Key Points

The Lok Sabha was adjourned yet again as Opposition MPs continued their relentless sloganeering over SIR notices. Speaker Om Birla expressed frustration, calling out the 14th straight day of disruptions as a waste of public resources. Key discussions were drowned out, leaving critical legislation in limbo. The ongoing chaos highlights deepening political divisions and eroding parliamentary productivity.

Key Points: Lok Sabha Adjourned Again Amid Opposition Sloganeering Over SIR Notices

  • Speaker Birla slams MPs for wasting public money amid 14-day protests
  • Opposition MPs demand justice over SIR notices with placards
  • Critical debates stalled as chaos drowns out Question Hour
  • Treasury benches accuse Opposition of planned legislative paralysis
2 min read

Lok Sabha adjourned till 2 pm amid Oppn's sloganeering, disruptions

Speaker Om Birla rebukes MPs as Lok Sabha faces 14th straight day of disruptions, stalling crucial monsoon session debates.

"This is the fourteenth day you are disrupting the House in a planned manner – Speaker Om Birla"

New Delhi, Aug 11

The Lok Sabha was adjourned till 2 p.m. on Monday amid relentless sloganeering and disruptions by Opposition members, marking the fourteenth consecutive day of stalled proceedings in the ongoing monsoon session.

Speaker Om Birla, visibly perturbed by the continued disorder, rebuked the protesting MPs, stating, “This is the fourteenth day you are disrupting the House in a planned manner. The commoners have voted for you to raise public issues, but you are wasting public money. This is not parliamentary behaviour.”

He urged members to return to their seats, assuring that every MP would be given an opportunity to raise public concerns if decorum was restored.

Despite the appeal, Opposition members persisted with slogans demanding justice over the contentious Special Intensive Revision (SIR) notices, waving placards and refusing to relent.

The Speaker, citing the unmanageable chaos, adjourned the House till 2 p.m. Earlier, the session commenced with Question Hour, but the disruptions rendered most exchanges inaudible. Only a handful of MPs managed to pose questions before the din overwhelmed proceedings. Among them were Dr Byreddy Shabari of the Telugu Desam Party (Nandyal, Andhra Pradesh), Rudra Narayan Pany of the Bharatiya Janata Party (Dhenkanal, Odisha), and Naveen Jindal of the BJP (Kurukshetra, Haryana), who directed queries to Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav.

However, their interactions were drowned out by the Opposition’s vociferous protests.

The repeated adjournments have raised concerns over legislative paralysis, with critical debates and policy discussions stalled.

Speaker Birla’s remarks reflect growing disappointment within the treasury benches over what they term as “planned disruption”.

As the monsoon session inches toward its conclusion, the impasse underscores deepening political fault lines and a widening trust deficit between the government and the Opposition.

With public interest legislation hanging in the balance, the spectacle of daily disruptions continues to erode parliamentary productivity and public confidence in democratic institutions.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I agree disruptions aren't ideal, the Opposition has genuine concerns about SIR notices. The government should address these issues through dialogue rather than dismissing them as "planned disruption". Democracy needs both debate AND dissent.
A
Aman W
14 days of wasted session! ₹2.5 lakh per minute is the cost to run Parliament and this is what we get? Both sides need to grow up. Public issues are suffering while they play political games. Shameful!
S
Shreya B
Remember when Parliament used to actually discuss bills? Now it's just shouting matches. The monsoon session is crucial for farmers' issues but nothing gets done. So frustrating for common citizens like us! 😞
V
Vikram M
The Speaker should use stronger measures - deduct salaries of MPs who disrupt proceedings. Only when it hits their pockets will they behave. This has become a regular drama every session!
N
Nisha Z
I feel bad for those few MPs who actually prepare questions and want to work. Their voices are being drowned out by this chaos. There must be a better system to ensure productive discussions continue despite protests.
K
Karan T
This is why young people are losing faith in politics. Instead of solving real issues like inflation and unemployment, our leaders are busy with this tamasha

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50