Analyzing the Decline in Parliamentary Functioning and the Crisis of Disruption

Syllabus: Parliament and State legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges and issues arising out of these.

Context

  • The 2025 Winter Session began amid protests on electoral roll revision and a shortened calendar.
  • Both Houses faced immediate disruptions, continuing a persistent pattern of stalled functioning.

Parliament: Role and Constitutional Basis

  • Parliament is India’s supreme legislative body, comprising the President, Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha (Article 79).
  • It performs lawmaking, budget approval, executive oversight, and representation of public concerns.
  • Key provisions: Articles 79–122 on composition, powers, privileges, and procedures.
  • Article 80 defines Rajya Sabha, Article 81 defines Lok Sabha, while Article 107 requires agreement of both Houses to pass Bills.
  • Article 118 permits each House to frame rules of procedure, and Articles 120–121 govern language and debate limits.

Trends Showing Decline in Parliamentary Functioning

  • Reduced sittings: Early Lok Sabhas met for 120–130 days; recent Houses sit only 55–70 days yearly.
  • The 17th Lok Sabha became the shortest full-term House since 1952.
  • Frequent disruptions through slogan-shouting, entering the Well, and repeated adjournments.
  • Bills passed without meaningful debate, often within days of introduction.
  • Many Bills were approved with less than an hour of discussion, and budget sections passed without scrutiny.
  • Committee scrutiny declining, with referral rates falling from 60–70% earlier to below 30% recently.
  • Question Hour curtailed due to adjournments, reducing executive accountability.

Reasons for Disruptions

  • Majoritarian legislative style, with limited consultations and perception of executive dominance.
  • Opposition’s strategy of agitation within the House when denied time for issues.
  • Breakdown of informal conventions, earlier used for negotiation and floor coordination.
  • Rising polarisation and personalised attacks reducing trust.
  • Media spectacle incentivising theatrics.
  • Weak rule enforcement, with presiding officers avoiding penalties without consensus.

Key Implications

  • Weaker legislative scrutiny, risking errors and rights-related issues.
  • Reduced executive accountability due to lost Question Hour.
  • Marginalisation of smaller parties during continuous disorder.
  • Erosion of public trust as Parliament appears combative rather than deliberative.
  • Inability of MPs to raise constituency issues effectively.
  • A cycle of tit-for-tat disruption, normalising obstruction.

Way Forward

  • Adopt an all-party code of conduct with predictable penalties.
  • Ensure fixed Opposition time-slots, similar to UK Opposition Days.
  • Introduce mandatory minimum sittings of 100–120 days annually.
  • Make committee scrutiny compulsory for complex and rights-sensitive Bills.
  • Strengthen pre-legislative consultation and floor coordination to reduce mistrust.

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