Context:
Both Houses of Parliament recently discussed the Motion of Thanks on the President’s Address delivered by President Droupadi Murmu at the start of the Budget Session.
Key Highlights:
What is the Motion of Thanks?
- The Motion of Thanks is a formal resolution moved in both Houses of Parliament to express gratitude to the President for the Special Address delivered to a joint sitting of Parliament.
- The Address occurs:
- At the beginning of the first session after a general election, and
- At the beginning of the first session each year.
- It allows Parliament to debate the Government’s policies and programmes outlined in the Address.
Origin and Background
- The practice originates from the Westminster parliamentary tradition.
- In India, it has been adapted within the constitutional framework of parliamentary democracy.
- The President’s Address reflects the policy agenda of the Government, as it is:
- Drafted by the Council of Ministers
- Approved by the Cabinet
- Discussion on the Address takes place only through the Motion of Thanks, not directly on the Address itself.
Key Features of the Motion
- Moved and seconded by Members of Parliament chosen by the Government through the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs.
- Wide scope of discussion:
- MPs may raise any national or international issue, even if it is not mentioned in the President’s Address.
Amendments by Opposition
- Opposition members may propose amendments expressing regret that certain issues were omitted or inadequately addressed.
- If such amendments are accepted, the Motion is passed in an amended form.
Prime Minister’s Reply
- The debate concludes with a reply by the Prime Minister, addressing concerns raised by members.
Voting Process
- After the debate, the Motion is put to vote in each House.
- If amendments are adopted, the Motion is passed with those amendments included.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Article 86(1) of the Constitution
- Empowers the President to address either House or both Houses of Parliament assembled together.
- Article 87(1)
- Mandates a Special Address by the President:
- At the commencement of the first session after a general election.
- At the first session of Parliament each year.
- Mandates a Special Address by the President:
- Article 87(2)
- Requires Parliament to frame rules for discussion on matters referred to in the President’s Address, which is done through the Motion of Thanks.
- President’s Address
- Delivered to a joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament.
- Represents the Government’s policy priorities and legislative agenda.
- Budget Session
- Usually the longest session of Parliament.
- Begins with the President’s Address and discussion on the Motion of Thanks.
- Joint Sitting of Parliament
- Includes Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha members.
- Presided over by the Speaker of Lok Sabha.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Importance for Parliamentary Accountability
- The Motion of Thanks allows Parliament to examine the government’s policy direction.
- Enables scrutiny of executive actions and priorities.
- Democratic Deliberation
- Provides the first major debate of the year in Parliament.
- Allows MPs to raise key national issues affecting governance, economy, and foreign policy.
- Role of Opposition
- Serves as a constitutional platform for opposition parties to critique government performance.
- Amendments reflect political dissent and policy concerns.
- Political Significance
- Adoption of amendments may signal political weakness of the government in the Upper House.
- The Prime Minister’s reply often clarifies policy priorities and responds to criticism.
- Limitations
- Debate sometimes becomes politically polarised rather than policy-focused.
- Amendments are rarely adopted in the Lok Sabha due to government majority.
- Way Forward
- Encourage more substantive policy debate during the Motion discussion.
- Strengthen parliamentary scrutiny of executive policies.
- Promote constructive engagement between government and opposition.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper II – Polity: Parliamentary procedures, executive accountability, President’s Address.
- Prelims: Articles 86 and 87, Motion of Thanks, constitutional practices in Parliament.
