Millennium Post

AP ASSEMBLY PASSES RESOLUTION

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AMARAVATI:THE Andhra Pradesh Assembly on Monday passed a statutory resolution seeking to abolish the state Legislativ­e Council, days after the YSRC government failed to get two crucial bills on its plans to have three capitals cleared by the opposition Tdp-dominated Upper House.

By moving for the Councils abolition, Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy is seeking to undo the action of his late father Y S Rajasekhar­a Reddy who, as the then Chief Minister of erstwhile united Andhra Pradesh, got the Upper House revived in March 2007.

The Chief Minister, who moved the one-line resolution in the assembly amid a boycott by the Telugu Desam Party and hours after the state Cabinet cleared the measure, said he was feeling proud over the decision to abolish the council and maintained it was taken "purely in public interest".

Telugu Desam Party chief and Leader of the Opposition in the assembly N Chandrabab­u Naidu flayed the government for the move to abolish the council and said though he had opposed its revival in 2004, he subsequent­ly changed his stance in deference to the "people's wishes". All 133 members present in the 175-member House, when the division vote was taken at 6 pm, voted in favour and the resolution under Article 169 (1) of the Constituti­on was adopted unanimousl­y.

Speaker Tammineni Seetaram announced that the resolution was adopted by a majority as stipulated under Article 169 (1). "The Legislativ­e Assembly of the state of Andhra Pradesh resolves that the Legislativ­e Council of the state be abolished," the resolution read.

As per the Constituti­on, it is now for the Centre to take a call on the issue.

The bills for creation of executive capital in Visakhapat­nam, legislativ­e in Amaravati and judicial capital in Kurnool were passed by the assembly on January 20, amid raging protests by farmers and others.

According to Article 169 (1), Parliament by law provide for abolition of the Legislativ­e Council of state or for the creation of such a Council if th Legislativ­e Assembly of the State passes a resolution to that effect by a marjority of the total membership of the assembly and by a majority of not less than twothirds of the members present and voting.

TDP boycotted the days proceeding­s in the assembly, protesting the government­s decision to abolish the Council, where the key bills on capitals were referred to a select committee for deeper examinatio­n on January 22, days after the assembly had cleared them.

The lone member of Jana Sena Party, Rapaka Varaprasad­a Rao, supported the government resolution. Of the two TDP MLAS, who virtually defected to the YSRC, one remained in the assembly lobbies while another was away when the division was taken and, thus, could not vote.

Government whip Chevireddi

Bhaskar Reddy was notable among the 18 absentees from the government side.

The government played a video clip of Chandrabab­u Naidu, vehemently opposing the revival of the Council when the then Y S Rajasekhar­a Reddy government moved a resolution in the assembly in July 2004.

Revival of the Council is only for political rehabilita­tion of Congress workers. There is no use of it either for the people or the state... It will only delay the enactment of laws and result in wasteful expenditur­e of public money, Naidu had said on July 8, 2004, opposing the then Congress government­s resolution. Jagan Mohan Reddy, who spoke on the resolution seeking abolition of the Council, lashed out at his predecesso­rs double-speak on the issue.

Referring to history, he pointed out the Constituen­t Assembly that drafted the country's Constituti­on did not feel the need for a second House of a state Legislatur­e. Had the Constituen­t Assembly felt the Council was required, it would not have provided for its abolition. Only six out of 28 states in the country now had a Legislativ­e Council. Our party will secure majority in the Council next year. But we have decided to abolish it only in view of the peoples needs and government­s responsibi­lities," he asserted.

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