Are the troubles over JPC over?
February 22nd, 2011 - 6:59 pm ICT by IANS
By Sarwar Kashani
New Delhi, Feb 22 (IANS) The government’s decision to agree to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) probe into the 2G scam may lead to another row - who will form the panel which can even question the Indian prime minister.Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Tuesday promised in the Lok Sabha that the government will set up a JPC to study alleged financial irregularities in the allocation second generation spectrum - billed as one of the largest corruption scams in the country.
The announcement will be followed by a formal motion to be moved in the Lok Sabha by Communications Minister Kapil Sibal soon. It will be referred to the Rajya Sabha for approval.
Political parties are likely to fight it out over representation in the committee that will have members from both the houses - two-thirds from the Lok Sabha and the rest from the the Rajya Sabha.
Earlier JPCs had 21 members. The upper limit is 30 members.
The Congress, which initially was dead set against a JPC, will also have a tough task in making up its mind on naming a chairman of the panel.
The opposition is advocating a broader panel so that it can have wide political representation.
However, accommodating representatives of all 37 parties with members in the two houses seems impossible. But informed sources told IANS that groups with major representation, including the Left, which has a combined strength of 24 in the Lok Sabha, will get to be in the JPC.
The JPC has a mandate from the constitution empowering it to summon any agency and call in for questioning the prime minister. No other body other than courts enjoys such power.
What is a JPC:
It is a structured but ad hoc committee whose composition and functioning are governed by parliament.
It is set up to probe a specific issue and its duration is limited. Such a panel is set up by a motion passed in parliament. Its terms of reference depend on the motion. It is not limited to scrutiny of government finance.
Effectiveness of JPC: The mandate of a JPC depends on the motion constituting it. Its recommendations have persuasive value but it cannot force the government to take any action. Many past JPC reports have been ignored by governments.
The government can decide to conduct its own investigations on the basis of a JPC report. But it has to report to parliament on the follow-up action on the JPC recommendations.
A JPC report can recommend the prosecution or the change in government policies, for example, cancellation of 2G licence, but the government can disagree with the JPC and refuse to take such action.
Power: For a JPC to ask for any minister to testify depends on its terms of references, which usually allow it to question any government functionary, including the prime minister.
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- Will JPC on 2G spectrum get to the truth? Debate is on - Mar 02, 2011
- PM agrees to JPC probe, says parliament can't be paralysed (Lead) - Feb 22, 2011
- Manmohan Singh agrees to JPC on 2G spectrum scam - Feb 22, 2011
- 2G scam: Manmohan Singh to move motion for JPC in Rajya Sabha - Mar 01, 2011
- Joint Parliamentary Committee debate in Parliament today - Feb 24, 2011
- JPC on 2G scam to meet on March 24 - Mar 10, 2011
- Rajya Sabha passes motion for forming JPC (Roundup) - Mar 01, 2011
- Under pressure, PM announces JPC into 2G scam (Second Lead) - Feb 22, 2011
- 30 member JPC set up to probe 2G-spectrum issue - Feb 24, 2011
- 'Government likely to agree to JPC on 2G spectrum controversy' - Feb 18, 2011
- JPC on 2G scam is fifth of its kind - Feb 24, 2011
- PM to announce JPC on 2G scam Tuesday - Feb 21, 2011
- 2G scam: Sibal moves motion for JPC in Rajya Sabha - Mar 01, 2011
- 30-member JPC formed to probe 2G scam, telecom policy (Lead) - Feb 24, 2011
Tags: financial irregularities, formal motion, government finance, hoc committee, indian prime minister, jpc, jpcs, kapil sibal, kashani, Lok Sabha, manmohan, manmohan singh, parliamentary committee, political parties, political representation, prime minister manmohan, prime minister manmohan singh, rajya sabha, second generation, terms of reference