Opposition withdraws no-confidence notice against Maharashtra Assembly Speaker Haibhau Bagde

The opposition parties had given a notice of no- confidence against the speaker on March 5, alleging that he was biased in conducting proceedings of the House.
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis (File | PTI)
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis (File | PTI)

MUMBAI: The opposition Congress and NCP today withdrew their notice of no-confidence against Maharashtra Assembly Speaker Haibhau Bagde.

The notice was listed in today's agenda for the Lower House.

The names of 38 opposition members, from the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), were mentioned in the one-line resolution, which said that the speaker be removed from his post.

However, as the no-confidence notice came up for consideration before the House, Leader of Opposition Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil stood up and said the issue was discussed among the opposition leaders, and that they decided against pressing for adoption of the one-line resolution.

The Congress legislator further said that the no-confidence notice against the speaker was being withdrawn.

The opposition parties had given a notice of no- confidence against the speaker on March 5, alleging that he was biased in conducting proceedings of the House.

They had also criticised him for the passage of the motion of thanks on Governor Ch Vidyasagar Raos address without any debate, thus allowing the government "to run away from debate".

Last week, the opposition members had demanded that the notice of no-confidence be admitted and taken up for discussion in the House.

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis had later told the members that appropriate decision would be taken on it after consultations.

However, on March 23, Fadnavis moved a motion of confidence in the Chair, which the House had passed with a voice vote.

The sudden development had left the opposition parties stumped as they did not get a chance to speak on it.

The chief minister yesterday justified his action of getting a trust motion passed in favour Bagde when a no-confidence notice against the latter was pending.

Cited a "precedent" during the Congress-NCP rule, he said, "In 2006, the then chief minister Vilasrao Deshmukh got a trust vote in favour of his Council of Ministers passed in the House without a prior notice and listing of the issue on the day's agenda.

"When you didn't find anything objectionable then, why are you opposing it now?" Fadnavis asked the opposition members in the House.

He said there was no difference between an Assembly speaker and a chief minister (in terms of moving no-trust motion).

The ongoing budget session of the state Legislature would end tomorrow.

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