Centre demands apology from Opposition for protesting during President’s Address to House

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UPSC Study Note

Centre Demands Apology from Opposition for Protesting During President's Address to Parliament

Budget Session 2026 | Constitutional Conventions | Parliamentary Procedure


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Milestone Detail
1949 Article 87 incorporated into the Constitution — modelled on the British practice of the King's/Queen's Speech
2005 MGNREGA enacted under UPA-I — guaranteed 100 days of unskilled wage employment per rural household per year
2026 (Budget Session) Government replaces MGNREGA with VB-G RAM G Act (Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission–Gramin) — triggering Opposition protest
29 Jan 2026 President's Address disrupted by sloganeering; Centre demands apology

4. Core Static Facts

Constitutional Provision - Article 87(1): President shall address both Houses assembled together at commencement of the first session after each general election and at commencement of the first session of each year. - Article 87(2): Provision for Rules of Procedure regulating the procedure at such joint sittings. - The Address is not debatable on the floor while it is being delivered; discussion follows as a separate "Motion of Thanks."

Motion of Thanks - After the Address, both Houses separately debate and pass a Motion of Thanks to the President. - Amendments can be moved to the Motion of Thanks — the primary vehicle for Opposition critique without disrupting the Address itself.

VB-G RAM G Act (triggering legislation) - Full name: Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act - Replaces: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 (MGNREGA) - Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development - MGNREGA guaranteed 100 days of unskilled manual work per rural household per financial year.

Key Persons (event-specific) | Person | Role | |---|---| | Droupadi Murmu | President of India (15th President, in office since July 2022) | | Kiren Rijiju | Parliamentary Affairs Minister; demanded apology | | Jairam Ramesh | Congress chief whip, Rajya Sabha; defended protest | | Mallikarjun Kharge | Congress President; named by Rijiju as present during protest | | Rahul Gandhi | Leader of Opposition, Lok Sabha; named by Rijiju as present |


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Social / Welfare

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 87 of the Constitution mandates the President to address both Houses in joint sitting at the commencement of the first session after a general election and the first session of each year.
  2. The President's Address under Article 87 is followed by a Motion of Thanks in each House — not an immediate debate.
  3. The President's Address is drafted by the Union Cabinet, not the President personally; it reflects government policy priorities.
  4. MGNREGA (2005) guaranteed 100 days of unskilled manual employment per rural household per financial year — enacted under UPA-I.
  5. MGNREGA was administered by the Ministry of Rural Development.
  6. VB-G RAM G Act (Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission–Gramin Act) replaced MGNREGA — announced/enacted 2025–26.
  7. Kiren Rijiju served as Parliamentary Affairs Minister at the time of the 29 January 2026 incident.
  8. Jairam Ramesh was Congress chief whip in the Rajya Sabha (not Lok Sabha) at the time of the incident.
  9. Droupadi Murmu is India's 15th President and the first tribal woman to hold the office (took charge July 2022).
  10. Vande Mataram — composed by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay — completed 150 years in 2026; its anniversary coincided with the Budget Session opening.
  11. A privilege motion can be moved against MPs for misconduct during parliamentary proceedings, including during the President's Address.
  12. Unlike a joint sitting under Article 108 (for passing deadlocked bills), the joint sitting under Article 87 is for the President's Address only — no legislative business is transacted.
  13. The Motion of Thanks to the President's Address, if defeated, does not constitute a vote of no confidence.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper II — Indian Constitution / Governance - Syllabus headings: Parliament and State Legislatures; Functioning of Constitutional Bodies; Powers, Functions, and Responsibilities of Parliament.

GS Paper II — Social Justice - Syllabus heading: Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections; Issues Relating to Poverty and Hunger.

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The President's Address to Parliament under Article 87 is a constitutional occasion, not a political one. In light of recent disruptions, critically examine the limits of parliamentary dissent and the sanctity of constitutional offices." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "The replacement of MGNREGA with VB-G RAM G Act marks a shift from a rights-based to a mission-based approach to rural employment. Analyse the implications for rural livelihoods and democratic accountability." (GS-II/III, 250 words) 3. "Parliamentary decorum is as important as parliamentary dissent. Discuss with reference to procedures available to the Opposition for expressing disagreement with the President's Address." (GS-II, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 87 & Article 86 Direct constitutional basis of President's Address; Article 86 covers right to address at other times
MGNREGA — History, Design & Impact The legislation at the heart of the Opposition protest
Motion of Thanks — Procedure & Significance The correct constitutional channel for critique of the Address
Article 108 — Joint Sitting Distinguished from Article 87 joint sitting; common exam confusion
Parliamentary Privileges (Articles 105 & 194) Governs what MPs can and cannot do inside Parliament
Viksit Bharat 2047 Framework Policy context within which VB-G RAM G Act was framed
Budget Session — Constitutional & Procedural Framework Article 112 (Annual Financial Statement), budget presentation norms
Role of Parliamentary Affairs Ministry Coordinates government business in both Houses; central to this episode

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Article 87 (President's Address) with Article 108 (Joint Sitting for Bills): Article 87 joint sittings are for the Address only; Article 108 is invoked when a bill is deadlocked between the two Houses.
  2. Assuming the President drafts her own Address: The Address is entirely drafted by the Union Cabinet; the President has no discretion over its content (unlike Governors in some interpretations).
  3. Confusing Motion of Thanks with a Confidence Motion: The Motion of Thanks is a formal courtesy; its defeat does not automatically trigger a no-confidence motion.
  4. Misidentifying Jairam Ramesh's role: He was Congress chief whip in Rajya Sabha — not the Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha (that post was held by Rahul Gandhi).
  5. Confusing MGNREGA's implementing ministry: It was the Ministry of Rural Development — not Ministry of Labour or MoRD's sub-department; a common MCQ trap around welfare schemes.

11. Sources


Note to aspirant: Web retrieval from Tier 1/2 sources was unavailable during this session (API access errors). All constitutional provisions (Articles 87, 108, 105, 112) are drawn from established knowledge of the Constitution of India and standard UPSC reference material. Verify against the bare Constitution and PRS India (prsindia.org) before the exam.