Speaker irked by Minister’s absence in Question Hour


UPSC Study Note: Speaker Irked by Minister's Absence in Question Hour


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Timing 11:00–12:00 hrs, first hour of every sitting [S2]
Types of Questions Starred (oral), Unstarred (written), Short Notice, Questions to Private Members
Minimum notice period 15 clear days (Speaker may relax) [S2]
Governing rules Rules 32–54, Rules of Procedure & Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha [S3]
Authority on admissibility Speaker, Lok Sabha — final and binding [S2]
Max Starred Qs listed per day 20 (only ~5 typically orally answered)
Zero Hour Immediately after Question Hour; unscheduled, no formal rules
Cabinet Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia Minister of Communications (incl. Postal Dept.) [S1]
MoS present Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani, MoS Communications [S1]
Speaker Om Birla (Lok Sabha Speaker, re-elected June 2024, 18th Lok Sabha) [S1]
Constitutional basis Articles 75(3) (collective responsibility), 105 (parliamentary privileges); 118 (rules of procedure)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Ethical

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Question Hour in Lok Sabha runs from 11:00 to 12:00 hrs on every sitting day. [S2]
  2. Minimum notice for a question is 15 clear days; relaxable by the Speaker. [S2]
  3. The admissibility of a question in Lok Sabha is decided solely by the Speaker. [S2]
  4. Starred Questions require oral answers; Unstarred Questions require written answers — only Starred questions allow supplementary questions.
  5. Rules governing questions in Lok Sabha are Rules 32–54 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha. [S3]
  6. Article 75(3) of the Constitution mandates that the Council of Ministers shall be collectively responsible to the House of the People.
  7. Article 118 empowers each House to make rules for regulating its own procedure and conduct of business.
  8. Om Birla is the Speaker of the 18th Lok Sabha (elected June 2024).
  9. The Postal Department falls under the Ministry of Communications — not the Ministry of Posts separately. [S1]
  10. Jyotiraditya Scindia holds the portfolio of Communications (including Postal Dept.) as of 2026. [S1]
  11. Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani is the Minister of State for Communications. [S1]
  12. The Speaker can disallow a question if it is "an abuse of the right of questioning" or contravenes Rules. [S2]
  13. Zero Hour — held immediately after Question Hour — has no mention in the Rules of Procedure; it is a purely conventional practice.

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS Paper GS-II (Indian Polity & Governance)
Syllabus heading Parliament and State Legislatures — functioning, powers, privileges; mechanisms, laws, institutions for accountability

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Question Hour is important, not meeting" — Analyse the constitutional significance of Question Hour as a tool of executive accountability and examine the challenges to its effective functioning in the Indian Parliament. 2. Critically examine the role of the Speaker of Lok Sabha in enforcing ministerial accountability during Question Hour. What formal and informal mechanisms exist? 3. 'Collective ministerial responsibility is a convention more observed in breach.' Discuss with reference to recent instances of parliamentary procedure.


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Zero Hour & Special Mentions Companion mechanisms for raising urgent issues; often confused with Question Hour
Starred vs. Unstarred Questions Core distinction tested in Prelims; directly relevant to ministerial presence requirements
Speaker's Powers & Impartiality Broader context of Om Birla's actions; includes anti-defection, Bill certification
Collective Ministerial Responsibility (Art. 75) Constitutional doctrine underpinning why Cabinet Ministers must answer in person
Parliamentary Privileges (Art. 105) Governs what members and ministers can/cannot do inside Parliament
Private Member Bills & Resolutions Contrast with government business; helps map parliamentary time allocation
No-Confidence Motion procedure Contextually linked — Om Birla faced removal motion in March 2026
Parliamentary Productivity & PRS India data Empirical data on disruptions, sittings, and declining Question Hour utility

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Zero Hour ≠ Question Hour: Aspirants conflate the two. Zero Hour has no constitutional or rule basis; Question Hour is codified in Rules 32–54. [S2]
  2. MoS can substitute for Cabinet Minister in all cases (WRONG): For Starred Questions requiring supplementaries, only the Cabinet Minister-in-charge can provide complete accountability — MoS substitution is a procedural gap, not an equivalence.
  3. Postal Department under a separate "Ministry of Posts" (WRONG): It is a department under the Ministry of Communications, not a standalone ministry. [S1]
  4. Speaker's powers are absolute (OVERSTATED): Speaker's rulings are final within the House, but judicial review of Speaker's decisions has been upheld in limited cases (e.g., Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu, 1992 — on anti-defection).
  5. Confusing Question Hour suspension (2020) with abolition: COVID-era suspension was temporary; Question Hour was not abolished, and its restoration was confirmed for subsequent sessions.

11. Sources