The nation must find various ways to reconvene Parliament and get back to work for making better decisions and policy making. Elaborate (200 Words)
Refer - The Indian Express
Enrich the answer from other sources, if the question demands.
IAS Parliament 4 years
KEY POINTS
· The fate of the Monsoon session of Parliament, usually held in the third week of July, is still uncertain. There is no official word yet on when the House, brought to an abrupt standstill by the COVID-19 outbreak, which cut short the Budget session in March, will reconvene.
· The pandemic seems to have subdued even the parliamentary committees, which carry on Parliament’s work of scrutiny of government’s functioning in between sessions and form a crucial bridge between the parliamentary institution and the people.
· Ever since both Houses adjourned on March, the over 3-month-long silence was broken only last week when the Committee on Welfare of Other Backward Classes met and made recommendations to various ministries — two parliamentary committee meetings are scheduled for today.
· The apparent hesitation, or reluctance of India’s Parliament to resume work amid the pandemic, even as legislatures worldwide are designing innovative and hybrid modalities for doing so, is taking a toll that may not be visible but it is there arguably adding an accountability and representation deficit to a serious and prolonged public health emergency.
· According to PRS Legislative Research, the central government has issued about 850 COVID-related notifications and 11 ordinances. These range from international travel restrictions to board exam dos and don’ts, from prohibitions on exports of ventilators to mandating of the use of the Aarogya Setu.
· Many of the measures were needed, but many have also sparked questions and controversy about the nature of government response to the pandemic its proportionality and its responsiveness to the anxieties and needs of the most vulnerable, including migrants.
· It is also true that across the world, even as they scramble to respond to a mostly unknown virus that does not yet have a cure, governments have used the crisis to extend and enlarge their own powers, impose stricter, even draconian laws, restrict freedoms, short-circuit privacy concerns, or simply resort to a technocratic solutionism that isn’t mindful enough of human costs and unintended consequences of policy responses. India’s Parliament must meet sooner, rather than later, physically or virtually.
· If the rules of procedure stand in its way parliament secretariat has flagged the confidentiality of virtual meetings as a concern they must be tweaked and the NIC’s technological prowess harnessed.
Shivangi 4 years
Please review. Thank you.
IAS Parliament 4 years
Good attempt. Keep Writing.
Ananta Kumar Muduli 4 years
Kindly review
IAS Parliament 4 years
Try to include about over reliance on ordinances. Keep Writing.
aswin 4 years
please review
IAS Parliament 4 years
Try to bring coherence in answer, points are isolated, include about over reliance on ordinance. Keep Writing.
Sanjeev Kumar Singh 4 years
Please review sir/mam
IAS Parliament 4 years
Try to include about over-reliance on ordinance. Keep Writing.