The Lok Sabha

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Disruptions in Parliament, 1991-2014; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, August 26, 2015
These are newspaper articles selected for the excellence of their content.

Contents

The leader of the opposition

Cong can't get LoP post in LS: AG to Speaker

Dhananjay.Mahapatra @timesgroup.com New Delhi: The Times of India Jul 26 2014

In 2014, with just 44 seats, Congres had based its claim for the post of leader of opposition post in the Lok Sabha on the law relating to Salary and Allowances of Leader of Opposition in Parliament Act, 1977 and the rules there under. The law provides the largest opposition party would get the post. Answering a query on this issue posed to him by the 2014 Speaker Sumitra Mahajan, attorney general Mukul Rohatgi referred to the rulings given by highly regarded parliamentarian G V Mavalankar, the first Speaker of the Lok Sabha. He said Mavalankar's directions were adopted to deny LoP status to any party during the period when Jawaharlal Nehru was the PM from 1947 to 1964.

According to Rohatgi, Mavalankar had ruled that to get the post in the Lok Sabha, an opposition party has to secure a minimum of 10% of the seats, that is it must have a strength of 55 MPs.

Rohatgi said Mavalankar had felt that the main opposition party's numbers must equal the quorum, which is 10% of the total strength, required for functioning of the House. Following Mavalankar's ruling, the Congres regimes under Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi had decided not to give the LoP post to the then largest opposition party because they had failed to reach the 55 MP-mark in the Lok Sabha.

The Centre has highlighted direction 121 of `Directions to the Speaker' which provide that a party's strength must be one-tenth of the Lok Sabha to be recognized as a parliamentary party or group.

No-confidence motions

1966-2018

No-confidence motions moved against the government in the parliament, 1966-2018
From: July 21, 2018: The Times of India

See graphic  :

No-confidence motions moved against the government in the parliament, 1966-2018

Percentage of women members in Lok Sabha

Source: PRS Legislative Research

India Today June 1, 2009

Ladies first

1952-4.4%

1957-4.5%

1962-6.7%

1967-5.8%

1971-4.9%

1977-3.8%

1980-5.7%

1985-7.9%

1989-5.2%

1991-7.6%

1996-7.4%

1998-8.1%

1999-9.2%

2004-8.7%

2009-10.7%

Speakers of the Lok Sabha

The speakers: a table

First Lok Sabha

Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar

5 May, 1952 – 27 February, 1956

First Lok Sabha

M. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar

8 March, 1956 –  10 May, 1957

Second Lok Sabha

M. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar

11 May, 1957 –  16 April, 1962

Third Lok Sabha

Hukam Singh

17 April, 1962 –  16 March, 1967

Fourth Lok Sabha

Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

17 March, 1967 –  19 July, 1969

Fourth Lok Sabha

Gurdial Singh Dhillon

8 August, 1969 –  19 March, 1971

Fifth Lok Sabha

Gurdial Singh Dhillon

22 March, 1971 –  1 December, 1975

Fifth Lok Sabha

Bali Ram Bhagat

5 January, 1976 –  25 March, 1977

Sixth Lok Sabha

Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

26 March, 1977 –  13 July, 1977

Sixth Lok Sabha

K. S. Hegde

21 July, 1977 –  21 January, 1980

Seventh Lok Sabha

Bal Ram Jakhar

22 January, 1980 –  15 January, 1985

Eighth Lok Sabha

   Bal Ram Jakhar

16 January, 1985 –  18 December, 1989

Ninth Lok Sabha

Ravi Ray

19 December, 1989 –  9 July, 1991

Tenth Lok Sabha

Shivraj V. Patil

10 July, 1991 –  22 May, 1996

Eleventh Lok Sabha

P. A. Sangma

23 May, 1996 –  23 March, 1998 (FN)

Twelfth Lok Sabha

G. M. C. Balayogi

24 March, 1998 –  20 October, 1999 (FN)

Thirteenth Lok Sabha

G. M. C. Balayogi

22 October, 1999 –  3 March, 2002

Thirteenth Lok Sabha

Manohar Joshi

10 May, 2002 –  4 June, 2004

Fourteenth Lok Sabha

Somnath Chatterjee

4 June, 2004 –  31 May, 2009

Fifteen Lok Sabha

Smt. Meira Kumar

3 June, 2009 –  4 June,2014

Sixteenth Lok Sabha

Smt.Sumitra Mahajan

5 June 2014 -

 

1952- 2014 repeated, with explanatory footnotes

Speakers of the Lok Sabha, 1952- 2011
Speakers of the Lok Sabha: footnotes

Sixteenth Lok Sabha Smt.Sumitra Mahajan 5 June 2014 -


See also

The 15th Lok Sabha: 2009-14/ The 16th Lok Sabha (2014-19): MPs complete list of MPs / The 16th Lok Sabha (2014-19): trends

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