LIVE Parliament LIVE | Will bring Uniform Civil Code in every state: Amit Shah
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Union Home Minister Amit Shah speaks during the Constitution debate in the Rajya Sabha at the Winter Session of Parliament, in New Delhi on Tuesday. | PTI photo

Parliament LIVE | Will bring Uniform Civil Code in every state: Amit Shah

Slamming the Congress, the Home Minister said successive Congress regimes did not prioritise the progress of OBCs


The Congress on Tuesday (December 17) claimed the Bill on holding simultaneous polls was against federalism and "anti-constitutional", and said the voting at its introduction stage in Lok Sabha showed the BJP lacks the two-thirds majority required to pass a constitutional amendment.

Two Bills that lay down the mechanism to hold simultaneous elections were introduced in the Lok Sabha after a fiery debate on Tuesday.

Opposition parties dubbed the draft laws -- a Constitution amendment bill and an ordinary bill -- as an attack on the federal structure, a charge rejected by the government.

Also read: 'One Nation One Election' Bill likely to be tabled in Lok Sabha today

Speaking to reporters on Parliament premises, Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said, "Anti-constitutional bill, it is against the federalism of our nation. We are opposing the bill."

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor also hit out at the government, saying voting at the introduction stage showed the BJP did not have the two-thirds majority required to pass a constitutional amendment.

"We (the Congress) are not the only ones that have opposed this bill. The vast majority of the opposition parties have opposed this bill and the grounds are very many, it is a violation of the federal structure of the Constitution. Why should a state government fall if the central government falls?" he told reporters on the premises.

Tharoor said the government might constitute Parliament's joint committee in such a way that it has a majority, but without a two-thirds majority in the House there would not be a constitutional amendment. "So this discussion is increasingly futile," he added.

Opposition terms move 'dictatorial'

The Opposition termed the move “dictatorial” even as Union Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal asserted that the legislation would not tamper with the powers enjoyed by states.

The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha by Meghwal after a nearly 90-minute debate, followed by a division of votes. As many as 269 members voted in favour of the Bill and 198 against it.

Meghwal also introduced The Union Territories Amendment Bill, which seeks to align elections in the Union territories of Puducherry, Delhi, and Jammu and Kashmir with the Lok Sabha polls. He said the proposed bills did not attack the "basic structure doctrine, as claimed by the Opposition". He said he would move a resolution referring the Bills to a joint committee of Parliament.

Also read: BJP’s obsession with One Nation, One Election: Implications for democracy

Congress MP Manish Tewari opposed the introduction of the Bills and termed the move an assault on the basic structure doctrine that stipulates certain features of the Constitution are beyond the amending power of Parliament.

Samajwadi Party MP Dharmendra Yadav said the measure to introduce "one nation, one election" by the BJP was an attempt to bring dictatorship in the country.

TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee said the Bills linked the tenure of state assemblies to that of the Lok Sabha, thus undermining the mandate of the people.

DMK member TR Baalu said, "The electors have the right to elect the government for five years and this right cannot be curtailed with simultaneous elections."

Meanwhile, BJP allies TDP (TDP) and Shiv Sena (Shinde) extended "unwavering support" to the election reform measure.

TDP member and Union minister Chandra Shekhar Pemmasani said "One Nation, One Election" would reduce expenditure on polls and enhance logistical efficiency.

Shiv Sena member Shrikant Shinde hit out at the Opposition, saying they were allergic to reforms.

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Live Updates

  • 17 Dec 2024 4:06 PM IST

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  • 17 Dec 2024 3:50 PM IST

    CPI(M) against One Nation, One Election policy: Kerala MP

    CPI(M) MP and former Kerala Minister K Radhakrishnan said his party was against the One Nation, One Election policy being mooted by the central government and the legislation in favour of it would be strongly opposed.

    Radhakrishnan said that besides the CPI(M), even the Congress would oppose the legislation trying to bring simultaneous elections in the country.

    He further said that even the regional parties would oppose the policy of simultaneous polls as this concept was not beneficial for them.

    Two bills that lay down the mechanism to hold simultaneous elections were introduced in the Lok Sabha after a fiery debate on Tuesday.

    Opposition parties dubbed the draft laws — a Constitution amendment bill and an ordinary bill — as an attack on the federal structure, a charge rejected by the government.

  • 17 Dec 2024 3:46 PM IST

    PM favoured referring ONOE Bill to JPC, Shah tells LS

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi favoured detailed discussion at every level on the 'One Nation, One Election' Bill and wanted it to be referred to a Joint Committee of Parliament, Home Minister Amit Shah said on Tuesday.
    Shah made the remarks in Lok Sabha when the House was hearing objections to the introduction of the Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill that seeks to usher in simultaneous polls to the Lower House and state assemblies.
    "When One Nation, One Election bills came up in Cabinet, PM Modi said these should be referred to the Joint Committee of Parliament. There should be a detailed discussion over it at every level," Shah said.
    The home minister pointed out that DMK member TR Baalu, too, had favoured referring the bill to a parliamentary committee.
    Shah said the bill can be discussed in greater detail in the Joint Committee of Parliament. The report of the JPC will be approved by the Union Cabinet and the Bill can be discussed again in Parliament, he said.
    The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill was introduced in Lok Sabha following a division of votes. The Union Territories Amendment Bill seeks to align the elections to the union territories Puducherry, Delhi and Jammu & Kashmir with the Lok Sabha polls.

  • 17 Dec 2024 3:41 PM IST

  • 17 Dec 2024 2:56 PM IST

  • 17 Dec 2024 2:44 PM IST

  • 17 Dec 2024 2:30 PM IST

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