Why Gujarat, HP wins won't give BJP much clout in Rajya Sabha

The BJP covers 19 out of 29 Indian states and 67% of the country's population. In Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament, it already runs a majority government with 280 members

Prachi Salve | IndiaSpend 

A view of the Rajya Sabha. Photo: PTI
A view of the Rajya Sabha. Photo: PTI

Its recent assembly election wins in Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh will not give the ruling (BJP) the legislative muscle to push critical bills through Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the parliament, according to an analysis.

The now covers 19 out of 29 Indian states and 67% of the country’s population. In Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament, it already runs a majority government with 280 members.

However, a recent analysis by Delhi think tank, PRS Legislative Research, on the impact of BJP’s victories in Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh showed the following: Four members of from Gujarat will be retiring from the in 2018. Of them, the will gain two seats and the Congress, two.

Himachal Pradesh has only one seat in the and BJP’s victory there will have no significant impact on its position in the upper house.

The now has 57 members in a 239-member as of December 20, 2017, according to government data. This will increase to 70 with the addition of nine members from Uttar Pradesh (UP), two from Gujarat, one each from Manipur and Goa in 2018, according to the PRS analysis.

But the will need greater representation than what its recent electoral victories have brought because important laws cannot be passed without being cleared by both houses of the parliament, as IndiaSpend reported in November 2015.

Crucial bills coming up this session

The ongoing winter session, from December 15, 2017, to January 5, 2018, will have 14 sittings spread over 21 days. It will see a total of 39 bills, of which 25 will be considered for passing, 14 for introduction, consideration and passing and one for withdrawal, according to a Press Information Bureau release.

The Uniform Civil Code Bill, which needs a constitutional amendment, will require 167 votes to be passed in the and 271 in the

The other important business pending this season includes the Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance Bill which will reduce the government’s share in the bail-out of distressed banks and the bill to impose a ban on surrogacy.

dominates in two of five states that have 100 seats in RS

members get elected from the states and the representation of a party in a state assembly affects its strength in the upper house.

The ruling Democratic Alliance has 78 seats, including six seats from its ally, the Telugu Desam Party. The opposition United Progressive Alliance has 74 seats.

 

Source: Rajya Sabha

The membership of the is determined by the population of the state. The top five states based on population—Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Bihar and West Bengal—have 100 seats in the The is currently in power in two states among the top five–Maharashtra and UP–and is an alliance partner in Bihar.

 

Source: Rajya Sabha

Of the 19 seats in Maharashtra, has five and its ally Shiv Sena has three. The Congress has four seats in the state.

In UP, the has two seats and the Congress, three. However the BJP’s landslide win in the state–312 of 503 seats–will work to its benefit.

members retire after six years. In 2018, 65 members will be retiring and of them, nine will be from UP. This will bring the total number of MPs from UP in to 11 of 31 seats. In 2020, the will have 21 of 31 seats from UP alone.


(Prachi Salve is an analyst with IndiaSpend.)

Reprinted with permission from IndiaSpend.org, a data-driven, public-interest journalism non-profit organisation.


 

First Published: Tue, December 26 2017. 10:34 IST