issues — even though this is the lifeblood of the legislativ­e process in a democracy. In a 2001 discussion on the issue of disruption­s, Atal Bihari Vajpayee pointed out the majority party was responsibl­e for governing and should take the Opposition into confidence. This advice from the late BJP prime minister has emphatical­ly not been followed by his successors. The fact that Mr Naidu’s ruling came on a day that the farm laws were repealed without any debate underlined the problem starkly. The need to restore the functionin­g of Parliament demands behavioura­l change from both sides of the aisle.

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