The Road Transport and Safety Bill, 2015, was "violative of the federal spirit by taking away states' rights," and paved the way for Centre enjoying more powers and the one-day strike by trade unions against the bill on April 30 was largely successful, he said.
The "negative provisions" included servicing vehicles only in authorised centres, opting for genuine spares even for two-wheelers and stringent punishment for minor offences, he said.
Many sops for the underprivileged including free bus passes will end in the coming years, he said.
"The transport bill is a deceptive one as under the garb of (ensuring) safe and accident-free road journeys, it aims at killing the basic infrastructure of the years-old Indian road transport at the behest of private corporates," he said.
Considering the opposition to the Bill, which was registered through the April 30 nationwide strike by trade unions, the NDA government should rollback the proposed bill, he said.
"I wish to point out (to the NDA) that it will be of no use calling itself a people's government even as it has angered all-sections of the society," he added.
