Mumbai: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla on Sunday announced to constitute a committee headed by Maharashtra speaker of legislative Assembly Rahul Narwekar to review the provisions of the 10th Schedule of the Indian Constitution, which deals with defections in political parties.
The committee will give recommendations about the changes to be done in it. Mr. Birla made the announcement after the conclusion of the 84th All India Presiding Officers’ Conference (AIPOC) held in Mumbai. “We have formed a committee, which is headed by Maharashtra Legislative Assembly speaker Rahul Narwekar. The committee will review the provisions of the 10th Schedule and if the amendment is required, it will give its recommendation. We will consider amending the Act in the Parliament,” he said.
The Lok Sabha speaker also pointed out that in the past, a committee headed by C.P. Joshi, Speaker of Rajasthan Legislative Assembly, was formed for the review of the 10th Schedule and the Joshi committee had given some suggestions. The recommendations of the Joshi committee will be reviewed by the Narwaker committee, he said. “The committee will hold discussions on what changes need to be brought and
accordingly submit its report to us. If needed, the government will make the changes in the 10th schedule,” Mr. Birla said in a response to a query.
Mr. Birla also insisted that discipline and decorum of the House should be maintained. “The new trend of disrupting the speeches of president and governors is not appropriate for the democracy of the country. All the political parties will try to ensure that there should not be disruption in the House when the President or the Governor addresses the Houses,” the Lok Sabha speaker said. Addressing the closing ceremony of the 84th All India Presiding Officers Conference in Mumbai’,
Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar also expressed deep concern over the lack of discipline and decorum in legislatures. He urged Presiding Officers to invoke their authority to enforce discipline and decorum as lack of these is virtually shaking the very foundations of Legislatures. “Disruption in legislatures is cancerous not only for legislatures but also for democracy and society. Curbing it is not optional but an absolute necessity to save the sanctity of the legislature,” he said.