http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/view-from-the-earlier-side-when-jaitley-saw-benefits-to-the-country-in-obstructing-parliament/

View from the Earlier Side: When Jaitley saw ‘benefits to the country’
in obstructing Parliament

The Congress is now recalling the statements Jaitley and Sushma had
made, arguing that the BJP had set the precedent for disruption.

Written by Manoj C G | Updated: July 27, 2015 6:34 am

Over the last week, leader of the House in the Rajya Sabha Arun
Jaitley has repeatedly criticised the Congress for disrupting
Parliament and accused it of running away from a debate on the Lalit
Modi controversy as it insists that Union minister Sushma Swaraj
resign first.

During the previous regime, it was Jaitley and, ironically, Sushma who
had led the then Opposition’s offensive over various issues, leading
to a series of disruptions that both had justified then.

When the oil-for-food scandal broke during UPA-I, Jaswant Singh headed
the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha but Jaitley and Sushma were the BJP
faces who led the offensive, resulting in disruption of Parliament in
winter 2005 and external affairs minister Natwar Singh’s eventual
resignation.

The multiple ministerial resignations during UPA-II — from A Raja to
Dayanidhi Maran and Shashi Tharoor to P K Bansal and Ashwani Kumar —
followed vociferous demands led again by Jaitley and Sushma, leaders
of the opposition in the two Houses.

The Congress is now recalling the statements Jaitley and Sushma had
made, arguing that the BJP had set the precedent for disruption.

They point out that the entire winter session of 2010 was washed out
when the BJP set the constitution of a joint parliamentary committee
as a precondition for allowing Parliament to function.

Productivity of the 15th Lok Sabha (2009-14) has been the worst in the
last 50 years, the Lok Sabha working 61 per cent of its scheduled time
and the Rajya Sabha 66 per cent, according to PRS Legislative
Research. The BJP disrupted Parliament over the 2G scam in 2010, the
CVC’s appointment in 2011 and coal block allocation in 2012.

Sushma Swaraj, Then…
November 4, 2005 (outside Parliament): “It was only due to the
pressure mounted by the Opposition that the government yesterday
talked about probing the issue… But no probe can be impartial without
Natwar Singh quitting office.”

September 7, 2012 (at end of monsoon session, disrupted over coal
allocations): “Not allowing Parliament to function is a form of
democracy like any other form… They asked us to hold a debate either
under an adjournment motion, rule 184, or rule 93. Under adjournment
motion, debate is taken up after adjourning question hour, followed by
voting by voice vote… Debate under 193 would mean a ‘talkout’ by the
government and walkout by Opposition. If we had taken debate under
184, they would have won because they have numbers. Numbers do not
give a licence to loot the country.”

Arub Jaitley, Then…
January 30, 2011 (quoted by ANI as having said in Ranchi):
“Parliament’s job is to conduct discussions. But many a time,
Parliament is used to ignore issues and in such situations,
obstruction of Parliament is in the favour of democracy. Therefore
parliamentary obstruction is not undemocratic.”
August 22, 2012 (interview to Times Now): “We are not interested in a
debate. What is there to debate?We have had bad experiences on these
discussions in the past with the 2G scam.”

August 26, 2012 (outside Parliament): “There are occasions when
obstruction in Parliament brings greater benefits to the country… Our
strategy does not permit us to allow the government to use Parliament
(for debate) without being held accountable… we do not want to give
government an escape route through debate.”

August 28, 2012 (article in The Hindu): “Parliamentary obstructionism
should be avoided. It is a weapon to be used in the rarest of the rare
cases. Parliamentary accountability is as important as parliamentary
debate. Both must coexist. If parliamentary accountability is
subverted and a debate is intended to be used merely to put a lid on
parliamentary accountability, it is then a legitimate tactic for the
Opposition to expose the government through parliamentary instruments
available at its command.”

August 26, 2012 (article issued by BJP):  “Suggestions that the issue
should be debated only in Parliament will put a lid on one of the
greatest scandals in Indian history (coal blocks allocation). We, in
the Opposition, are not interested in merely the issue being talked
out through a one-day debate in Parliament… Parliamentary
obstructionism should ordinarily be avoided. However, in the rarest of
rare cases, obstructionism also brings its dividends.”

September 7, 2012 (after disrupted session): “One session of
Parliament has earlier been lost on account of corruption in allotment
of 2G spectrum. That helped this country cleanse the telecom sector.
Hopefully, the long-term gains of this session may enable future
governments to clean up the process of allocation of natural
resources.”

Arun Jaitley, Now…
July 21, 2015 (Rajya Sabha): “We are ready for discussion… Why are you
(Opposition) running away from a discussion?… If they want the
external affairs minister to make a statement, we are ready for that…
you are scared of a discussion.”

July 21 (outside the House): “We get a distinct and clear impression
that the Opposition wants disturbance for some time… Obviously state
issues can’t be discussed… But as far as other issues are concerned,
we offered that we are ready for discussions and we are ready right
now for a discussion.”

July 22 (Rajya Sabha): “If the Opposition wants the rules to be
changed and state issues are to be discussed, we will discuss issues
of various states and we are ready for that. We will discuss so that
we set a new precedent that all state issues ranging from what has
been happening in Kerala, in Himachal Pradesh, Assam and Goa, and all
such state issues can be discussed… If they want to discuss the issue
relating to Sushma Swaraj, please start the discussion right now…

“I dare you to start the discussion. You don’t have a single fact.
Therefore, noise-making is all that you want to do, and you don’t want
to discuss…”
July 22 (outside): “Opposition is weak on arguments but strong on
disturbance. We want the entire nation to hear Sushma Swaraj’s views
but the Opposition does not want the House to run.”

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Peace Is Doable

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