NE NEWS SERVICE
NEW DELHI, FEB 8
Lok Sabha proceedings were extended till midnight to accommodate the long list of speakers participating in the Motion of Thanks to the President’s address.
Lok Sabha meets between 4 pm and 9 pm.
Meenakshi Lekhi, who was presiding over the proceedings, said there is a long list of speakers participating in the debate and extended the time till midnight after taking the sense of the House.
After several days of the impasse over the three new agri laws, the House resumed the debate on the Motion of Thanks on Monday evening.
The time allocated for the debate is 15 hours and it would continue on Tuesday.
Lok Sabha logjam ends after Rajnath appeals ‘to not break tradition’
Lok Sabha resumed normal functioning Monday after a week-long disruption over the three Central farm laws following an appeal by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh that it was a duty of every member to maintain the tradition of passing the Motion of Thanks to President’s Address.
After the House convened at 5 pm, Singh said the tradition of thanking the President has been continuing for a long and it should not be broken in a healthy democracy.
He also said that Rajya Sabha has already passed the Motion of Thanks after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s reply and “I appeal to members not to break this tradition in the Lok Sabha”.
Singh said that members are free to speak on farm laws during the discussion on the Motion of Thanks.
Congress leader Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury too said that this tradition has been continuing since 1921 and should not be broken.
“We demanded to discuss the issue of farmers who have been sitting in the cold on the borders of Delhi in protest against farm laws. Regrettably, they are being stopped from entering the capital by sharp nails and barbed wires,” he said referring to the reinforced barricading at the farmers’ protest sites.
He said the Opposition wanted an assurance from the government for a standalone discussion on the farmers’ issue either after the debate on Motion of Thanks or after the discussion on Budget.
Speaker Om Birla also appealed to the members to allow the House to function and not indulge in sloganeering.
The House was repeatedly disrupted by the Opposition members from February 2 over the three farm laws which were passed by Parliament in September last year.
Earlier Birla had called a meeting of leaders of different political parties to break the impasse in the House.
In the meeting, an agreement was reached to resume its normal functioning with Singh appealing to start the debate on President’s Address.