Parliament to function until April 2: Rijiju informs LS


Parliament to Function Until April 2: Rijiju Informs LS

UPSC Study Note — Parliament & Constitutional Bodies


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Part Dates Duration
Part I 28 Jan – 13 Feb 2026 13 sittings each House
Recess 14 Feb – 8 Mar 2026 Standing Committees examine Demands for Grants
Part II 9 Mar – 2 Apr 2026 15 sittings each House
Extension 16 Apr – 18 Apr 2026 3 sittings (essential Govt business)

4. Core Static Facts

Parliamentary Sessions — Key Definitions: - Session: Period between the first sitting after summoning and the date of prorogation. [S4] - Recess: Gap within a session between two parts; House is not prorogued. - Adjournment: Termination of a sitting to a specified or unspecified time; does not end the session. - Prorogation: President's power (Article 85(2)(a)) to prorogue; ends a session; pending Bills lapse (non-Money Bills introduced in Lok Sabha). - Adjournment sine die: Indefinite adjournment of a sitting; used to signal the business of a session is complete before prorogation.

Budget Session 2026 — Key Numbers: [S1][S2] - Total Bills passed during Budget Session 2026: 9 Bills - Lok Sabha General Budget discussion: 12 hours 57 minutes, 63 Members participated - Rajya Sabha General Budget discussion: 16 hours 30 minutes, 97 Members participated - Union Budget presented: 1 February 2026 - Session commenced: 28 January 2026 - Session adjourned sine die: 18 April 2026

Implementing Authority: - Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs (headed by Kiren Rijiju in 2026) — coordinates government legislative business, liaises between Cabinet and Parliament. - Speaker of Lok Sabha — allots time, decides agenda for any given day.

Constitutional Provisions: - Article 85: President summons, prorogues, and dissolves Lok Sabha. - Article 112: President to cause an Annual Financial Statement (Budget) to be laid before both Houses. - Article 110: Defines Money Bill.

Private Members' Business: - Normally allotted 2.5 hours every Friday in Lok Sabha (last 2.5 hours) for Private Members' Bills and Resolutions. - Can be substituted by government business under the Speaker's discretion when Parliament time is at a premium.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Political / Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Budget Session 2026 commenced on 28 January 2026 and was originally scheduled to conclude on 2 April 2026. [S1]
  2. The session was adjourned sine die on 18 April 2026, after being extended for Delimitation-related legislation. [S1][S2]
  3. 9 Bills were passed by both Houses of Parliament during Budget Session 2026. [S2]
  4. The Union Budget 2026-27 was presented on 1 February 2026. [S4]
  5. Part I of Budget Session 2026 had 13 sittings each of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. [S1]
  6. Part II of Budget Session 2026 had 15 sittings each of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. [S1]
  7. Recess period (14 Feb – 8 Mar 2026) was used by Standing Committees to examine Demands for Grants. [S4]
  8. Kiren Rijiju was the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs at the time of the announcement (March 2026). [S3]
  9. March 31, 2026 was a parliamentary holiday on account of Mahavir Jayanti. [S3]
  10. Private members' business in Lok Sabha is normally allotted on Fridays; can be replaced by government business with Speaker's approval.
  11. Under Article 85, the President summons, prorogues, and can dissolve the Lok Sabha; the gap between two sessions cannot exceed 6 months.
  12. Adjournment sine die differs from prorogation — the former is done by the presiding officer; the latter is by the President.
  13. During prorogation, pending non-Money Bills introduced in Lok Sabha lapse (if not passed); Bills in Rajya Sabha do not lapse.
  14. Lok Sabha General Budget Discussion 2026: 63 members participated over ~13 hours. [S1]
  15. The Budget Session extension in April 2026 was linked to Delimitation Bills, not the original schedule. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper II — Indian Polity and Governance - Syllabus heading: Parliament and State Legislatures — Structure, Functioning, Conduct of Business, Powers and Privileges

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The substitution of private members' business by government business in Parliament has become a recurring practice. Critically examine its implications for legislative democracy in India." 2. "Discuss the constitutional and procedural distinctions between adjournment, recess, prorogation, and dissolution of Parliament. How do these tools affect legislative accountability?" 3. "Early adjournment of Parliament citing State Assembly elections raises serious questions about the autonomy of the Union Legislature. Comment."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Budget Session vs Other Sessions Contextualises why Budget Session is the most critical; covers Article 112, Finance Bill, Appropriation Bill
Private Members' Bills in India Directly linked — understanding why Friday slots matter and why substitution is controversial
Article 85 — Summoning and Prorogation Constitutional backbone of this entire episode
Standing Committees of Parliament Recess period is specifically utilised for committee examination of Demands for Grants
Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) Often tested alongside parliamentary procedures
Delimitation Commission and Process Session was extended for Delimitation Bills — a hot-button GS-II topic
Election Commission of India — Model Code of Conduct Intersects with why early adjournment was rumoured (Assembly elections)
Speaker's Powers and Functions Speaker controls timetabling, allotment of private members' time

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing recess with prorogation: Recess is a gap within a session (House not prorogued; committees function); prorogation ends the session. Aspirants often conflate the two.
  2. Sine die vs Prorogation: Adjournment sine die is by the presiding officer; prorogation is by the President. Both precede a formal end of session but are procedurally different.
  3. Who can substitute private members' business?: It requires the Speaker's concurrence, not a unilateral government decision — a common factual error.
  4. Lapsing of Bills: Only Bills introduced in Lok Sabha and pending lapse on dissolution/between sessions (complex rules apply to prorogation vs dissolution). Rajya Sabha Bills do not lapse on Lok Sabha dissolution. Do not over-generalise.
  5. "Budget Session is mandated by the Constitution": Partially true — Article 112 requires the Annual Financial Statement, but the session itself is summoned by the President under Article 85; there is no constitutional prescription for a "Budget Session" by name.

11. Sources