Critical Bill to be brought in second part of the Budget Session, says Rijiju


Critical Bill in Second Part of Budget Session 2026 — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Session Budget Session 2026 (Part II)
Dates 9 March – 2 April 2026 (originally); sine-die 18 April 2026
Part I dates 28 January – 13 February 2026
Announcing minister Kiren Rijiju, Union Minister of Parliamentary Affairs & Minority Affairs
"Critical Bill" Identity not disclosed at time of announcement (16 Feb 2026)
Finance Bill, 2026 Passed by Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026
Appropriation (No. 2) Bill Introduced, considered and passed by Lok Sabha on 18 March 2026
No-confidence motion against Speaker Moved by Opposition (118 MPs); taken up 9 March; defeated ~12 March 2026
Guillotine Parliamentary device to pass pending demands for grants without debate; Rijiju threatened its use if disruption continued
Assembly elections coinciding West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala (States); Puducherry (UT)
Enabling rule — Motion against Speaker Rule 198 of Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure (14-day notice; taken up on first available sitting after notice is admitted)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-II (Polity & Governance)
Syllabus heading Parliament and State Legislatures — Structure, functioning, conduct of business; Significant provisions in the Indian Constitution

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The use of the 'guillotine' in Parliament is a necessary evil in a democracy. Critically examine with reference to recent Budget Sessions." (GS-II, 15M)

  2. "What are the constitutional provisions governing the removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker? How does a no-confidence motion against the Speaker affect the functioning of the House?" (GS-II, 10M)

  3. "Parliamentary sessions in India have increasingly become arenas of political confrontation rather than legislative deliberation. Discuss the institutional mechanisms available to restore order and legislative productivity." (GS-II, 15M)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. Article 94 & 179 — Removal of Speaker/Deputy Speaker: Constitutional basis for the motion; comparison between LS Speaker and RS Chairman removal procedures.
  2. Money Bill vs. Finance Bill vs. Ordinary Bill: Article 110; Rajya Sabha's limited role; why Finance Bill is not always a Money Bill.
  3. Guillotine and Demands for Grants: Procedure under Rules 30–31, LS Rules; implications of unvoted grants.
  4. Budget Session mechanics: Joint sitting (Article 108), President's address (Article 87), Vote on Account vs. Full Budget.
  5. Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule): Relevant because Speaker is the deciding authority — conflict of interest when Speaker faces no-confidence.
  6. State Legislative Assembly elections 2026 (WB, TN, Assam, Kerala, Puducherry): Election Commission's Model Code of Conduct impact on Parliamentary legislation.
  7. Parliamentary Standing Committees: Role in detailed scrutiny of Bills that the full House cannot provide during disrupted sessions.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing "guillotine" with "closure motion": Closure (Rule 56) ends debate on a motion; guillotine (Rule 30) is specific to Demands for Grants — all undiscussed demands are lumped and voted together.
  2. Wrong majority for Speaker removal: Students write "simple majority" — it is effective majority (majority of total membership), NOT merely majority of those present and voting.
  3. Speaker removal notice period: 14 days' notice required (Article 94(c)); a common MCQ trap is confusing this with 10 days (which applies to other motions).
  4. Finance Bill ≠ Money Bill always: Finance Bill contains provisions beyond Article 110's definition (e.g., changes to IT Act) — it is introduced as a Financial Bill under Article 117, not always as a Money Bill.
  5. Session dates confusion: The Budget Session's first part ended 13 February; the second part started 9 March — a 24-day recess. Do not conflate with the Winter Session or a Special Session.

11. Sources