How Parliamentary Committees Summon Officials
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...