Anna hazare fasts: government agrees to voice vote on lokpal

CA ADITYA SHARMA (CA IN PRACTICE ) (16719 Points)

27 August 2011  

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/anna-hazare-fasts-government-agrees-to-voice-vote-on-lokpal-bill/articleshow/9758659.cms

NEW DELHI: The government on Saturday agreed to a voice vote on the Lokpal Bill according to reports from Times Now. Sources say that the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha will consider a resolution on sense of the House on Lokpal.

Member of Team Anna, Arvind Kejriwal said, "We are OK with voice vote."

As the two Houses of Parliament took up an extraordinary debate, government took into account some voices opposing Hazare's proposals and are considering conveying the sense of Parliament to the Gandhian.

Hazare had demanded that the Parliament should accept the three key demands of the civil society for him to end the fast.

Team Anna was insisting that a resolution be moved and put to vote in both Houses of Parliament on the Lokpal issue and this should incorporate the three contentious points of a Citizens' Charter, Lokayuktas in states and including the lower bureaucracy under the ambit of the ombudsman.

Though the opposition was unsparing in its attack on the government on the issue of corruption, both the government and the opposition were unanimous that parliament was the only body which could and should draft legislations in the country.

The point of agreement emerged as both sides, participating in the special debate on the Lokpal issue in the Rajya Sabha Saturday, said that parliament was the only body which should be drafting bills.

"No one can dispute that Indian parliament is supreme in law making. Law can't be made anywhere else but in parliament. So even when pressure groups build up pressure in the society, we must concede to them the right to build up pressure, but not be provoked by them," Leader of Opposition in the upper house Arun Jaitley said while participating in the debate.

"We must not lose our rationality to what we have to accept and what we don't have to accept. We must legislate keeping in mind the basic principle and values of Indian society, experiences of our democracy and our constitutional rights," he said.

The leader of opposition said while civil society had a role to play as crusaders, the option to agree or not was there.

"There will be a role for civil society, some of them may take positions which may not be implementable, but then they have the role of campaigner and crusader... when they try to compel lawmakers to change their route, we have the option of agreeing with them, we have the option of not agreeing," he said.

Union Minister Ashwani Kumar, participating in the debate, also raised the same point, stating there was unanimity in the house that law-making should be with parliament alone.

"There is one issue on which there is complete unanimity that law-making is the exclusive domain of the two houses and cannot be compromised by people sitting under a banyan tree or peepal tree," he said.

He also said that mistakes might have been made, but there were no two opinions on the fact that corruption needed to be fought against.

Jaitley meanwhile said the massive support for Anna Hazare is a "loud and clear" message that people are unhappy with the present dispensation.

"The message is loud and clear, people are not ready to accept the present status quo," he said as the house took up the debate on the Lokpal bill.

"Corruption in many areas has become a way of life.
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