Speaker, party leaders optimistic about budget session
February 19th, 2011 - 9:42 pm ICT by IANS
New Delhi,Feb 19 (IANS) Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar and leaders of various parties hope that the budget session of parliament beginning Monday will sail smoothly unlike the stormy winter session that was washed away in the loud protests over corruption scandals.”I am very optimistic. I feel there is a consensus among party leaders that parliament should function smmothly,” Meira Kumar told IANS.
The speaker will hold a customay luncheon meeting here with the leaders of various parties Sunday where she is expected to urge them for restoration of normalcy in parliament functioning.
The government will in a day or two take a decision on the issue of a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) probe into the 2G spectrum scandal, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pawan Bansal told reporters at a pre-session press conference here Friday.
However, political circles say the government has already agreed to form a JPC.
The 23-day winter session in November-December last year was virtually washed out as the opposition party members persistently protested, demanding the JPC on 2G spectrum scam.
Research groups have calculated that the national exchequer suffered a loss of Rs.171 crore due to the disuption of parliamentary work in the winter session.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, a known trouble-shooter for the government, indicated at an all-party meeting Feb 8 that the government was now ready for a JPC.
He is reported to have told some party leaders that the government was ready to pay any price for smooth conduct of parliament.
The opposition has also demanded JPC probes into the Commonwealth Games scandal and the Adarsh Housing Society scam.
Bansal ruled out JPCs into other scandals. “They (the opposition leaders) know that the JPC is constituted only to look into one issue,” he said.
Even the BJP, which led the protests in the winter session, is hopeful of a normal budget session.
“We are optimistic that the government will announce a JPC at the outset and help conduct the session. We will play the role of a constructive oppposition,” BJP spokesperson Nirmala Sitharaman told IANS.
However, she cautioned that the party will take up other scandals. “We will take up the Commonwealth Games scam, Adarsh scam.”
Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader P. Karunakaran said there would be protests in the budget session too. “We will corner the government over the issues of price rise and the plight of the poor,” Karnuanakaran told IANS.
While the political leaders look forward to a fruitful budget session, the ‘aam admi’ (ordinary people) is least interested in the goings-on.
“What difference does it make to us whether parliament functions or not. Both ways, it is a waste,” said Mohinder Singh, a resident of Old Rajinder Nagar in New Delhi.
Delhi University student Sahasranshu Mahapatra said: “There is no shortage of laws in India. Even if parliament passes new laws, one has to wait for proper implementation.”
The six-week budget session is scheduled to take up 62 bills, other than dealing with the main financial business - presentation, discussion and passage of the general budget and the railway budget.
The session will conclude April 21 with a break from March 17 to April 3.
Political pundits and policy analysts are waiting to see how the budget session goes off.
“If the budget session is disrupted seriously, the image of India’s democracy - the largest in the world - will get a hit,” said political analyst Yogesh Vajpeyi.
- PM attends speaker's all-party meeting (Lead) - Feb 20, 2011
- Speaker holds all-party luncheon meet for smooth parliament functioning - Feb 20, 2011
- PM hopeful budget session will be productive (Second Lead) - Feb 20, 2011
- Govt. may agree to JPC probe in 2G scam, says Bansal - Feb 17, 2011
- JPC deadlock persists but speaker hopes for smooth budget session (Lead) - Dec 31, 2010
- At Meira Kumar's luncheon meeting, BJP sticks to JPC demand (Lead) - Dec 30, 2010
- House logjam: Speaker plans lunch meetings for solution - Dec 29, 2010
- Decision on JPC before Wednesday, says Bansal (Lead) - Feb 18, 2011
- Parliament deadlock: Govt. must announce JPC on Feb. 22, says Swaraj - Feb 16, 2011
- 'Government likely to agree to JPC on 2G spectrum controversy' - Feb 18, 2011
- Government makes fresh bid to break parliament stalemate - Feb 08, 2011
- Manmohan Singh hopes Budget session will be peaceful, productive - Feb 21, 2011
- Mukherjee to convene all-party meet to break Parliament deadlock - Feb 08, 2011
- Parliament session begins Monday; JPC announcement likely Wednesday - Feb 20, 2011
- Mukherjee to convene all-party meet on Feb. 8 to break Parliament deadlock - Feb 06, 2011
Tags: budget session, commonwealth games, corruption scandals, housing society, jpcs, Lok Sabha, loud protests, luncheon meeting, meira kumar, opposition leaders, opposition party members, parliamentary affairs, parliamentary work, pawan bansal, political circles, pranab mukherjee, smooth conduct, stormy winter, trouble shooter, winter session