Question and answer


Parliamentary Accountability & Motion of Thanks: Q&A — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Constitutional provision Article 87, Constitution of India
Who addresses President of India (address drafted by Union Cabinet)
When First session post-general election & first session (Budget Session) of each year
Venue Central Hall, Parliament House (joint sitting)
Motion of Thanks — mover A government MP in each House separately
Debate duration Typically spread over 2–4 days in each House
PM's reply Customary; PM replies in Lok Sabha; Minister replies in Rajya Sabha
Adoption method By voice vote (or division if demanded)
Amendments Opposition may move amendments to the Motion (criticism of govt)
Rules governing it Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha; Rajya Sabha equivalent [S6]
2026 Budget Session start 28 January 2026 — President Droupadi Murmu addressed joint sitting [S5]
2026 adoption date 5 February 2026 (Lok Sabha) [S4]
Speaker (2026) Om Birla
Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi (Lok Sabha)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Political / Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Motion of Thanks on the President's Address is governed by Article 87 of the Constitution of India.
  2. The President addresses a joint sitting of both Houses — not a session of either House independently.
  3. In 2026, the Lok Sabha adopted the Motion of Thanks without the PM's reply — the first such instance in recent parliamentary history.
  4. The Motion of Thanks is moved and debated separately in Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha; adoption requires a simple majority.
  5. Speaker Om Birla is the presiding officer of the Lok Sabha; Chairman of Rajya Sabha is the Vice-President of India.
  6. The President's Address under Article 87 is prepared by the Union Cabinet — the President has no discretion over its content.
  7. Leader of the Opposition in Lok Sabha (2026): Rahul Gandhi (Indian National Congress).
  8. The Budget Session 2026–27 commenced on 28 January 2026 with President Droupadi Murmu's joint address.
  9. Opposition amendments to the Motion of Thanks are a recognised form of expressing no-confidence in specific government policies — though they do not constitute a formal no-confidence motion.
  10. The Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha govern the Speaker's powers to restrict or expunge speeches — the LoP's citation of Gen. Naravane's book was disallowed under these rules.
  11. General M.M. Naravane served as Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) — the controversy in the 2026 session related to a book authored by him on India-China affairs.
  12. The Lok Sabha adopted the Motion of Thanks by voice vote — not a division (counted vote) — on 5 February 2026.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (Polity, Governance, Constitution, Parliament)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers and privileges - Separation of Powers between various organs: Dispute Redressal Mechanisms and Institutions - Important aspects of governance: accountability, transparency

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The executive's accountability to Parliament rests on convention as much as law. Critically examine this statement in light of the 2026 Budget Session controversies." 2. "Analyse the constitutional and democratic significance of the Prime Minister's reply to the Motion of Thanks on the President's Address. What does its omission in 2026 signify for parliamentary conventions in India?" 3. "The Speaker of Lok Sabha is simultaneously the guardian of parliamentary procedures and a member of the ruling party. Does this dual role undermine parliamentary accountability? Discuss with recent examples."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 87 & 86 (President's Address) Direct constitutional basis of the Motion of Thanks
No-Confidence Motion (Article 75) The Motion of Thanks is functionally a "soft" accountability tool; contrast with the hard instrument
Powers & Privileges of Parliament (Articles 105, 122) LoP's speech being disallowed touches on privileges and immunity
Speaker's Role & Removal (Article 93–94) Speaker's neutrality is at the heart of the 2026 controversy
Westminster Model vs Indian Adaptations Motion of Thanks traces its origin to the Address in Reply in Westminster
Budget Session — Constitutional & Procedural Aspects Article 112; Annual Financial Statement; role of Parliament in budget scrutiny
Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) Governs how MPs vote on motions, including the Motion of Thanks
Role of Leader of the Opposition Statutory recognition, powers, salary — directly relevant to Rahul Gandhi's role

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Article 86 and Article 87: Article 86 allows the President to address either House at any time; Article 87 specifically deals with the special address at the start of a session (Budget Session / post-election session). The Motion of Thanks arises only under Article 87, not Article 86.

  2. Thinking the PM's reply is constitutionally mandated: It is NOT written in the Constitution or the Rules — it is a parliamentary convention. UPSC may test whether it is "statutory", "constitutional", or "conventional" — the answer is conventional.

  3. Confusing "joint sitting" with "joint session": The President's address under Article 87 is to a joint sitting — used routinely at the start of the Budget Session. A joint session under Article 108 is a different, rarer instrument to resolve deadlocks between Houses.

  4. Wrong presiding officer: The joint address is presided over by the Speaker of Lok Sabha (not the Vice-President/Chairman of Rajya Sabha), even though both Houses are present.

  5. Assuming Motion of Thanks can bring down the government: It cannot. Even if the government loses the vote on the Motion of Thanks, it does not automatically lead to a fall of the government — it is a censure, not a no-confidence motion under Article 75(3).


11. Sources