That's the poser from the Central Information Commission (CIC), which has asked the party's chief whip in the Lok Sabha, the leader, deputy leader of the House or "any other authorised representative" to reply on the issue at 2 pm on September 7.
The CIC's recent query follows an RTI application filed by Vishnu Dev Bhandari from Bihar who wanted to know how projects are chosen under the MP Local Area Development Scheme (MPLADS) and their progress in his constituency Madhubani, represented by the BJP's Hukumdev Narayan Yadav.
According to the order, every legislature and parliamentary party shall be considered a "public authority" in principle.
Therefore, the Commission has also asked other political parties with legislature wings in state assemblies and in Parliament for their opinion on why they should not be brought under the RTI Act.
However, they are not bound to reply, unlike the BJP which has been given the September 7 deadline.
The CIC has also asked civil society members to express their opinions and contentions and send them to the id, madabhushisridhar@gov.In before September 8.
Every MP gets Rs 5 crore per annum for local area development. This comes from tax payers' money, the information commissioner noted at the hearing.
Representatives of the ministry told the Commission that actual progress on the field could be ascertained only by local authorities like the district magistrate.
"Regarding how the works were chosen, the officers said that it was totally at the discretion of the concerned MP and no authority could intervene in it," Acharyulu pointed out.
Acharyulu also directed the ministry and district collectors to answer the petition in 30 days.
Besides, Hukumdev Yadav's private secretary was directed to furnish details of the work recommended by him, the criterion of selection or rejection and progress of the work before September 7.
"Considering the possibility of policy of guidelines being issued from the Parliamentary Party of the BJP, in which the concerned MP is the member, invites the views and contentions of the Government Chief Whip, the Leader, and the Deputy Leader (LS) of BJP, or any other authorised representative as to why the BJP Parliamentary Party should not be declared as a public authority under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act on September 7, 2017 at 2 PM," the order said.
Other parties also have the "moral, legal and constitutional obligation" to disclose "at least" MPLADS information on their own, it said.
Under the RTI Act, public authority means any body or institution established or constituted by or under the Constitution, or by any other law made by Parliament.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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