13 जून 2013
Cabinet defers Food Bill Ordinance; eyes Spl session of Par
New Delhi, Jun 13. The government plans to convene a
special session of Parliament for passage of the Food Security
Bill as a divided Cabinet today shunned the idea of
promulgating an Ordinance to implement the watershed
legislation.
A meeting of the Cabinet could not arrive at a decision on
bringing an Ordinance to implement the UPA Chairperson Sonia
Gandhi's pet programme and instead decided to court Opposition
parties for passage of the bill in a special Parliament
session.
Home Minister and Leader of the Lok Sabha Sushil Kumar
Shinde, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kamal Nath and Food
Minister K V Thomas will meet opposition leaders to elicit
their support for passage of the key legislation, Finance
Minister P Chidambaram said after the Cabinet meeting.
"The Food Security Bill is ready. We would like to pass it
as a bill but Ordinance version of bill is also ready. We
decided today that we would like to make one more effort to
ask the Opposition parties whether they will cooperate in
passing the bill in a special session of Parliament," he said.
Thomas said the Ordinance route has not been completely
shelved and remains an option available to the government.
The Food Security Bill was tabled in the Budget session
of Parliament but could not be taken up for discussion due to
pandemonium in the Lok Sabha over various scams.
The Bill aims to give legal rights to 67 per cent of the
population over a uniform quantity of 5 kg foodgrains at a
fixed price of Rs 1-3 per kg through ration shops.
Chidambaram said if the support from the Opposition
parties is "forthcoming" then the food bill will be passed in
a special session of Parliament.
"Based on the response of the main Opposition, we will
have to take a view. Our intention is to get it (Food Bill)
passed in a special session of Parliament and we are making
one more effort to ask the Opposition parties to support us,"
the Minister said.
If the Opposition parties agree for passage of the bill
in Parliament, Chidambaram said, "a special session could be
called pretty early, We would like to pass the bill as early
as possible."
Briefing separately, Thomas said: "We have taken a
decision because many political parties including BJP have
requested it should be discussed in Parliament.
"The Prime Minister has consulted everybody, so we have
decided lets have a special Parliament session. ...only thing
is that political parties should take a positive view."
Thomas said the proposal of Ordinance is still with the
Cabinet. "We are deferring the decision on Ordinance but
it is not withdrawal. ...We will start the discussion with all
the political parties (on Food Bill) and if they are willing
to cooperate, then will have a special Parliament session."
Congress considers the proposed Food law, which was
promised in the election manifesto of 2009 general elections,
as a game changer for the next elections.
The government would require 62 million tonnes of
foodgrains annually to implement the Food Bill. It would cost
the exchequer about Rs 1.25 lakh crore subsidy annually which
will be about Rs 25,000 crore more than the current level.
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