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How Parliamentary Committees Summon Officials

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One of the most consequential but least publicly visible exercises of parliamentary power in India is the summoning of government officials to testify before parliamentary committees. When a committee takes evidence from a ministry — calling secretaries, joint secretaries, or technical officials to answer questions under conditions of parliamentary privilege — it exercises the legislature's oversight function in its most direct form. The official must appear.  They must answer questions truthfully. The evidence they give is protected by parliamentary privilege, but the accountability they face is real. Unlike Question Hour — where answers are carefully prepared days in advance and ministers are briefed by officials in the gallery — committee testimony is more detailed, more technical, and often more revealing about how policy is actually implemented. Representational Image: How Parliamentary Committees Summon Officials Parliamentary committees in India — both Departmentally Re...

What 'Voice Vote' Means in Indian Parliament

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A voice vote — known in Hindi as dhvani mat — is the standard mechanism by which the Indian Parliament decides most questions put before it. When the Speaker or Chairman puts a motion to the House, they invite all members who support it to say "Aye" and all who oppose it to say "No." Based on the volume of the collective response, the presiding officer declares whether the "Ayes have it" or the "Noes have it" — and the motion is resolved. No individual vote is recorded.  No precise count is taken. The outcome depends on the presiding officer's judgement about which response was louder. In a House where the ruling party holds a clear majority and its members are present and vocal, the voice vote outcome is predictable before the Ayes have been called. Representational Image: What 'Voice Vote' Means in Indian Parliament This mechanism is constitutionally valid and procedurally efficient. Parliament conducts hundreds of votes each sessi...

How Bills Move Through Parliament

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Every law enacted by the Parliament of India begins as a bill, a statute in draft form. A bill cannot become law until it has been passed by both Houses of Parliament and received the assent of the President of India, with specific procedural variations for Money Bills, Financial Bills, and Constitutional Amendment Bills.  The process is designed to be deliberative rather than hasty: multiple readings in each house, opportunities for referral to committees, and a requirement that both chambers agree before the President is asked to assent. In practice, the pace of this process has varied significantly across different Lok Sabhas, and the share of bills receiving thorough committee scrutiny before passage has declined markedly in recent years, as documented by PRS Legislative Research. Representational Image: How Bills Move Through Parliament The Ministry that proposes a new law drafts a bill text in consultation with other concerned ministries and the Law Ministry. The Law Min...

Understanding Standing Committees As India's Hidden Legislature

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India's Parliament is best known through its visible moments — heated Question Hours, budget speeches, the passage of landmark bills. Less visible but arguably more consequential is the work of the 24 Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs), which conduct detailed, in-camera scrutiny of ministry budgets, government bills, annual reports, and policy subjects across the entire span of Union government activity. These committees were first constituted in 1993, beginning with 17; the number was expanded to 24.  They sit year-round, regardless of whether Parliament is in session. They produce reports that are tabled in both Houses, creating a permanent legislative record of the government's positions and their scrutiny. They represent, in the assessment of PRS Legislative Research, "the backbone of our parliamentary system." Representational Image: Standing Committees — India's Hidden Legislature The 24 DRSCs are divided between the two Secretariats: 16 are ...

What Parliament Can Control — and Cannot

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India's Parliament is often described as the supreme legislative body of the Republic — and constitutionally, it is. No law can be enacted without Parliament's approval. No money can be drawn from the Consolidated Fund without parliamentary authorisation through the Appropriation Act. The government cannot continue in office if it loses the confidence of the Lok Sabha.  These are real and significant powers. But the Indian Parliament is not sovereign in the sense that the British Parliament is sovereign. It operates within a written Constitution that defines its jurisdiction, a federal structure that distributes legislative authority between the Union and states, a chapter of justiciable fundamental rights that it cannot abrogate, a Supreme Court with the power to strike down legislation, and a basic structure doctrine that limits even its power to amend the Constitution. Understanding what Parliament can and cannot control is essential to understanding how Indian governance ac...

Budget Session Explained — India's Fiscal Power Centre

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The Budget Session is the longest and most consequential of India's three annual parliamentary sessions. It typically runs from late January or early February to May, with a recess of three to four weeks in the middle. It is the session in which the Finance Minister presents the Union Budget, in which both Houses debate fiscal priorities, and in which Lok Sabha votes on ministry-wise Demands for Grants before passing the Appropriation Bill and Finance Bill that together form the legal basis for all government spending and taxation for the coming financial year.  No other session of Parliament carries comparable fiscal and legislative weight. The Budget Session typically accounts for around one-third of total annual parliamentary sitting time and produces the single most important annual output of the legislature. Representational Image: Budget Session Explained — India's Fiscal Power Centre The session begins with the President of India addressing a joint sitting of both House...

Decoding Parliament vs Executive Power in India

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Parliament and the executive are not strictly separated — they are fused in India's constitutional design. The Prime Minister and Council of Ministers are drawn from Parliament, remain members of Parliament, and are collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha. They govern through parliamentary processes: legislation requires Parliament's approval, budgets require parliamentary appropriation, and the government continues only so long as it retains Lok Sabha's confidence.  This fusion of executive and legislative authority — characteristic of the Westminster parliamentary model — is intended to produce accountable, responsive government: the executive must constantly justify itself to the legislature or face removal. Representational Image: Parliament vs Executive Power in India In practice, the relationship is asymmetric in the executive's favour. A government with a stable Lok Sabha majority effectively controls Parliament's agenda, the scheduling of sessions, the all...
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