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
- Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju announced (16 Feb 2026) that the second part of the Budget Session 2026 (March 9 – April 2) would bring "several important Bills" including one undisclosed "critical Bill." [S1]
- The Budget Session 2026 ran from 28 January to 2 April 2026 (extended/concluded sine-die on 18 April), covering both parts. [S2]
- Critical for UPSC: tests knowledge of parliamentary procedures — Budget Session mechanics, guillotine, no-confidence motion against Speaker, legislative business scheduling.
- Connects GS-II syllabus on Parliament, legislative process, and constitutional provisions governing sessions.
2. Why in the News
- On 16 February 2026, Rijiju (speaking from Tawang) warned the Opposition not to disrupt Parliament, stating the second part would be "interesting" for three reasons: [S1] 1. One undisclosed "critical Bill" to be tabled. 2. Debate and vote on no-confidence motion against Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla scheduled for 9 March 2026 (first day of second part). [S3] 3. Upcoming Assembly elections in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala and Puducherry coinciding with the session. [S1]
- The first part concluded with Houses in recess from 13 February, resuming 9 March 2026. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- Budget Session structure: Conventionally split into two parts — Part I (late January–mid-February) for Budget presentation and Part II (March–April/May) for detailed legislative business and passage of Finance/Appropriation Bills.
- Budget Session 2026 chronology:
- 28 Jan 2026: Session commenced; President's Address to joint sitting. [S2]
- 1 Feb 2026: Union Budget 2026–27 presented.
- 13 Feb 2026: First part concluded; Houses adjourned for recess. [S4]
- 9 Mar 2026: Second part commenced. [S3]
- 18 Mar 2026: Appropriation (No. 2) Bill, 2026 passed by Lok Sabha. [S2]
- 25 Mar 2026: Finance Bill, 2026 passed by Lok Sabha. [S2]
- 2 Apr 2026 (original end date) → 18 Apr 2026: Both Houses adjourned sine-die. [S2]
- No-confidence motion against Speaker: Signed by 118 MPs (led by Congress); listed for 9 March — rule mandates it be taken up on the first day after notice is received. Motion was defeated by 12 March 2026. [S3]
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
- Article 94 of the Constitution governs removal of Lok Sabha Speaker — requires effective majority (majority of all members of the House, not merely those present and voting), with 14 days' notice.
- Motion against Speaker Om Birla was the first such motion in several decades, making it constitutionally significant.
- The Speaker's casting vote (Article 100) and their role as guardian of House decorum make this a high-stakes constitutional event.
- Guillotine is a parliamentary device under Rule 30 of Lok Sabha Rules, curtailing debate on Demands for Grants; constitutionally, Parliament cannot adjourn without passing the Appropriation Act.
Political / Governance
- Rijiju's warning ("we will go for the guillotine") signals government's intent to use procedural rules to override Opposition disruption — reflects tension between legislative efficiency and deliberative democracy.
- Coincidence with five State/UT elections (WB, TN, Assam, Kerala, Puducherry) politicised the session — legislation and floor management had electoral optics.
- No-confidence motion against Speaker used as a pressure tactic by Opposition (Congress + allies); the Speaker's impartiality is a constitutional convention.
Administrative
- Second part carries the heavier legislative load: Finance Bill debate, Demands for Grants, passage of all money Bills before adjournment.
- Sine-die extension (to 18 April from 2 April) indicates heavier-than-expected business — a common pattern when guillotine is deployed late.
- Government strategy: withhold identity of "critical Bill" to prevent preemptive Opposition mobilisation.
Historical
- Past "critical" undisclosed bills have included constitutional amendment bills (e.g., 42nd Amendment 1976, various NDA-era bills on reservations, citizenship).
- The UPSC relevance is structural: each Budget Session tests constitutional provisions on Money Bills (Article 110), Appropriation Bills (Article 114), and the Finance Bill's sui generis status.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- 28 Jan 2026: Budget Session 2026 opened with President's joint address. [S2]
- 1 Feb 2026: Finance Minister presented Union Budget 2026–27.
- 11 Feb 2026: Lok Sabha Speaker directed Secretariat to rectify deficiencies in Opposition's no-confidence motion. [S3]
- 13 Feb 2026: Part I concluded; Parliament in recess. [S4]
- 16 Feb 2026: Rijiju's announcement from Tawang about "critical Bill" and second-part agenda. [S1]
- 8–9 Mar 2026: Phase II commenced; Lok Sabha scheduled to take up Speaker removal resolution on 9 March. [S3]
- 18 Mar 2026: Appropriation (No. 2) Bill, 2026 passed by Lok Sabha. [S2]
- 25 Mar 2026: Finance Bill, 2026 passed by Lok Sabha. [S2]
- 18 Apr 2026: Both Houses adjourned sine-die. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Budget Session 2026 commenced on 28 January 2026 and concluded sine-die on 18 April 2026. [S2]
- The second part of Budget Session 2026 ran from 9 March to 2 April 2026 (originally). [S3]
- The no-confidence motion against Speaker Om Birla was signed by 118 MPs. [S3]
- Under Article 94 of the Constitution, removal of Lok Sabha Speaker requires 14 days' notice and effective majority.
- "Guillotine" in parliamentary context = curtailing debate on pending Demands for Grants so they can be put to vote; governed by Rule 30, Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure.
- The Finance Bill, 2026 was passed by Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026. [S2]
- The Appropriation (No. 2) Bill, 2026 was passed by Lok Sabha on 18 March 2026. [S2]
- Kiren Rijiju holds the portfolio of Parliamentary Affairs AND Minority Affairs. [S1]
- Five elections coinciding with the second part: West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala (States) + Puducherry (UT). [S1]
- A Money Bill (Article 110) can only be introduced in Lok Sabha; Rajya Sabha can only make recommendations (not amendments) within 14 days.
- The Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was also listed for the second part. [S2]
- Parliamentary Affairs Minister "goes for guillotine" when the Opposition disrupts the House and Demands for Grants cannot be debated; unvoted grants lapse.
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:
-
"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)
-
"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)
-
"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
- Article 94 & 179 — Removal of Speaker/Deputy Speaker: Constitutional basis for the motion; comparison between LS Speaker and RS Chairman removal procedures.
- Money Bill vs. Finance Bill vs. Ordinary Bill: Article 110; Rajya Sabha's limited role; why Finance Bill is not always a Money Bill.
- Guillotine and Demands for Grants: Procedure under Rules 30–31, LS Rules; implications of unvoted grants.
- Budget Session mechanics: Joint sitting (Article 108), President's address (Article 87), Vote on Account vs. Full Budget.
- Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule): Relevant because Speaker is the deciding authority — conflict of interest when Speaker faces no-confidence.
- State Legislative Assembly elections 2026 (WB, TN, Assam, Kerala, Puducherry): Election Commission's Model Code of Conduct impact on Parliamentary legislation.
- Parliamentary Standing Committees: Role in detailed scrutiny of Bills that the full House cannot provide during disrupted sessions.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- 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.
- 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.
- 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).
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] "Critical Bill to be brought in second part of the Budget Session, says Rijiju" — The Hindu, 16 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-16/ (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Both Houses of Parliament Adjourn Sine-Die" — PIB, April 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2253254®=3&lang=1 (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Lok Sabha to vote on motion to remove Speaker Birla on March 9" / "Phase two of Budget Session commences on March 9" — Newsonair / Daily Pioneer — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/phase-two-of-budget-session-commences-on-march-9 (corroborating Tier 4)
- [S4] "Second part of Budget Session of Parliament to begin tomorrow" — Newsonair — https://newsonair.gov.in/second-part-of-budget-session-of-parliament-to-begin-tomorrow (Tier 4)