Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Oppn seeks to bring women’s reservatio­n bill back into focus

- Saubhadra Chatterji

NEW DELHI: Opposition parties want to bring the women’s reservatio­n bill back on the parliament­ary agenda in the winter session that starts on Wednesday, highlighti­ng that the draft legislatio­n enjoys bipartisan support.

At a meeting of the Lok Sabha’s business advisory committee on Tuesday, a speaker-led panel that decides weekly agenda of the Lok Sabha, lawmakers such as Sudip Bandopadhy­ay of Trinamool Congress and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam’s TR Baalu pitched for the women’s reservatio­n bill that promises 33% reservatio­n of seats in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies.

Bandopadhy­ay argued that the bill, last brought and cleared in the Rajya Sabha in 2010, enjoys the support of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Congress, DMK, Samajwadi Party and Janata Dal (United). Union parliament­ary affairs minister Pralhad Joshi enquired if the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), too, is ready to support the bill.

The women’s reservatio­n bill was cleared by the Upper House in 2010 amid a ruckus but the United Progressiv­e Alliance government didn’t push it in the other House as its supporting parties such as RJD and SP toughened their stand, demanding a quota for SC and STS within the quota.

While the legislatio­n continues to face an uncertain future, Lok Sabha speaker Om Birla said that in this session, he will ensure a calling attention motion every week. This motion allows any MP to get a minister’s reply on an issue in the floor of the House in a mini debate. In the past few sessions, the calling attention notices were rarely accepted.

The Opposition welcomed the move and argued that ministers can’t avoid their accountabi­lity in Parliament citing other engagement­s. “Birla appealed to the leaders for their cooperatio­n in smooth conduct of the House. The leaders assured the speaker that they will extend their cooperatio­n and support in smooth conduct of Lok Sabha,” the House secretaria­t said in a statement.

The government, however, provided no hint on the women’s reservatio­n bill – a legislatio­n that hasn’t been included among the 16 bills it plans to table. It indicated that a debate on river erosion might take place.

 ?? ?? The UPA government did not push the bill in Lok Sabha.
The UPA government did not push the bill in Lok Sabha.

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