Govt Responds to EC Notice on Advancing the Union Budget Date

The opposition parties had complained against the presentation of the Union Budget on 1 February.

PTI
India
Published:


Government on Tuesday replied to the Election Commission on the opposition’s complaint. Image only used for representational purposes. (Photo: Reuters)
i
Government on Tuesday replied to the Election Commission on the opposition’s complaint. Image only used for representational purposes. (Photo: Reuters)
null

advertisement

Government on Tuesday replied to the Election Commission on the opposition’s complaint against presenting the Union Budget before Assembly elections, defending its decision to advance the budget session for the purpose.

The Cabinet Secretariat on Tuesday wrote to the Election Commission which had asked it to respond to a representation by opposition parties urging the poll panel to make the government postpone the budget till assembly polls are over.

The government is learnt to have described the Union Budget as an annual constitutional exercise covering the entire country and not just a few states, an apparent rebuttal of the opposition’s charge that the budget will be used to woo voters in the poll-bound states.

It has also said that the advancing of budget presentation was necessary as it would ensure that all budgetary provisions are allocated to different sectors from 1 April, the beginning of the new fiscal.

The budget is usually presented around last week of February and, as a result, the approval of the budget spills over to the next financial year, delaying the start of new programmes.

The Budget session has already been convened from 31 January when the President will address the joint sitting of the two Houses. The Union Budget and the Economic Survey are slated to be presented the next day.

Earlier, the government while defending the move to advance the budget session had said that the parliamentary committees have already been informed to study budgetary proposals in the recess period between 10 February and 8 March.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

It said that the government had made its intentions clear to advance the session in September last and the Union Cabinet had also cleared the proposal.

The opposition parties had written to the President and the Commission objecting to the presentation of the Union Budget on 1 February ahead of the Assembly elections in five states and demanded that the government be asked to defer the annual exercise till 8 March, the last day of voting.

A delegation of opposition parties comprising Congress, JD U(), BSP, SP, DMK and RJD had met Chief Election Commissioner Nasim Zaidi on 5 January to press that the government be asked to defer the Budget presentation till at least 8 March.

Punjab and Goa will go for polls on 4 February and the last phase of Assembly polls in Uttar Pradesh and Manipur will be held on 8 March.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: undefined

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT