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


2. Why in the News


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

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


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Institutional

Administrative

Ethical / Accountability

Historical / Comparative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Tenth Schedule of the Constitution — inserted by 52nd Constitutional Amendment, 1985 — governs anti-defection; Speaker is the adjudicator. [S5]
  2. 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).
  3. The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) India Region is divided into 9 Zones.
  4. CPA India Region Zone-II (North Zone) conference (June 2026) was held at Chandigarh; presided over by Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla. [S1 — article]
  5. Article 122 bars courts from inquiring into proceedings of Parliament; equivalent for State Legislatures is Article 212.
  6. Zero Hour in Parliament is not mentioned in the Rules of Procedure — it is a convention that begins at noon.
  7. Speaker's power to expunge unparliamentary remarks — governed by Rule 380 of the Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure.
  8. 91st Constitutional Amendment (2003) amended the Tenth Schedule — capped Council of Ministers at 15% of Lok Sabha strength and eliminated the merger exception partially.
  9. Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) functions under the Lok Sabha Secretariat (not the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs).
  10. 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.
  11. 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]
  12. The Presiding Officers' Conference is an annual conclave of Speakers and Chairpersons of all Union and State legislatures — chaired by the Lok Sabha Speaker.
  13. 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:

  1. "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)
  2. "The Anti-Defection Law, intended to ensure stability, paradoxically incentivises collective disruption. Discuss with reference to parliamentary productivity data." (GS-II, 10 marks)
  3. "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

  1. 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.
  2. Anti-Defection adjudicator: The Speaker decides disqualification petitions under the Tenth Schedule — not the Election Commission. EC handles party recognition, not individual disqualification.
  3. 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).
  4. 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.
  5. 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