The 15th Lok Sabha: 2009-14
(→Add Title/Subtitle) |
|||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
===Productivity: Number of bills passed=== | ===Productivity: Number of bills passed=== | ||
− | 15th Lok Sabha to be least productive ever | + | ====15th Lok Sabha to be least productive ever==== |
Has Passed Only 96 Of 365 Bills Tabled | Has Passed Only 96 Of 365 Bills Tabled | ||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
As pressing issues raised by MPs spill out of zero hour into question hour and after, the proportion of time spent by Parliament on core legislative business is falling, says Chakshu Roy of PRS. | As pressing issues raised by MPs spill out of zero hour into question hour and after, the proportion of time spent by Parliament on core legislative business is falling, says Chakshu Roy of PRS. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===93 hrs lost in most disrupted budget session of 15th Lok Sabha=== | ||
+ | Bharti Jain The Times of India 2013/05/09 | ||
+ | [http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=TOINEW&BaseHref=CAP/2013/05/09&PageLabel=17&EntityId=Ar01702&ViewMode=HTML The Times of India ] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Budget session — saddled by a washed out second half —ended [two days ahead of schedule], earning the dubious distinction of being the most disrupted budget session of the 15th Lok Sabha and second only to the 2010 winter session in terms of hours lost. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A good 92 hours and 40 minutes were lost to disruptions and forced adjournments, on account of sustained protests over Coalgate, Railgate and the leaked draft report of the JPC on 2G. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This was against a matching 94 hours and 42 minutes of sittings during the latest session, according to the data compiled by the Lok Sabha secretariat. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Had the session concluded as per schedule on May 10, the hours lost would have well surpassed the hours of sittings, given the bleak prospects of the House functioning on the two remaining days. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The picture was no different in the Rajya Sabha. According to PRS Legislative Research, the total productive time in the Upper House was 83 hours, which is just 52% of the scheduled time. | ||
+ | |||
+ | During the budget session of 2012, the Rajya Sabha worked for 94% of the scheduled time. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
[[Category:Government|L]] | [[Category:Government|L]] |
Revision as of 09:20, 9 May 2013
Contents |
Add Title/Subtitle
This is a newspaper article selected for the excellence of its content. |
Productivity: Number of bills passed
15th Lok Sabha to be least productive ever
Has Passed Only 96 Of 365 Bills Tabled
By Rukmini Shrinivasan The Times of India 2013/05/02
The 15th Lok Sabha is well on track to achieving the dubious distinction of having passed the fewest bills. It is likely to end up being the one that sat for the least time — just 1,157 hours until Monday. The number of days the Lok Sabha sits has been steadily falling and now averages 75 per year, as against an average of 130 in the US House of Representatives. But beyond the hours of sitting is the key question of what is getting discussed in those hours.
Till 30 Apr 2013, the 15th Lok Sabha had passed 96 of the 365 bills the UPA government brought before it, according data from PRS Legislative Research, an independent, nonpartisan legislative research organization. To equal the previous low set by the 14th Lok Sabha, the House would have to pass 165 bills over the next one year, against the 96 it has passed in the past four. The 261 bills passed during the tenure of UPA-I was, until now, the poorest legislative performance during a full term of Parliament. The bills now pending before Parliament include those on food security, land acquisition, judicial accountability, the setting up of a Lokpal and various labour laws. The number of bills passed by Parliament has been in gradual decline over the past few decades, PRS’s analysis of 60 years of Parliament data shows. Even more worryingly, the time spent discussing each bill before passing it is also falling. In 2012, the two houses passed between them 11 bills on which they spent just 30 minutes each. In 2012, the Lok Sabha passed the anti-sexual harassment at workplace bill with no discussion.
As pressing issues raised by MPs spill out of zero hour into question hour and after, the proportion of time spent by Parliament on core legislative business is falling, says Chakshu Roy of PRS.
93 hrs lost in most disrupted budget session of 15th Lok Sabha
Bharti Jain The Times of India 2013/05/09 The Times of India
The Budget session — saddled by a washed out second half —ended [two days ahead of schedule], earning the dubious distinction of being the most disrupted budget session of the 15th Lok Sabha and second only to the 2010 winter session in terms of hours lost.
A good 92 hours and 40 minutes were lost to disruptions and forced adjournments, on account of sustained protests over Coalgate, Railgate and the leaked draft report of the JPC on 2G.
This was against a matching 94 hours and 42 minutes of sittings during the latest session, according to the data compiled by the Lok Sabha secretariat.
Had the session concluded as per schedule on May 10, the hours lost would have well surpassed the hours of sittings, given the bleak prospects of the House functioning on the two remaining days.
The picture was no different in the Rajya Sabha. According to PRS Legislative Research, the total productive time in the Upper House was 83 hours, which is just 52% of the scheduled time.
During the budget session of 2012, the Rajya Sabha worked for 94% of the scheduled time.