Parliament will convene on Monday for special session
Parliament will meet on Monday for a special three day session to consider
important financial business relating to the 1997-98 Budget proposals.
After the United Front government headed by H D Deve
Gowda was voted out in the Lok Sabha on April 11, Speaker Purno A Sangma
adjourned the House sine die.
Leaders of several political parties and Speaker Sangma had called on
the President earlier to draw his attention to the
implications in case the Budget and the Finance Bill were
not passed by the Lok Sabha. The House before adjournment on
March 21, had passed a vote on account for two months.
The President, after consultation with constitutional
experts, asked the Speaker and the Rajya Sabha chairman, Vice-President
K R Narayan to convene the Houses to consider important financial business,
sources said.
Before the two Houses reassemble, the leaders of all the political
parties will discuss and finalise the business to be taken up.
Some constitutional experts and the Bharatiya Janata Party
have objected to the passage
of the Budget presented by the government which was voted out
of power.
The BJP on Sunday conveyed
to Sangma that a ''most peculiar'' situation
had arisen following the Tamil Maanila Congress's decision to keep
out of the UF government under the new leadership.
The party also wanted to know the ''status'' of the financial
business to be taken up in Parliament from Monday.
Leader of the Opposition Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Jaswant Singh, the party's deputy leader
in the Lok Sabha, met the Speaker to convey their views about the special session.
In the event of the House being adjourned on Monday as a mark of
respect to Lok Sabha MP and former Orissa chief
minister Biju Patnaik, the BJP wanted to
know the status of the financial business.
Therefore, in case of dissolution of the House or the prospects
of formation of an alternate government, Parliament could do
''no more than pass'' the necessary vote on account, the BJP leaders
pointed out to the Speaker.
The BJP leaders told Sangma that if by Monday ''no
government is on the horizon'' it would be difficult to steer the
Finance Bill ''without a finance minister.''
Singh said the Speaker had ''broadly'' concurred with their
view. Sangma has called an all-party meeting at 0930 hours
on Monday.
Until the uncertainty and suspense was resolved, Singh said
Parliament should not shoulder the responsibility of the previous
government.
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