In News
- Recently, a series of recommendations were given by the Ramacharyulu committee that studied the working of the Rajya Sabha secretariat and other procedural issues.
- This is the first-ever comprehensive study of the Rajya Sabha secretariat.
Key recommendations
- Parliamentary Standing Committees:
- A dedicated hour in Rajya Sabha:
- The panel suggested that there should be a dedicated hour during the Rajya Sabha proceedings to discuss the “import and implications” of the reports finalised by Parliamentary Standing Committees.
- Tenure of Parliamentary committees:
- It also suggested that the tenure of the Parliamentary committees should be increased from present one year to two years.
- Field visits:
- The field visits of committees should also be increased from present two visits for a maximum of ten days in a year to three visits and fifteen days.
- Accessibility of the reports:
- The panel said that these reports should be made more accessible to the stakeholders and general public.
- Amid complaints that the media do not cover Standing Committee reports adequately, it is suggested that panel chairpersons hold press conferences.
- A standard structure of the report has also been suggested for easy understanding.
- A dedicated hour in Rajya Sabha:
- Secretarial work:
- The study has suggested streamlining the secretarial work, including disposing of 75% of the issues at the lower and middle levels in a ten-layer hierarchy that exists in the secretariat at present.
- The Rajya Sabha secretariat, which in 1952 had started out with 200 officers and staff, has 1,700 personnel at present.
- The panel has demanded a makeover for quick decision-making and delivery of services in a transparent, monitorable and accountable manner.
- The study has suggested streamlining the secretarial work, including disposing of 75% of the issues at the lower and middle levels in a ten-layer hierarchy that exists in the secretariat at present.
- Financial Power:
- The financial power of divisional heads, who hold the rank of Joint Secretary, has been recommended to be increased from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 5 lakh with the corresponding increase at the lower levels.
Parliamentary Committees
- In a parliamentary democracy, Parliament has broadly two functions, which are:
- Lawmaking and
- Oversight of the executive branch of the government.
- Committees are an instrument of Parliament for its own effective functioning.
- Constitutional provisions:
- Parliamentary committees draw their authority from:
- Article 105 (on privileges of Parliament members) and
- Article 118 (on Parliament’s authority to make rules for regulating its procedure and conduct of business).
- The Constitution of India makes a mention of these committees at different places, but without making any specific provisions regarding their composition, tenure, functions, etc.
- All these matters are dealt by the rules of the two Houses.
- Parliamentary committees draw their authority from:
- Accordingly, a parliamentary committee means a committee that:
- Is appointed or elected by the House or nominated by the Speaker /Chairman.
- Works under the direction of the Speaker / Chairman
- Presents its report to the House or to the Speaker / Chairman
- Has a secretariat provided by the Lok Sabha / Rajya Sabha
- Types of parliamentary committees:
- Broadly, parliamentary committees are of two kinds:
- Standing Committees – They are permanent (constituted every year or periodically) and work on a continuous basis.
- Ad Hoc Committees – They are temporary and cease to exist on completion of the task assigned to them. For instance, to deliberate on a particular bill.
- The chairman/speaker uses his/her discretion to refer a matter to a parliamentary committee but this is usually done in consultation with leaders of parties in the House.
- Broadly, parliamentary committees are of two kinds:
- Committee reports and recommendations:
- Committee reports are usually exhaustive and provide authentic information on matters related to governance.
- Bills that are referred to committees are returned to the House with significant value addition.
- Parliament is not bound by the recommendations of committees.
Significance of Parliamentary Committees
- Ease of legislative business:
- Given the volume of legislative business, discussing all Bills under the consideration of Parliament in detail on the floor of the House is impossible.
- Committees are platforms for threadbare discussion on a proposed law.
- Independent of party politics:
- Committee meetings are ‘closed door’ and members are not bound by party whips, which allows them the latitude for a more meaningful exchange of views as against discussions in full and open Houses were grandstanding and party positions invariably take precedence.
- Provision of expertise:
- While lawmaking gets increasingly complex and newer forms of technology getting introduced, lawmakers cannot infinitely expand their knowledge into ever-expanding areas of human activities.
- It is through committees that such expertise is drawn into lawmaking.
Challenges
- Referring bill to the committee:
- Currently, it is not mandatory to refer a Bill to a Committee.
- In some Parliamentary systems like the UK, all Bills other than Money Bills are automatically referred to Committees.
- However, in India, it depends on the decision of the Speaker or Chairman, in consultation with the Minister putting forth the Bill, whether a Bill should be referred to a Committee.
- Attendance of members:
- On average only 49% of members were present for meetings of these Committees between the period 2009-2014.
- Parliamentary Committees hold several meetings to conduct an in-depth analysis of various issues through extensive deliberations among Members.
- The success of the Committee system depends on the participation of Members in these meetings.
Way Ahead
- Strengthening the role of Parliamentary committees along with the better implementation of given panel recommendations is the way forward to strengthening the democratic functioning of the legislature.
Source: TH
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