An aggressive BJP is expected to arrive all guns blazing in Parliament today, charged up at the possibility of routing the Congress in Assembly elections in four major states, being seen as a semi-final before general elections due in a few months. (Winter session of Parliament: Track live updates)
"If the Congress were to lose, which seems likely, you'll have a lame-duck government for the next few months. The government had already lost its legitimacy, it will lose political relevance also," said the BJP's Arun Jaitley, Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha. (Watch)
Polling was held in Delhi yesterday and votes for four states where elections were held in the last month will be counted on Sunday. The "exit poll of polls", an average of exit polls conducted by different agencies, shows that the BJP looks set to register convincing wins in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh and has a clear edge in Delhi, where the Aam Aadmi Party makes an extra-ordinary debut. (Read)
Already, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has written to the Prime Minister accusing the government of pushing a Communal Violence Bill "that is ill conceived and poorly drafted." He has said that the bill is an attempt to "encroach on the authority of state governments." (Read)
The Communal Violence Bill is among a set of key legislations that the government has planned for the 12-day winter session of Parliament beginning today. The BJP has questioned the timing, accusing the government of trying to consolidate minority votes with an eye on general elections.
"The session is short and it is obligatory for all parties to get all possible legislations and pending business done," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said today.
For the Congress-led UPA government, this is one of the last chances to prepare ground for the 2014 elections. On the BJP's demand that a bill on a separate Telangana state be "brought without ifs and changes," minister of state for parliamentary affairs Rajiv Shukla said, "We will definitely pass the Telangana bill."
The government also wants to push through the women's reservation bill in the Lok Sabha, which ally Samajwadi Party opposes and the Lokpal Bill.
"If the Congress were to lose, which seems likely, you'll have a lame-duck government for the next few months. The government had already lost its legitimacy, it will lose political relevance also," said the BJP's Arun Jaitley, Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha. (Watch)
Polling was held in Delhi yesterday and votes for four states where elections were held in the last month will be counted on Sunday. The "exit poll of polls", an average of exit polls conducted by different agencies, shows that the BJP looks set to register convincing wins in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh and has a clear edge in Delhi, where the Aam Aadmi Party makes an extra-ordinary debut. (Read)
Already, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has written to the Prime Minister accusing the government of pushing a Communal Violence Bill "that is ill conceived and poorly drafted." He has said that the bill is an attempt to "encroach on the authority of state governments." (Read)
The Communal Violence Bill is among a set of key legislations that the government has planned for the 12-day winter session of Parliament beginning today. The BJP has questioned the timing, accusing the government of trying to consolidate minority votes with an eye on general elections.
"The session is short and it is obligatory for all parties to get all possible legislations and pending business done," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said today.
For the Congress-led UPA government, this is one of the last chances to prepare ground for the 2014 elections. On the BJP's demand that a bill on a separate Telangana state be "brought without ifs and changes," minister of state for parliamentary affairs Rajiv Shukla said, "We will definitely pass the Telangana bill."
The government also wants to push through the women's reservation bill in the Lok Sabha, which ally Samajwadi Party opposes and the Lokpal Bill.
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