Monsoon Session of Parliamnet Likely to be Stormy as Opposition Closes Ranks

Monsoon Session of Parliamnet Likely to be Stormy as Opposition Closes Ranks
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Highlights

The monsoon session of Parliament beginning Tuesday is set to be stormy as Congress and several other Opposition parties appeared to be closing ranks to corner the government on a range of issues including the Vyapam scam and the Lalit Modi controversy.

The monsoon session of Parliament beginning Tuesday is set to be stormy as Congress and several other Opposition parties appeared to be closing ranks to corner the government on a range of issues including the Vyapam scam and the Lalit Modi controversy.


Besides pressing for the removal of Union ministers Sushma Swaraj and Smriti Irani, Opposition parties have indicated that they would raise the issue of scams and controversies allegedly involving BJP chief ministers -- Shivraj Singh Chouhan of Madhya Pradesh, Vasundhara Raje of Rajasthan and Raman Singh of Chhattisgarh -- and demand their resignations.

External Affairs Minister Swaraj is at the centre of a major row for helping former IPL chief Lalit Modi secure travel documents in the UK, while Human Resource and Development Minister Smirti Irani is facing the Opposition's flak in the wake of a controversy over her educational qualifications.

The ruling BJP, on its part, is likely to train its guns on Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh of the Congress, who is embroiled in a disproportionate assets case.

In an indication of the challenges his government is likely to face in the Parliament, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has convened the maiden meeting of all National Democratic Alliance or NDA constituents tomorrow to deliberate the strategy to counter the Opposition.

Before meeting the allies at his residence, the Prime Minister may also attend two separate all-party meetings called by Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu and Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan to discuss ways to ensure a smooth session.

Sensing the Opposition heat awaiting his government in Parliament, PM Modi had on Friday acknowledged that there will be a 'muqabla' (contest).

The government's floor managers conceded the Monsoon Session could be stormy. In the last Lok Sabha, an entire session was washed out over the Opposition's demand for a Joint Parliamentary Committee in the 2G scam.

While the BJP-led NDA commands an absolute majority in Lok Sabha, it lacks numbers in the Upper House where Congress is the largest party and holds key to the passage of the crucial legislations, including the Goods and Services Tax and land bill.

Senior NDA ministers had on Thursday held a meeting to chalk out the strategy for pushing the government's legislative business in view of the Opposition parties closing ranks on various issues.

The government has finalised 35 items of business for the monsoon session, which included nine bills pending in the Rajya Sabha and four pending in Lok Sabha, besides the introduction of 11 new bills.
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