Disruptions in legislatures pose a serious challenge: LS Speaker
Legislative Disruptions in Legislatures — LS Speaker's Concern
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Core issue: Frequent interruptions and disruptions in Parliament and State Assemblies undermine the deliberative function of democratic institutions — raised by Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla as a "serious challenge." [S1]
- Why it matters for UPSC: Directly maps to GS-II (Parliament & State Legislatures, Functioning of Democracy) and recurring Mains questions on parliamentary productivity, presiding officers' powers, and institutional reforms.
- Disruptions deprive citizens of meaningful debate, block Question Hour utility, and prevent scrutiny of legislation — all central to legislative accountability. [S4]
- The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) provides the institutional forum through which Indian presiding officers coordinate on best practices across legislatures. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- June 10, 2026: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla, addressing the Second Conference of CPA India Region Zone-II (North Zone) at Chandigarh, stated that disruptions in Parliament and State Assemblies pose a serious challenge to democratic institutions. [S1 — article]
- He announced the conference concluded with four resolutions aimed at making legislative institutions more effective, accountable, and people-centric. [S1 — article]
- November 2025: Speaker Birla had earlier, at the 22nd Annual Conference of CPA India Region Zone-III in Kohima, warned that planned disruptions not only undermine democratic processes but also deprive citizens of meaningful deliberations. [S2]
- He referenced the Winter Session (commencing December 1, 2025), urging all political parties to ensure smooth House proceedings. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1952 | First Lok Sabha constituted; early sessions characterised by substantive debate and high productivity |
| 1985 | Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law) inserted via 52nd Constitutional Amendment — intended to reduce floor-crossing but later linked to reduced independent voting and party-enforced disruptions [S5] |
| 1989 onwards | Coalition era begins; disruptions as opposition tactic escalate across sessions |
| 2001 | Speaker G.M.C. Balayogi convenes first CPA India Region conference to address legislative quality |
| 2010–2014 | UPA-II era — several sessions effectively washed out (notable: Winter Session 2010, disrupted over 2G scam) |
| 2021–2022 | Multiple Monsoon and Winter sessions disrupted; PRS India documents productivity as low as 5–14% in some sessions [S4] |
| 2025–26 | Speaker Birla escalates concern via CPA zonal conferences; frames reform around Viksit Bharat goal [S1 — article] |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional & Procedural Framework
- Article 93: Election of Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha
- Article 178: Speaker of State Legislative Assembly
- Article 105 & 194: Parliamentary privileges — members cannot be sued for speech/vote in House
- Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha: Governs adjournment motions, calling attention motions, zero hour, etc.
- Article 122 / Article 212: Courts cannot inquire into proceedings of Parliament / State Legislature
- Tenth Schedule (1985): Anti-defection law — Speaker is adjudicator; amended in 2003 (91st Amendment) to remove merger provision partially [S5]
Key Bodies
| Body | Role |
|---|---|
| Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) | International body; India Region has 9 Zones covering Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha, and State/UT legislatures |
| CPA India Region Zone-II (North Zone) | Covers Hindi-belt States — venue of June 2026 conference at Chandigarh [S1 — article] |
| Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) | Lok Sabha Secretariat body for legislator capacity building |
| Presiding Officers' Conference | Annual conference of Speakers & Chairpersons of all legislatures |
Instruments Used to Disrupt / Respond to Disruption
- Adjournment Motion (Rule 56, Lok Sabha): Raises definite matter of urgent public importance — requires Speaker's consent
- Calling Attention Motion (Rule 197): Draws minister's attention to urgent matter
- Zero Hour: Informal; not in Rules of Procedure — used for impromptu issues
- Suspension under Rule 374/374A: Speaker can suspend disruptive members for remainder of session
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Speaker's power to expunge unparliamentary remarks (Rule 380, Lok Sabha) and suspend members (Rule 374A — introduced 2001 — allows automatic suspension for five consecutive sitting days). [S3]
- Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) paradoxically contributes to disruptions: parties issue whips to disrupt en masse, as members who defy face disqualification. [S5]
- Article 122 bars judicial review of parliamentary proceedings — meaning no court can remedy a disrupted session; reform must be internal.
Governance / Institutional
- PRS India data: disruptions in winter sessions have led to sessions working at <20% of scheduled time; bills passed in < 5 minutes without debate. [S4]
- Question Hour — the primary accountability mechanism — is often first casualty of disruptions; ministers escape scrutiny.
- Speaker Birla's framing: solution lies "within legislative institutions themselves" — pointing to self-regulation over statutory intervention. [S1 — article]
Administrative
- Capacity of legislators: Speaker emphasised capacity enhancement as key — BPST and CPA programmes target this. [S1 — article]
- Technology use: Speaker called for maximising technology in legislative processes — echoes e-Vidhan (digital legislature project) rollout across State Assemblies.
- Citizen participation: Resolutions at CPA Zone-II conference included involving citizens in policy/law framing — linked to pre-legislative consultation norm.
Ethical / Accountability
- "Society is shaped by the conduct and behaviour of its leadership" — Speaker Birla, June 2026. [S1 — article]
- Exemplary conduct of public representatives is a constitutional expectation; disruptions signal breakdown of political ethics.
- Disruption as a strategic tool by opposition raises a normative tension: disruption can be a form of protest where other channels are blocked, but it sacrifices legislative output.
Historical / Comparative
- UK Parliament: Speaker has power to name a member and have them removed by motion — stronger enforcement than India.
- Pre-1989 India: Disruptions were exceptions; post-coalition era normalised them as opposition tactics.
- 72nd Conference of Presiding Officers (2023): Collectively resolved to improve productivity — continuity with Birla's 2026 statement.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- October 2025: Speaker Om Birla led Indian Parliamentary Delegation to 68th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference, Bridgetown, Barbados (October 5–12, 2025). [S3]
- November 2025: Addressed 22nd Annual CPA India Region Zone-III conference, Kohima — warned against planned disruptions ahead of Winter Session (December 1, 2025). [S2]
- September 2025: Inaugurated 11th CPA India Region Conference, Bengaluru. [S3]
- June 10, 2026: Addressed Second CPA India Region Zone-II (North Zone) Conference, Chandigarh — announced four resolutions; linked legislative functioning to Viksit Bharat vision. [S1 — article]
- Ongoing rollout of e-Vidhan (digital legislature) under Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs — aimed at improving legislative efficiency.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Tenth Schedule of the Constitution — inserted by 52nd Constitutional Amendment, 1985 — governs anti-defection; Speaker is the adjudicator. [S5]
- Rule 374A of Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure — provides for automatic suspension of a member for the remainder of the session for grave disorder (introduced 2001).
- The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) India Region is divided into 9 Zones.
- CPA India Region Zone-II (North Zone) conference (June 2026) was held at Chandigarh; presided over by Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla. [S1 — article]
- Article 122 bars courts from inquiring into proceedings of Parliament; equivalent for State Legislatures is Article 212.
- Zero Hour in Parliament is not mentioned in the Rules of Procedure — it is a convention that begins at noon.
- Speaker's power to expunge unparliamentary remarks — governed by Rule 380 of the Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure.
- 91st Constitutional Amendment (2003) amended the Tenth Schedule — capped Council of Ministers at 15% of Lok Sabha strength and eliminated the merger exception partially.
- Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) functions under the Lok Sabha Secretariat (not the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs).
- Adjournment Motion (Rule 56) requires the Speaker's consent and relates to definite matters of urgent public importance; it is a censure motion on the government.
- PRS India documented Lok Sabha working at 14% of scheduled time and Rajya Sabha at 5% during one of the least productive sessions of the 16th Lok Sabha. [S4]
- The Presiding Officers' Conference is an annual conclave of Speakers and Chairpersons of all Union and State legislatures — chaired by the Lok Sabha Speaker.
- Speaker Birla linked strong legislative institutions to the Viksit Bharat vision at the June 2026 CPA conference. [S1 — article]
8. Mains Relevance
| Detail | |
|---|---|
| GS Paper | GS-II (Primary); GS-IV (conduct/ethics of public representatives) |
| Syllabus Heading | Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges; Functioning of democratic government; Issues of representation |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
- "Disruptions in legislatures are not merely procedural inconveniences but represent a structural crisis in Indian democracy." Critically examine the causes, consequences, and possible reforms. (GS-II, 15 marks)
- "The Anti-Defection Law, intended to ensure stability, paradoxically incentivises collective disruption. Discuss with reference to parliamentary productivity data." (GS-II, 10 marks)
- "The Speaker of Lok Sabha occupies a constitutional office that must balance partisan origins with institutional neutrality. How can this tension be resolved to address legislative disruptions?" (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Party whips enabling mass disruption; Speaker as adjudicator — core structural link |
| Powers and Privileges of Parliament (Articles 105, 194) | Disruptions occur within the shield of privilege; immunity from judicial review |
| Role and Powers of the Lok Sabha Speaker | Central to managing disruptions — suspension powers, expunction, recognition of motions |
| Parliamentary Committees (especially PAC, Estimates, DRSCs) | Committees do substantive work when plenary is disrupted — alternative accountability mechanism |
| e-Vidhan / Digital Legislature | Technology-based response to legislative inefficiency; mentioned by Speaker Birla |
| Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) | Institutional forum for inter-legislature coordination on best practices |
| Electoral Reforms & Candidate Criminalisation | Legislator conduct in the House often reflects entry-level accountability deficits |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Speaker vs. Chairman: The Lok Sabha has a Speaker; the Rajya Sabha has a Chairman (the Vice-President ex-officio). Disruption management tools differ — Rajya Sabha has no equivalent of Rule 374A.
- Anti-Defection adjudicator: The Speaker decides disqualification petitions under the Tenth Schedule — not the Election Commission. EC handles party recognition, not individual disqualification.
- Zero Hour is NOT in the Rules: Aspirants often treat Zero Hour as a formal procedural instrument — it has no mention in Rules of Procedure; it is purely conventional (≈ 12 noon).
- CPA India Region Zones ≠ CPA Regions globally: India forms one region in the global CPA but is subdivided into 9 zones internally — do not confuse with international CPA regional structure.
- Article 122/212 scope: These bar inquiry into proceedings — they do not grant absolute immunity to members for acts outside the House (e.g., bribery to vote — settled in P.V. Narasimha Rao case, 1998; being revisited after Sita Soren judgment, 2024).
11. Sources
- [S1] "Disruptions in legislatures pose a serious challenge: LS Speaker" — The Hindu, June 10, 2026 — Article content provided in prompt — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Lok Sabha Speaker urges all political parties to uphold dignity of legislative institutions; says planned disruptions weaken democracy" — PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2188381 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Lok Sabha Speaker to Inaugurate First Conference of Zone VII of CPA India Region in Goa" / "CPA conference a significant milestone" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseDetail.aspx?PRID=2250904 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "The Cost of Parliamentary Disruption" — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/articles-by-prs-team/the-cost-of-parliamentary-disruption — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "Anti-Defection Law — Intent and Impact" — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/files/parliament/discussion_papers/Anti-Defection%20Law%20Intent%20and%20Impact_0.pdf — (Tier 1)