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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Dhankhar-Kharge letter war: Cong chief says 'answer may not lie in a discussion', MPs' suspension was premeditated

The Congress president, in his reply, said that he agrees with the Chairman that they need to move ahead but stressed that the 'answer may not lie in a discussion in the Chairman's chambers, if the government is not keen on running the House'

PTI New Delhi Published 25.12.23, 05:41 PM
Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge.

Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge. File picture

It was the mass suspension of MPs that was "premeditated" and "weaponised" by the ruling party to sabotage Parliamentary practices, Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge alleged on Saturday, hitting back at Rajya Sabha Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar.

Kharge was replying to a second letter on the disruption of parliamentary proceedings and the suspension of MPs by Vice President Dhankhar, who had alleged that the disorder by the Opposition in the House was deliberate and part of a strategy.

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In his letter on Saturday, Dhankar had also said, "We need to move ahead", and invited the Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha for an interaction on December 25 "or a time of your convenience" at his official residence.

The Congress president, in his reply, said that he agrees with the Chairman that they need to move ahead but stressed that the "answer may not lie in a discussion in the Chairman's chambers, if the government is not keen on running the House".

The Congress chief said he is currently out of Delhi and it would be his "privilege and duty" to meet the Chairman as soon as he is back.

Replying to the points raised by Dhankhar, Kharge alleged that the suspensions were "executed without any application of mind" and said that as the custodian of the House, he should protect the people's right to hold its government accountable in Parliament.

The opposition leader alleged that the ruling party has "weaponised the suspension of MPs as a convenient tool to undermine democracy, sabotage Parliamentary practices and throttle the Constitution".

Kharge said the Chairman's letter "unfortunately justifies the autocratic and arrogant attitude of the Government towards Parliament" "If anything privilege motions have also been weaponised to muzzle the voice of the Opposition. This is a deliberate design of the ruling dispensation to undermine Parliament itself. By suspending MPs, the government is effectively silencing the voice of the voters of 146 MPs altogether," Kharge said.

"You have also mentioned that disorder was deliberate and strategised and predetermined.

"I would like to submit that if anything, it is the mass suspension of the Opposition MPs from both Houses of Parliament that seems to be predetermined and premeditated by the Government and I am most sorry to say, executed without any application of mind, as can be seen by the suspension of an INDIA party MP who was not even present in the Parliament," he said.

While Dhankhar, in his letter, had said that his attempts to meet the Leader of Opposition were turned down, Kharge said he had sought a statement from the Union Home Minister Amit Shah on the security breach on December 14, before the suspensions started.

"I recognise it is well within your powers as Chairman to decide on these notices. However, it was regrettable that the Chair condoned the attitude of the Hon'ble Home Minister and the Government who did not wish to make a statement on the floor of the House.

"It was even more regrettable that the Hon'ble Home Minister made his first public statement before a TV channel when Parliament was in session and the Chair did not find that sacrileging the temple of democracy," Kharge alleged.

The senior Congress leader urged him to examine his concerns "objectively and with neutrality as the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha." He said a Union minister allegedly informed an opposition parliamentarian that most opposition MPs "will be suspended before the home minister is present in the Rajya Sabha".

"We would have expected the Chairman to have inquired if such a threat was indeed issued. Such comments grossly undermine the Chair who we believe is the final authority on conducting the House including suspension of members," Kharge said Kharge said as the custodian of the House, the Chairman should protect the people's right to hold its government accountable in Parliament.

"The Chairman should also kindly note that the government has escaped accountability on all crucial issues like serious border incursions by China, or continued unrest in Manipur or the recent intrusion in the Lok Sabha by visitors who had been facilitated entry by a BJP MP," he said.

"It would be distressing when history judges the presiding officers harshly for Bills passed without debate and not seeking accountability from the government.

"It is disappointing that the Hon'ble Chairman feels effecting suspensions facilitated legislative business by passing bills without discussion," he said.

Kharge had on Friday told Dhankhar that the suspension of MPs on such a large scale was detrimental to the core principles of India's parliamentary democracy.

In his letter to Dhankhar, the Congress chief had said he was pained and agonised at the suspension of so many MPs and felt frustrated and disheartened.

The Congress president was responding to an earlier letter by Dhankhar in which he had said rendering the House dysfunctional by making a demand to the Chair that cannot be acceded was unfortunate and against public interest.

The Rajya Sabha was adjourned sine die on Thursday, a day ahead of the scheduled end of Parliament's Winter session.

The Winter session began on December 4 and was scheduled to conclude on December 22.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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