Motion to remove Speaker sets stage for a stormy session
Motion to Remove the Lok Sabha Speaker — UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Motion of Removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker is a constitutional mechanism under Article 94(c) of the Constitution of India by which the House can remove its presiding officer by a majority of all then-members. [S1]
- Such motions are rare but constitutional — only four instances in 75+ years of parliamentary history, none successful. [S1]
- For UPSC aspirants, this topic sits at the intersection of GS-II (Parliament, constitutional provisions, functioning of Parliament) and polity ethics (independence of presiding officers, role of opposition).
- The March 2026 motion against Speaker Om Birla revived interest in procedural rules, constitutional articles, and the political dynamics of majority vs. opposition in the 18th Lok Sabha. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- March 9, 2026: The second part of the Budget Session of Parliament resumed. The first agenda item was the debate on the Motion of Removal admitted against Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla. [S1]
- The resolution was listed against Congress MPs Mohammad Jawed, K. Suresh, and Mallu Ravi, and was signed by 118 Opposition members of the INDIA (Indian National Developmental, Inclusive Alliance) bloc. [S1]
- Union Home Minister Amit Shah replied to the discussion on the no-confidence motion in the Lok Sabha, as confirmed by a PIB press release. [S2]
- The motion was the fourth such instance in Indian parliamentary history — the first since 1987. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Speaker | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1952 | G.V. Mavalankar (1st Speaker, 1st Lok Sabha) | Motion moved 1954; failed [S1] |
| 1962 | Hukum Singh (3rd Speaker) | Motion moved 1966; failed [S1] |
| 1985 | Balram Jakhar (7th Speaker) | Motion moved 1987; failed [S1] |
| 2024–26 | Om Birla (18th Lok Sabha) | Motion moved March 2026; expected to fail [S1] |
- Driving rationale for 2026 motion: Opposition's protest over alleged partisan conduct by the Speaker and the government's handling of parliamentary procedure; broad-based opposition solidarity across 118 MPs of the INDIA bloc. [S1]
- The Deputy Speaker post has remained vacant in the 18th Lok Sabha — a constitutional anomaly that added procedural complexity to who would preside during the debate. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions: - Article 94 — Conditions for vacation of office, resignation, and removal of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha. - Article 94(c) specifically: Speaker can be removed by a resolution of the House passed by a majority of all the then members of the House. [S1] - Article 96 — Speaker shall not preside while a resolution for their removal is under consideration; the Deputy Speaker (or in their absence, a member of the Panel of Presiding Officers) presides. [S1][S3]
Procedure: - 14 days' advance notice is required before moving such a resolution. [S3] - Speaker is permitted to be present in the House during the debate and may be allotted a seat among Cabinet Ministers — not in the Speaker's Chair. [S1] - Speaker may address the House during the debate. - A motion requires effective majority (majority of total membership, 272+ in a 543-member House), not just simple majority of members present and voting. [S1]
Key Numbers (March 2026): - Total Lok Sabha strength: 543 - NDA seats: ~335 (comfortable majority) [S1] - INDIA bloc seats: ~230 (short of the required majority for removal) [S1] - Signatories to the motion: 118 [S1] - Majority required to remove Speaker: 272 (majority of all then-members) [S1]
Presiding officer during debate (March 2026): - In absence of a Deputy Speaker, the senior-most MP in the Presiding Officers Committee presides — likely BJP MP Jagdambika Pal. [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 94(c) sets a higher threshold than a simple no-confidence motion against the government (which needs simple majority of members present and voting).
- Article 96 creates a temporary constitutional vacancy in the speakership's presiding function — filled by the Deputy Speaker or panel member.
- The absence of a Deputy Speaker (18th Lok Sabha) creates a grey area resolved by the Presiding Officers Committee — itself a rare institutional mechanism. [S1]
- The motion underscores the principle that the Speaker must enjoy the confidence of the entire House, not just the ruling majority.
Political / Governance
- Opposition's use of the removal motion is a procedural weapon to signal displeasure without actual expectation of success — all four historical motions failed.
- The NDA's 335-seat strength ensures the motion cannot succeed; the debate itself is the political objective (visibility, agenda-setting). [S1]
- The vacant Deputy Speaker post (no Deputy Speaker since June 2024) reflects a broader governance concern — the Constitution mandates election of Deputy Speaker but does not fix a timeline. [S1]
Historical
- All three prior removal motions (1954, 1966, 1987) failed — establishing a strong convention that the ruling majority defends its Speaker. [S1]
- G.V. Mavalankar's case (1954) is notable because he was the first Speaker and a Congress figure facing a Congress-aligned challenge, illustrating that removal motions are not purely partisan. [S1]
Administrative
- The peculiar seating arrangement — Speaker seated among Cabinet Ministers — highlights procedural adaptability; the Chamber's physical layout itself signals a constitutional shift in authority. [S1]
- The absence of a Deputy Speaker forces use of the Panel of Chairpersons / Presiding Officers Committee, whose conventions are less publicly understood and thus a potential Prelims trap. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- June 2024: 18th Lok Sabha constituted; Om Birla re-elected Speaker — the first Speaker to be re-elected to the same House in the modern era. The Opposition backed K. Suresh (Congress) as its candidate — a contest not seen since 1976.
- Deputy Speaker post vacant: As of March 2026, no Deputy Speaker has been elected in the 18th Lok Sabha, an unprecedented gap of nearly 2 years. [S1]
- Early March 2026: Opposition gives the mandatory 14-day advance notice of the removal motion; motion is admitted by the House. [S1]
- March 9, 2026: Budget Session (Part II) resumes; removal motion debate listed as first agenda item; Speaker Om Birla absent from the Chair; Jagdambika Pal likely presides. [S1]
- Home Minister Amit Shah replies to the debate on behalf of the government; motion expected to fail given NDA's ~335-seat strength. [S1][S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker is governed by Article 94(c) of the Constitution of India. [S1]
- A motion to remove the Speaker requires a majority of all then-members of the House (effective majority), not merely a majority of members present and voting. [S1]
- When a resolution for Speaker's removal is under consideration, the Speaker shall not preside — governed by Article 96. [S1][S3]
- 14 days' advance notice is mandatory before moving a resolution for removal of the Speaker. [S3]
- During the removal debate, the Speaker may sit among Cabinet Ministers on the floor of the House. [S1]
- The first Speaker of the Lok Sabha, G.V. Mavalankar, faced a removal motion in 1954 — the earliest such instance in Indian parliamentary history. [S1]
- The last removal motion before 2026 was against Speaker Balram Jakhar in 1987. [S1]
- In total, there have been four instances of removal motions against Lok Sabha Speakers (1954, 1966, 1987, 2026) — none has succeeded. [S1]
- In the March 2026 motion, the resolution was listed in the names of Congress MPs Mohammad Jawed, K. Suresh, and Mallu Ravi. [S1]
- The motion was signed by 118 Opposition MPs of the INDIA bloc; the INDIA bloc has ~230 MPs in total. [S1]
- To remove the Speaker in a 543-member House, at least 272 votes are required (majority of all members). [S1]
- In the absence of the Deputy Speaker (post vacant since June 2024), the senior-most member of the Presiding Officers Committee presides during the removal debate — in March 2026, likely Jagdambika Pal (BJP). [S1]
- Hukum Singh (3rd Speaker) was the subject of a removal motion in 1966 — the second such instance. [S1]
- The Speaker is elected by the Lok Sabha under Article 93; the Deputy Speaker is also elected under Article 93. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Indian Constitution — historical underpinnings, evolution, features; Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business; functioning of executive/legislative institutions.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - Powers, functions, and responsibilities of Parliament; functioning of Parliament. - Salient features of the Representation of the People's Act; constitutional positions. - Separation of powers between various organs; dispute redressal mechanisms.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Critically examine the constitutional provisions and parliamentary conventions governing the removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker. What does the recurrence of removal motions indicate about the health of Indian parliamentary democracy?" (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "The prolonged vacancy of the Deputy Speaker's post in the 18th Lok Sabha raises serious constitutional and governance concerns. Discuss." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "The independence of the Speaker is essential for the effective functioning of parliamentary democracy. Analyse the challenges to Speaker neutrality in India with reference to historical and recent instances." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 93 — Election of Speaker and Deputy Speaker | Foundational provision; complements Article 94 and 96 on removal |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Speaker is the sole adjudicatory authority; Speaker's partisan perception directly linked to removal motions |
| No-Confidence Motion against Council of Ministers (Article 75) | Contrast in threshold (simple majority vs. effective majority for Speaker removal) |
| Panel of Chairpersons / Presiding Officers Committee | Activated when Speaker and Deputy Speaker are both absent; highlighted by 2026 episode |
| Parliamentary Privileges (Articles 105, 194) | Debates during removal motion are protected; understanding scope of privilege matters |
| Deputy Speaker — Constitutional Role and Vacancy | The 18th Lok Sabha's vacant Deputy Speaker post is a direct context for the 2026 motion |
| Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha (Rule 12/13 on notice) | Procedural underpinning for the 14-day notice requirement |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing Article 94 with Article 75: Article 94(c) governs Speaker removal (requires majority of all members = effective majority); a no-confidence motion against the government under Article 75 requires only a simple majority of members present and voting. Examinees often conflate the two thresholds.
-
Assuming the Deputy Speaker presides during removal debate: Article 96 says the Deputy Speaker presides — but if the post is vacant (as in 2026), a member from the Presiding Officers Committee steps in. The answer "Deputy Speaker" is constitutionally correct but factually wrong for the current context.
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Mis-attributing the 1987 motion: The 1987 motion was against Balram Jakhar, not against Shivraj Patil or any other Speaker. Jakhar served as Speaker 1980–89.
-
Thinking removal motions are unprecedented: They are uncommon but not unprecedented — four instances (1954, 1966, 1987, 2026). A question asking "first instance" points to G.V. Mavalankar, 1954, not the current one.
-
Confusing "all then-members" with "all 543 members": The effective majority threshold is calculated on the basis of actual membership (seats filled), not the constitutional maximum. Vacant seats reduce the required number below 272 in practice.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Motion to remove Speaker sets stage for a stormy session" — The Hindu, March 9, 2026, p. 5 (article content as provided) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Union Home Minister Shri Amit Shah replies to the discussion on the No-Confidence Motion moved against Shri Om Birla, the Speaker, Lok Sabha" — Press Information Bureau, Government of India — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2238660 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha" — Sansad.in / Lok Sabha Secretariat — https://sansad.in/uploads/Rules_of_Procedures_E_9d8fd0f4c3.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "A Guide to Parliamentary Interventions — Lok Sabha" — PRS Legislative Research — https://prsindia.org/files/parliament/primers/A_Guide_to_Parliamentary_Interventions-Lok_Sabha.pdf — (Tier 1/3)
- [S5] "Frequently Asked Questions on Lok Sabha" — Sansad.in — https://sansad.in/ls/faq — (Tier 1)
Note: All constitutional article references (Art. 93, 94, 96) are verifiable in the bare text of the Constitution of India available at legislative.gov.in and the Lok Sabha Rules of Procedure at loksabha.nic.in.