One Nation, One Election Bill will not come in the monsoon session of Parliament starting from Monday. According to sources, the government believes that now is the time for One Nation, One Election Bill, because its target is 2029 elections and there is 3 years time for that. At present the government’s focus is on the Women’s Reservation and Delimitation Bill. Whether the Delimitation Bill will come in this session or not. The situation in this regard may become clear in the next day or two.
A meeting of the Group of Ministers was held under the chairmanship of Defense Minister Rajnath Singh on Friday regarding the monsoon session of Parliament. Apart from Rajnath Singh, Amit Shah, Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Kiran Rijiju, JDU leader Lalan Singh, TDP leader Ram Mohan Naidu and RLD’s Jayant Chaudhary attended this meeting. The government believes that on the Women’s Reservation and Delimitation Bill, many of the opposition parties will be in favor of the bill and the Congress will be isolated.
Opposition parties are also making strategies
Meanwhile, opposition parties are also making their strategy for the monsoon session. DMK President MK Stalin is in London these days. From there he spoke with party leaders through video conferencing. After discussing with Stalin, DMK leaders said that if the Delimitation Bill comes in its present form then they will oppose it. Saravanan Annadurai was saying that the Delimitation Bill is against the interests of Tamil Nadu. If the bill is passed in its current form, it will reduce the seats in South Indian states. He said that the government has called an all-party meeting on this issue. It remains to be seen whether the government makes any changes in it or not, but if the bill causes loss to Tamil Nadu, the DMK will oppose it.
South Indian parties are protesting
Southern parties are opposing the delimitation bill the most. Leaders coming from five states of South India feel that this will cause them loss. Karti Chidambaram, Congress MP from Sivagangai seat in Tamil Nadu, also said that the delimitation bill will increase the gap between North and South. He mentioned another problem. Karti Chidambaram said that currently there are 543 MPs in the Lok Sabha, yet very few people get a chance to speak. If there are eight hundred and fifty seats, then most of the MPs will remain as silent spectators.
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