The main focus of the session will be the transaction of the General and Railway budgets but the government is also keen to get passed a number of key reforms measures including the contentious GST and Real Estate Bills.
Sources said that the session is likely to begin on February 23. Usually, the budget session begins in the third week of February and concludes early May. There is a recess in between when the budgetary demands for grants are discussed in the committees.
Meanwhile the process for the Assembly elections in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Assam and Puducherry, where the tenure of the Assemblies is set to end in May-June, will begin in the midst of the session and that could raise questions about the number of sittings. A curtailment may be necessary to accommodate campaign by leaders during the elections.
Against the backdrop of near washout of the previous sessions, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today expressed the hope that Congress will "see reason" and help in passage of GST legislation, which is stuck in the Rajya Sabha during the coming session.
earlier this month met Congress President Sonia Gandhi seeking cooperation for the early passage of the crucial GST bill and the Real Estate bill.
Naidu said today that Opposition should refrain from disrupting the proceedings.
"We have no problem. Government is ready to discuss any and every issue," he said amidst indications that the Opposition might aggressively take up the issue of imposition of President's rule in Congress-ruled Arunachal Pradesh and the suicide of a dalit student in Hyderabad University.
The Winter session had ended on December 23, leaving the Goods and Services Tax Bill and a number of other measures in a limbo.
In the winter session, the Rajya Sabha saw passage of nine bills but lost 47 hours due to disruptions caused almost every day by Congress which raised one issue after another.
The Lok Sabha performed a little better as it passed 13 bills and saw discussions over various issues like price rise, flood and drought situation, despite repeated uproar created by the opposition Congress over various issues.
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