Jaitley apprehends wash out of Winter session

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Dec 14 2015 | 4:42 PM IST
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today apprehended a "wash out" of the current Winter session and invoked Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru to remind Congress of the responsibility of MPs for governance of the country through Parliament.
"The last session of the Parliament did not function.The current session of the Parliament is also threatened with a wash out. The reasons for the wash out of the current session keep changing by the hour.
"The nation is waiting for Parliament to discuss public issues, to legislate and approve a historic Constitution Amendment enabling the GST. All this is being indefinitely delayed. The question we need to ask ourselves is are we being fair to ourselves and this country?" Jaitley said in a Facebook post.
The Finance Minister also quoted a speech on the Parliamentary system by Pandit Nehru to hammer home his point.
He said that the speech delivered on March 28, 1957 in the last day of first Lok Sabha by Nehru is "a must read for all of us".
He quoted a paragraph from the speech in which Nehru had said, "Here, we have sat in this Parliament, the sovereign authority of India, responsible for the governance of India. Surely, there can be no higher responsibility or greater privilege than to be a member of this sovereign body which is responsible for the fate of the vast number of human beings who live in this country.
"All of us, if not always, at any rate from time to time, must have felt this high sense of responsibility and destiny to which we had been called. Whether we were worthy of it or not is another matter. We have functioned, therefore, during these five years not only on the edge of history but sometimes plunging into the processes of making history."
Jaitley, himself an eminent lawyer, said Justice Sabharwal
had "no likes, no dislikes, he even did not recognise his friends in the court".
The Finance Minister said that the former Chief Justice delivered some outstanding judgments during his tenure which went a long way in upholding the supremacy of the judiciary.
"He was one who took up the whole cause against arbitrary allotment of the petrol stations, gas agencies. He evolved to the Supreme Court and finally became the Chief Justice.
"He came out with some outstanding judgments on election law. The very complicated question he wrote further on Constitution bench whether secrecy is a part of the basic structure or not. His ninth schedule judgement will go down as probably the most important judgement he laid down," he said.
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First Published: Dec 14 2015 | 4:42 PM IST

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