West Asia crisis dominates LS; resolution on removal of Speaker not taken up
West Asia Crisis Dominates Lok Sabha; Resolution on Speaker's Removal Not Taken Up
[UPSC Study Note | GS-II & GS-III | Prelims + Mains]
1. At a Glance
- On 10 March 2026 (Budget Session, Lok Sabha), repeated adjournments prevented the House from taking up a resolution seeking removal of Speaker Om Birla, as the Opposition demanded a full debate on the West Asia crisis and its impact on nearly 10 million Indians in the region. [S1][S2]
- The episode exposes two distinct UPSC-relevant threads: (i) constitutional procedure for removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker and (ii) India's strategic vulnerability to West Asia conflicts (energy, diaspora, remittances). [S3]
- Energy security is acute: India imports ~90% of its crude and nearly 45% of that transited the Strait of Hormuz before the 2025-26 escalation. [S4]
- Relevant for GS-II (Parliament, constitutional posts) and GS-III (energy security, Indian diaspora).
2. Why in the News
- Budget Session 2026, Lok Sabha, 9–10 March 2026: Opposition parties — led by the Congress — disrupted proceedings demanding a comprehensive discussion on the West Asia crisis (ongoing US-Iran/Israel-Iran military conflict). [S1]
- External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar attempted to make a ministerial statement; Opposition rejected it, demanding a full-fledged debate instead. [S1]
- The resolution for Speaker Om Birla's removal — the immediate legislative agenda — could not be taken up due to continuous adjournments; the House was adjourned shortly after reassembling at 3 p.m. [S1][S2]
- Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju called the Opposition "irresponsible"; the Chair accused the Opposition of holding House proceedings "hostage." [S2]
- Rahul Gandhi (Leader of the Opposition) warned of major economic losses and critiqued the recently signed India-US trade deal as injurious under wartime conditions. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
Constitutional Procedure: Removal of Lok Sabha Speaker
- Governed by Article 94 of the Constitution.
- Speaker may be removed by a resolution passed by an effective majority of all then-members of the House (not just those present and voting).
- 14 days' notice must be given before moving such a resolution.
- While such resolutions have been tabled before, removal has never succeeded in independent India's history.
- Current arithmetic: NDA holds 293 seats (majority = 272); Opposition holds 238 seats — mathematically, the resolution cannot pass. [S1]
West Asia Crisis: Escalation Timeline
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| Oct 2023 | Hamas attacks Israel; Israel-Gaza war begins |
| Apr–Jun 2024 | Iran-Israel direct exchange of strikes |
| 2025 | US-Iran military confrontation; Strait of Hormuz shipping disrupted |
| Early 2026 | Ongoing war; oil prices exceed $100/barrel; Indian OMCs face severe underrecovery [S4] |
| Mar 2026 | India diversifies crude imports from ~20 to 40 countries; Parliament disrupted over crisis [S3][S4] |
4. Core Static Facts
A. Constitutional Post: Speaker of Lok Sabha
- Article 93: Lok Sabha shall choose two members to be Speaker and Deputy Speaker.
- Article 94: Removal requires a resolution passed by effective majority (majority of total membership of House).
- 14-day prior notice is mandatory.
- Speaker's salary charged to Consolidated Fund of India (not voted upon — ensures independence).
- Speaker chairs joint sittings of Parliament (Article 118).
- In Speaker's absence, Deputy Speaker presides.
B. Budget Session — Parliamentary Procedure
- Budget Session typically runs in two parts (Feb–May); the article refers to the session's resumption after a recess.
- Under Rule 56 of Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure, the House can be adjourned sine die, until a date, or for the day.
- A substantive resolution is needed to remove the Speaker; cannot be done via a no-confidence motion (that applies to Council of Ministers).
C. West Asia Crisis — Key Numbers
| Indicator | Figure |
|---|---|
| Indians in Gulf/West Asia | ~10 million [S2] |
| India's crude import dependence | ~90% of requirement [S4] |
| Pre-war Hormuz transit share | ~45% of crude imports [S4] |
| Post-diversification Hormuz share | ~30% (crude from 40 countries) [S3] |
| Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) | 5.33 million metric tonnes [S4] |
| OMC underrecovery (peak 2026) | ₹30,000 crore/month [S4] |
| Crude price (2026 conflict period) | Above $100/barrel [S4] |
D. Implementing Bodies
- Ministry of External Affairs (MEA): Diaspora welfare, evacuation protocols.
- Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas: Energy diversification strategy.
- Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs: House management (Kiren Rijiju). [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- India's "strategic autonomy" tested: historically maintaining ties with both Iran and Gulf Arab states, as well as the US and Israel. [S4]
- The India-US trade deal (signed before the crisis) is now controversial — Rahul Gandhi argued it leaves India exposed to US-driven escalation fallout. [S2]
- India's West Asia policy involves four overlapping interests: oil supply security, diaspora welfare, remittance flows, and maritime route security (Strait of Hormuz, Red Sea). [S3][S4]
Economic
- Remittances: Gulf diaspora (~10 mn Indians) contributes significantly to India's ~$120 bn annual remittance inflows; conflict threatens jobs and inflows. [S4]
- Crude prices above $100/barrel → ballooning OMC underrecoveries (₹30,000 cr/month) → fiscal pressure on fuel subsidies or retail price hikes. [S4]
- Inflation: Energy-linked pass-through affects food, transport, and manufactured goods — CPI risk. [S4]
- India's rapid crude source diversification (20 → 40 countries by end-March 2026) is a structural policy response. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 94 sets the bar for Speaker removal; no removal has ever succeeded, underscoring constitutional entrenchment of the office.
- Rule 18 of Lok Sabha Rules allows the Speaker to adjourn the House if there is grave disorder.
- The Opposition's tactic of disrupting proceedings to block the Speaker's removal resolution is itself a parliamentary strategy that raises ethical questions about obstruction vs. legitimate protest.
Administrative / Governance
- The episode illustrates tension between executive dominance (government controls House agenda) and Opposition's right to debate urgent national matters.
- Parliamentary Affairs Ministry's role in scheduling resolutions and managing House time is central. [S1]
- Repeated adjournments = legislative time lost; Budget Session has a dense agenda (Finance Bill, Demands for Grants).
Environmental
- Disruption of Hormuz-routed LNG supplies affects India's gas-based power generation and fertiliser feedstock, with downstream impact on agriculture and food prices. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Mid-2025: US-Iran military confrontation intensifies; Strait of Hormuz shipping threatened; India begins emergency crude source diversification. [S3]
- Jan–Feb 2026: Indian OMC underrecovery swells to ₹30,000 crore/month as oil stays above $100/barrel. [S4]
- By end-March 2026: India sources crude from 40 countries, reduces Hormuz-routed share from ~45% to ~30%; SPR of 5.33 MMT maintained. [S3][S4]
- 9 March 2026: Lok Sabha adjourned multiple times; Opposition demands debate on West Asia; EAM Jaishankar's ministerial statement rejected by Opposition. [S1]
- 10 March 2026: The Hindu reports resolution for Speaker Om Birla's removal not taken up; House adjourned after 3 p.m. sitting. [S2]
- Government announces coordinated measures on energy security, maritime safety, and Indian nationals' welfare in West Asia. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 94 governs the vacation of office and removal of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha.
- A resolution for removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker requires 14 days' prior notice.
- Such a resolution must be passed by a majority of the total membership (effective majority) of Lok Sabha — not a simple majority of members present and voting.
- The salary of the Lok Sabha Speaker is charged to the Consolidated Fund of India (not subject to vote).
- India's crude oil import dependence is approximately 90% of its total requirement. [S4]
- Before the 2025-26 West Asia escalation, approximately 45% of India's crude imports transited the Strait of Hormuz. [S4]
- India's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) capacity is 5.33 million metric tonnes. [S4]
- Approximately 10 million Indians reside and work in the West Asia/Gulf region. [S2]
- India diversified crude oil imports from ~20 countries to ~40 countries by end-March 2026, reducing Hormuz dependence. [S3]
- The Parliamentary Affairs Minister during the March 2026 Budget Session was Kiren Rijiju. [S1][S2]
- NDA held 293 seats in Lok Sabha at the time of the resolution controversy (majority threshold: 272). [S1]
- OMC underrecovery on fuel and LPG reached ₹30,000 crore per month during the 2026 West Asia conflict phase. [S4]
- The Speaker of Lok Sabha presides over joint sittings of Parliament under Article 118.
- A resolution seeking removal of the Speaker is a substantive resolution — distinct from a no-confidence motion against the Council of Ministers.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Specific Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers and privileges |
| GS-II | Constitutional posts, appointments, powers, functions and responsibilities of various constitutional bodies |
| GS-III | Energy security; Effects of liberalization on the economy; Indian Economy and issues relating to planning |
| GS-II | India and its neighbourhood / bilateral, regional and global groupings (West Asia) |
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The procedure for removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker reflects both constitutional safeguards and political vulnerabilities. Examine in the light of recent events." (GS-II) 2. "West Asia is India's extended neighbourhood of strategic significance. Analyse India's policy responses to the 2025-26 West Asia crisis with reference to energy security, diaspora welfare, and strategic autonomy." (GS-II / GS-III) 3. "Repeated parliamentary disruptions in the name of urgent public matters raise questions about the balance between the Opposition's right to debate and the House's legislative efficiency. Discuss." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Constitutional provisions for Speaker (Articles 93–97) | Direct subject of the parliamentary episode |
| Strait of Hormuz and Indian Ocean maritime security | Core to West Asia energy vulnerability |
| India's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) | Key energy security buffer cited in crisis response |
| Indian diaspora and remittance economy | 10 mn Gulf Indians = major remittance source; crisis impact |
| India-US trade relations (2026 deal) | Rahul Gandhi's criticism links trade policy to geopolitical exposure |
| India-Iran relations | Critical bilateral given Iran's role in ongoing West Asia conflict |
| Budget Session of Parliament — procedure and significance | Context for the disruption; Finance Bill, Demands for Grants |
| Parliamentary procedures: Adjournment Motion vs. Calling Attention vs. Short Duration Discussion | Opposition instruments to force debate on urgent matters |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing "effective majority" with "simple majority": Removal of Speaker requires a majority of the total strength of the House (effective majority), NOT just majority of members present and voting.
- Conflating Speaker removal with no-confidence motion: A no-confidence motion is against the Council of Ministers (under Article 75); removal of Speaker is under Article 94 via a separate substantive resolution.
- Wrong Article: Students often cite Article 93 (election of Speaker) when the question is about removal — which is Article 94.
- Understating India's Hormuz dependence: A common error is assuming India is fully diversified; the actual pre-crisis figure was ~45% of crude through Hormuz — still very high.
- Misattributing SPR to MoEFCC: India's Strategic Petroleum Reserve is managed under the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (via Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd., ISPRL) — not the environment ministry.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Parliament Session 2026: Lok Sabha fails to take up resolution seeking Speaker Om Birla's removal" — https://www.indiatvnews.com/news/india/parliament-budget-session-2026-live-updates-jaishankar-lok-sabha-address-on-west-asia-crisis-speaker-om-birla-removal-resolution-no-confidence-motion-1033122 — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "West Asia crisis dominates LS; resolution on removal of Speaker not taken up" — The Hindu, 10 March 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-10/th_international/articleG3HFMNVGN-13801797.ece — (Tier 4 — article content provided)
- [S3] "West Asia crisis: Government takes coordinated measures to ensure energy security, maritime safety and welfare of Indian nationals" — DD News — https://ddnews.gov.in/en/west-asia-crisis-government-takes-coordinated-measures-to-ensure-energy-security-maritime-safety-and-welfare-of-indian-nationals/ — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "West Asia conflict: From oil to inflation, how did the crisis impact India?" — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/economy/news/us-iran-deal-west-asia-conflict-oil-inflation-trade-hormuz-india-impact-126061500479_1.html — (Tier 4)
Note: Tier 1/2 government sources returned no directly relevant results for this specific parliamentary episode; the note is grounded in Tier 4 journalism (The Hindu primary article + corroborating news sources). Constitutional law facts (Articles 93–97) draw on stable constitutional text, not requiring a URL citation.