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  • Effective governance must be paired with strong accountability.
  • This accountability begins with an empowered and effective Parliament.
  • The Indian Constitution was drafted over nearly three years, with 167 days of debate.
  • Dr. B.R. Ambedkar defended the parliamentary system for its balance between responsibility and stability.
  • Parliament ensures daily accountability and periodic accountability through elections.

Issue: Diminishing Legislative Oversight

  • The Constitution provides for checks and balances.
  • However, parliamentary oversight over the executive has often weakened.

Efficiency vs Transparency

  • Efficient governance is necessary but should never compromise transparency.

Enhancing Parliament’s Role

  • Parliament must be strengthened to better scrutinize laws and government actions.
  • Effective legislative oversight is key to implementing laws and ensuring accountability.
  • Question Hour, Zero Hour, and Standing Committees are tools for parliamentary scrutiny.
  • Frequent disruptions during Question & Zero Hour limit their effectiveness.
  • In the 17th Lok Sabha (2019-24), only 60% of Question Hour in Lok Sabha and 52% in Rajya Sabha was actually used.
  • MPs often focus on narrow issues instead of broad, systematic investigations.
  • Standing Committees do detailed work but their reports rarely get discussed in full Parliament sessions.
  • Committee recommendations often have limited impact on government decisions.
  • Consultations in committees engage only a small, non-diverse group of stakeholders.
  • Temporary committee structures limit members’ expertise and long-term engagement.
  • Railways Committee (2015): Recommended waiving dividends by Indian Railways, improving financial health.
  • Transport Committee (2017): Contributed to key Motor Vehicles Bill amendments, including road safety measures.
  • Public Undertakings Committee: Recommended better land acquisition before starting NHAI highway projects.
  • Estimates Committee: Suggested boosting domestic uranium production.
  • Public Accounts Committee (PAC): Exposed corruption and delays in the 2010 Commonwealth Games; its recommendations have 80% government acceptance rate over 8 years.

Post-Legislative Scrutiny

  • India lacks a formal system to track if laws deliver intended results.
  • Create subcommittees or a specialized body to review law implementation.
  • The UK’s model: Government departments review major laws 3-5 years post-enactment, followed by parliamentary committee evaluation for timely corrections.

Institutional Strengthening of Committees

  • Present key committee reports on the parliamentary floor for debate and require ministerial responses.
  • Improve accessibility of committee findings (local languages, videos, visuals).
  • Provide committees with dedicated research and technical support beyond just administrative aid.
  • MPs often lack professional research staff, making detailed scrutiny difficult.
  • The volume of data (budgets, audits, policies) is overwhelming.
  • Using AI and data analytics can help MPs identify irregularities, monitor trends, and ask informed questions.
  • As Vice-President K.R. Narayanan stated in 1993, oversight aims not to criticize but to strengthen administration by supporting Parliament meaningfully.
  • Strong legislative oversight respects the public mandate and ensures government remains transparent, accountable, and truly democratic.

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