Why Attendance Doesn't Predict Influence in Parliament
In most public discussions of parliamentary performance, attendance is treated as the primary metric of an MP's engagement and effectiveness. India publishes attendance data for both Houses; MPs are sometimes ranked by presence in chamber; media coverage periodically notes which members have the best and worst attendance records. But attendance data, however useful for basic accountability, is a poor predictor of actual parliamentary influence. The MPs who shape legislation, extract politically damaging information from ministers, produce committee reports that change policy, or rally cross-party support for amendments are not necessarily those who sit in the chamber the longest. Parliamentary influence in India is concentrated, specific, and exercised through mechanisms that physical presence alone does not capture. Representational Image: Why Attendance Doesn't Predict Influence in Parliament The data on parliamentary questions provides one illustration of this concentratio...