‘I conveyed factual position’: Rahul Gandhi writes to LS Speaker, demands restoration of expunged remarks

He stated that he sought to "convey the ground reality in the House." Earlier today multiple portions of Rahul Gandhi's speech were expunged from Lok Sabha records.

New Delhi: Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday wrote a letter to Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla requesting the restoration of remarks expunged from his speech against the central government led by the National Democratic Alliance (NDA). He stated that he sought to “convey the ground reality in the House.” Earlier today multiple portions of Rahul Gandhi’s speech were expunged from Lok Sabha records.


“I am writing this in the context of remarks and portions expunged from my speech during a discussion on the Motion of Thanks on the President’s Address on 1 July 2024. While the Chair derives powers to expunge certain remarks from the proceedings of the House, the stipulation is only for those kinds of words, the nature of which has been specified in Rule 380 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha,” the Congress leader said in his letter.


“I am, however, shocked to note the manner in which a considerable portion of my speech has been simply taken off from the proceedings under the garb of expunction,” he added.


Rahul Gandhi asserted that every member of the House has the freedom of speech and the right to raise people’s concerns. “I am enclosing relevant portions of the uncorrected Debates of Lok Sabha dated 2 July. I am constrained to state that the portions expunged do not come under the ambit of Rule 380. What I sought to convey in the House is ground reality, the factual position. Every member of the House who personifies the collective voice of the people whom he or she represents has the freedom of speech as enshrined in Article 105(1) of the Constitution of India. It is every member’s right to raise people’s concerns on the floor of the House,” he said.


The Leader of Opposition said that expunging his remarks made in the Lok Sabha is against the tenets of parliamentary democracy.
“It is that right and in exercise of my obligations to the people of the country that I was exercising yesterday. Taking off my considered remarks from the records goes against the very tenets of parliamentary democracy,” he said.

- विज्ञापन -

Latest News