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


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Constitutional Procedure: Removal of Lok Sabha Speaker

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

B. Budget Session — Parliamentary Procedure

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


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 94 governs the vacation of office and removal of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha.
  2. A resolution for removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker requires 14 days' prior notice.
  3. 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.
  4. The salary of the Lok Sabha Speaker is charged to the Consolidated Fund of India (not subject to vote).
  5. India's crude oil import dependence is approximately 90% of its total requirement. [S4]
  6. Before the 2025-26 West Asia escalation, approximately 45% of India's crude imports transited the Strait of Hormuz. [S4]
  7. India's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) capacity is 5.33 million metric tonnes. [S4]
  8. Approximately 10 million Indians reside and work in the West Asia/Gulf region. [S2]
  9. India diversified crude oil imports from ~20 countries to ~40 countries by end-March 2026, reducing Hormuz dependence. [S3]
  10. The Parliamentary Affairs Minister during the March 2026 Budget Session was Kiren Rijiju. [S1][S2]
  11. NDA held 293 seats in Lok Sabha at the time of the resolution controversy (majority threshold: 272). [S1]
  12. OMC underrecovery on fuel and LPG reached ₹30,000 crore per month during the 2026 West Asia conflict phase. [S4]
  13. The Speaker of Lok Sabha presides over joint sittings of Parliament under Article 118.
  14. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Wrong Article: Students often cite Article 93 (election of Speaker) when the question is about removal — which is Article 94.
  4. 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.
  5. 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


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.