"The Bill has been ratified unopposed by Gujarat Assembly," Speaker Ramanlal Vora announced in the House after the bill was passed by voice vote by BJP legislators in absence of their counterparts from Congress.
Passed by Parliament recently, the bill needs to be ratified by at least 15 state legislatures before the President can notify the GST Council which will decide the new tax rate and other issues.
While introducing the Bill, Deputy Chief Minister Nitin Patel, who handles the finance portfolio, said the Congress- led UPA government had failed to evolve consensus in various states to ensure passage of the legislation.
He hailed Narendra Modi-led NDA government for achieving the uphill task of passing the long-pending legislation in Parliament.
"The deliberations on this Bill were on for last 10 years. The previous UPA government tried hard to implement the bill, but failed. As soon as Modi government took over in 2014, he (Modi) and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley started fresh discussions with states to clear their doubts," Patel said in his address on the GST Bill.
Earlier in the day, 50 Congress MLAs were evicted and suspended for a day from the Assembly after they staged a demonstration and disrupted the House proceedings over the Una Dalit flogging incident.
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"However, in this new Bill, there is a clear provision to compensate states for possible losses due to uniform tax structure. As per the Bill, the central government will bear the losses, if any, for five years. This was not there in the old Bill," Patel said.
He said Gujarat is a petroleum hub having refineries of ONGC as well as private players and that 40 per cent of state's tax income comes from that sector.
"Modi government took into account our contention and announced that income from taxes on petroleum production and refining would remain with the states," the minister added.
Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh have already ratified the GST bill.
