Rahul’s speech triggers face-off; 8 MPs suspended


UPSC Study Note: Rahul's Speech Triggers Face-Off; 8 MPs Suspended

Topic: Parliamentary Disruption, MP Suspension, Privileges & Procedure | Budget Session 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Date of incident 3 February 2026
Session Budget Session 2026-27, 18th Lok Sabha
Session end date 2 April 2026
MPs suspended 8 total — 7 Congress + 1 CPI(M)
Suspended Congress MPs Gurjeet Singh Aujla, Hibi Eden, C. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Amarinder Singh Raja Warring, Manickam Tagore, Prashant Padole, Dean Kuriakose
Suspended CPI(M) MP S. Venkatesan
Duration of suspension Remainder of Budget Session (till 2 April 2026)
Motion moved by Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju
Presiding officer Dilip Saikia (BJP, Assam) — in Chair
Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla
Trigger subject Unpublished memoir of Gen. M.M. Naravane (retd.) re. 2020 India-China conflict
Ground for suspension Tearing and throwing paper at the Chair; disrespect to authority of Chair
Relevant Lok Sabha Rule Rule 374 / Rule 374A
Constitutional provision Article 105 (Powers, privileges and immunities of Parliament and its Members)
Passed by Voice vote

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / Parliamentary Procedure

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Rule 374A of Lok Sabha Rules allows the Speaker to suspend a member automatically (without a motion) for up to 5 consecutive sittings for grossly disorderly conduct. [S3]
  2. Rule 374 requires a motion moved in the House to suspend an MP; the motion must be passed by the House. [S3]
  3. The eight MPs suspended in February 2026 were from Congress (7) and CPI(M) (1). [S1][S2]
  4. The suspension motion in February 2026 was moved by Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju, not by the Speaker. [S1]
  5. The proceedings on 3 February 2026 were presided over by Dilip Saikia (BJP, Assam) — a Panel Chairperson, not the Speaker. [S1]
  6. Article 105(2) gives MPs immunity for anything said in Parliament but does not override the Chair's power to regulate admissibility. [S3]
  7. Article 122 bars courts from inquiring into parliamentary proceedings, making suspension orders non-justiciable. [S3]
  8. The largest single-episode suspension in Lok Sabha history was 63 MPs in 1989 (Thakkar Commission controversy). [S3]
  9. The December 2023 mass suspension (146 MPs) was the largest in post-Independence history across both Houses. [S3]
  10. A suspended MP is not disqualified — they retain membership but cannot enter or participate in the House during the suspension period. [S3]
  11. The Salaries and Allowances of Leaders of Opposition in Parliament Act, 1977 governs the statutory status and entitlements of the LoP. [S3]
  12. The Deputy Speaker of the 18th Lok Sabha had not been elected as of February 2026, leaving the Chair to a Panel of Chairpersons. [S3]
  13. The memoir at the centre of the controversy was reportedly by Gen. M.M. Naravane (retd.), former Chief of Army Staff, concerning the 2020 India-China Galwan conflict. [S1][S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers and privileges
GS-II Role of Opposition; Leaders of Opposition; parliamentary accountability of the Executive
GS-III Internal Security — India-China border issues; 2020 Galwan Valley clash
GS-IV Ethical issues in governance — transparency, accountability, freedom of information

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The suspension of MPs for the remainder of a session strikes at the heart of parliamentary accountability. Examine the constitutional and procedural framework governing suspension of Members of Parliament, and the tensions it creates with legislative privileges." 2. "The Chair's discretion to disallow a subject of debate, when exercised on matters of national security, raises questions about executive control over parliamentary discourse. Critically analyze." 3. "Discuss the evolution of the 'Leader of the Opposition' in Indian Parliament — constitutional recognition, statutory framework, and the challenges to its effective functioning."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Parliamentary Privileges (Article 105 & 194) Core constitutional foundation of the episode
Rules of Procedure — Lok Sabha (Rules 373–376) The specific procedural rules invoked for suspension
India-China Relations & Galwan 2020 The substantive subject Rahul Gandhi sought to raise
Leader of the Opposition — statutory & constitutional status Central to why the disallowance was contested
December 2023 mass suspension of 146 MPs Comparative precedent; same procedural mechanism
Role and Powers of the Speaker of Lok Sabha Chair's discretion and its limits form the crux of the dispute
Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) Often confused with suspension; important distinction to master
Freedom of Information & RTI Broader context of access to information on military/security affairs

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Rule 374 with Rule 374A: Rule 374 requires a House resolution (as used here); Rule 374A allows direct suspension by the Speaker without a vote (for ≤5 sittings). Exams frequently test this distinction.
  2. Confusing suspension with disqualification: Suspension under Rule 374 does not disqualify the MP — they remain a member. Disqualification occurs under Article 102 / Tenth Schedule, which is an entirely different process.
  3. Attributing the motion to the Speaker: The suspension motion was moved by the Parliamentary Affairs Minister (Kiren Rijiju), not by the Speaker. The Speaker/Chair only "names" the member; the House votes.
  4. Mixing up the 2023 and 2026 suspension episodes: December 2023 (146 MPs, security breach) vs. February 2026 (8 MPs, Naravane memoir). Different triggers, different scales.
  5. Treating the memoir as a "classified document": As of the date of incident, the memoir was unpublished — the procedural objection was to citing documents not before the House, not that it was a classified/official secret per se.

11. Sources


Note to aspirant: The factual core of this note rests on the newspaper article (Tier 4) and official Lok Sabha procedural documents (Tier 1). The constitutional and procedural framework (Rules 374/374A, Articles 105/118/122) is static UPSC-standard content verifiable in the Lok Sabha Rules PDF (sansad.in). Cross-check with PRS India's legislative briefs for the most current session data.