Tamil Nadu Assembly Elections | Debate on live telecast of Assembly proceedings

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The DMK’s electoral promise to telecast live the proceedings of the Legislative Assembly has put the focus back on the issue.

Presently, while arrangements are in place to record the proceedings of the House, only select portions are released to media houses, leading to complaints of censorship.

Former Congress legislator S. Peter Alphonse, who first raised the demand for live telecast of House proceedings in the mid-1990s, argued that such a move would improve the performance of legislators. “Democracy is a system by discussion and such discussions must be transparent,” he said.

“Live telecasts will show whether a legislator is coming to the House, is attentive, is raising questions and is moving various call attention motions. It is definitely a deterrent for indisciplined MLAs and also an encouragement to the performers,” Mr. Alphonse said.

But what if an MLA uses unparliamentary remarks in the House and it gets telecast? “This can also happen on a public platform. Let the people understand that these are the characters who have been elected to the House and decide for themselves. They may speak that way on one occasion, but when questioned about it outside, they may not do it again. Everybody should be made accountable for what he/she speaks and does,” said the Congress leader.

D. Jagadheeswaran, an activist who moved the Madras High Court, seeking the live telecast of Assembly proceedings, argued that citizens had a right to know what their elected representatives did in the House. He pointed out that proceedings of the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha were telecast through dedicated TV channels.

Proceedings of the Assembly in Andhra Pradesh are webcast live and Karnataka, too, allows uninterrupted feed to all private channels. Kerala has operationalised a live webcast from the Chief Minister’s office, he said. “Several other States, including Gujarat and Bihar, are taking steps to operationalise the live telecast of all Assembly sessions,” he added.

In 1996, the P.A. Sangma Committee on telecasting of proceedings of legislatures recommended that infrastructure be set up to facilitate the live telecast of State Assembly proceedings. At several conferences of presiding officers of legislatures, it has been undertaken to move towards setting up of such live telecast.

During the hearing of Mr. Jagadheeswaran’s petition, the State submitted that telecasting proceedings was the privilege of the Speaker and it would need ₹60 crore for the required facilities.

“Even today, the Governor’s address and the Budget session are telecast live in Doordarshan channel. Citing infrastructure as hindrance is an alibi. We met DMK leader M.K. Stalin and leaders from the CPI, CPI(M) and other parties, urging them to raise the issue in the Assembly. It is good to see this figure in the DMK manifesto,” he said.

A former Assembly Secretary confirmed that a lack of funds for telecasting proceedings live was the primary reason behind not implementing it. “Houses of the Parliament have live telecast because they have sufficient budget, but that is not the case with us. Moreover, both the parties [AIADMK and DMK] have not been keen on telecasting the proceedings live.”

You have reached your limit for free articles this month.

Subscription Benefits Include

Today’s Paper

Find mobile-friendly version of articles from the day’s newspaper in one easy-to-read list.

Unlimited Access

Enjoy reading as many articles as you wish without any limitations.

Personalised recommendations

A select list of articles that match your interests and tastes.

Faster pages

Move smoothly between articles as our pages load instantly.

Dashboard

A one-stop-shop for seeing the latest updates, and managing your preferences.

Briefing

We brief you on the latest and most important developments, three times a day.

Support Quality Journalism.

*Our Digital Subscription plans do not currently include the e-paper, crossword and print.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Slashing Petrol & Milk Prices, Scrapping NEET, Court to Try AIADMK Leaders: DMK Manifesto Highlights

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


MK Stalin’s Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) on Saturday released its manifesto for the Tamil Nadu assembly elections that are to be held in a single phase on April 6. The manifesto, unveiled in Chennai, focuses on developmental plans and direct subsidy measures. It came a day after Stalin released the list of 173 DMK candidates for the elections, announcing that he will contest the Kolathur constituency.

Key promises

• The creation of a new cyber police station to deal with cases involving women.

• All noon meal employees (those involved in the mid-day meal programme) will be made government employees.

• Increase in property tax will be waived.

• The setting up of a department under the chief minister to handle all grievances that came in during Stalin’s campaign programme.

Milk prices will be slashed by Rs 3/litre.

• Unemployed youth will be provided Rs 20 lakh to start a new business.

• Women employees will be given maternity leave for one year. At present, the provision of leaves is for six months.

A special court will investigate alleged crimes by the ruling All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK).

Drinking water will be made available through pipelines in all corporation, including in Chennai.

• Passing a resolution in the first meeting of new assembly against holding NEET (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test ), an emotive issue.

Prices of petrol and diesel will be reduced Rs 5 and Rs 4, respectively.

• Payment of electricity bill will become monthly instead of bimonthly.

• The creation of a grievance redressal mechanism.

• Assembly proceedings will be telecast live on television.

Pongal celebrations will be made a state-wide festival event.

Rs 4,000 will be provided for rice ration card.

Rs 100-subsidy for cooking gas.

Free tablet computers for students studying in government schools.

• A Rs 10,000-crore water body preservation project to start under CM’s direct supervision.

• Fast-tracking probe into the death of former chief minister J Jayalalithaa.

• A special panel to make Chennai flood-proof.

• A law to provide 75% of the jobs to locals.

Financial assistance of Rs 25,000 each for one lakh people going on pilgrimage to major Hindu temples.

The big picture

The manifesto caters to a wide range of people: the economically weaker sections, the core DMK vote base, the common man and also a younger population looking for jobs. Stalin promises tablet computers for government school students, taking a leaf from the book of Jayalalithaa, who distributed laptops among school students. He bolsters his Tamil pitch by his job reservation promise and reaches out to Hindus through the proposed financial assistance for pilgrimage. He continues opposing the Centre on the NEET issue.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Assembly Elections 2021 LIVE Updates: Amit Shah, Sarbananda Sonowal Reach Nadda’s Home for Meet

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Assembly Elections 2021 News LIVE Updates: The BJP on Saturday is all set to declare names for candidates for Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. The meeting will start at 5 pm on Saturday.

The BJP Kerala core group meeting will also take place at party chief JP Nadda’s residence in Delhi before the CEC meeting. Apart from Nadda, Amit Shah, BL Santhosh, K Surendran were also present. This was the meeting ahead of CEC on Saturday.

While Mamata Banerjee has been discharged from hospital on Friday, and left the hospital in a wheelchair, the TMC has already announced an event on Saturday to induct into the party “an eminent personality”. TMC MP Derek O’ Brien, anchayat and rural development minister Subrata Mukherjee, and TMC leader Sudip Bandyopadhyay will be present for the event that will be held in Trinamool Bhavan.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Assembly Elections 2021 News LIVE Updates: Smriti Irani to Show Support At Suvendu Adhikari Rally; TMC to Meet EC Over Mamata Injury

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Assembly Elections 2021 News LIVE Updates: While West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was in hospital, it was learnt that programmes on her schedule for the next two days have been cancelled because of her condition.

Meanwhile, a medical board will re-examine her at 11 am on Friday to take a decision on when she can be discharged.

While a TMC delegation met the Bengal Chief Electoral Officer and insisted the Election Commission cannot absolve itself of culpability in Banerjee’s accident, insisting that maintaining law and order was the EC’s responsibility once the election has been announced, the EC sent a strongly-worded letter to the Trinamool Congress saying it looks “undignified to even respond” to allegations that the poll panel is doing things in the state at the behest of a “particular party”.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Tamil Nadu Assembly elections | Congress reaches pact with DMK, settles for 25 seats

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


It will get one Rajya Sabha seat and contest in the Kanniyakumari Lok Sabha bye-election.

The DMK and the Congress reached a seat-sharing agreement on Saturday night, ending days of strong posturing by the national party and its veiled threat of walking out of the alliance.


 

The Congress will contest in 25 Assembly seats and in the byelection to the Kanniyakumari Lok Sabha seat that fell vacant after the death of H. Vasanthakumar. It will also get one Rajya Sabha seat. In a late night development, party leaders Dinesh Gundu Rao, K.S. Alagiri and K.R. Ramasamy met DMK president M.K. Stalin at his residence.

“We have reached an agreement. We will be signing the agreement tomorrow around 10 a.m.,” Mr. Rao told The Hindu after the meeting.

The Congress was left with not many options after the DMK refused to concede its demand for 30 seats. Many in the Congress had been talking of walking out of the alliance if the demand was not met. Some leaders also floated the option of tying up with actor-politician Kamal Haasan’s Makkal Needhi Maiam as a last resort.

Pushed to the wall owing to the lack of strong alternatives, the Congress settled for 25 seats. The development came nearly three hours after Mr. Alagiri told reporters on the sidelines of a public meeting that a seat-sharing arrangement would be announced soon. Several leaders told The Hindu on Friday evening that the possibility of signing a deal was likely only on Monday since the DMK’s mega rally in Tiruchi was scheduled for Sunday.

 

A senior Congress leader attributed the climbdown to a lack of better options for the party. “What other options do we have? The other options are not great…,” the leader said.

In the past week, several Congress leaders had been insisting on “dignity for the party in the alliance and the number of seats”. On Friday, a senior leader told The Hindu that back-channel talks were taking place between the two parties.

A source in New Delhi said the central leadership was miffed at the State unit for fumbling on the seat-sharing exercise though it was given a free hand. The central leadership felt that winning a higher number of the allotted seats was more important than contesting in more seats.

You have reached your limit for free articles this month.

Subscription Benefits Include

Today’s Paper

Find mobile-friendly version of articles from the day’s newspaper in one easy-to-read list.

Unlimited Access

Enjoy reading as many articles as you wish without any limitations.

Personalised recommendations

A select list of articles that match your interests and tastes.

Faster pages

Move smoothly between articles as our pages load instantly.

Dashboard

A one-stop-shop for seeing the latest updates, and managing your preferences.

Briefing

We brief you on the latest and most important developments, three times a day.

Support Quality Journalism.

*Our Digital Subscription plans do not currently include the e-paper, crossword and print.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

AIADMK gives 20 seats to BJP

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The party has been allotted the Kanniyakumari Lok Sabha seat.

In a late night development, the ruling AIADMK signed a pact with the BJP, allotting it 20 Assembly seats and the Kanniyakumari Lok Sabha (bypoll) constituency for the April 6 election.

Earlier in the day, the DMK sealed a deal for six seats with the CPI, the fourth ally to sign a seat-sharing agreement.

The Kanniyakumari vacancy was caused by the death of Congress MP H. Vasanthakumar.

The seat-sharing agreement in the ruling camp was signed by O. Panneerselvam, coordinator, and Edappadi K. Palaniswami, co-coordinator of the AIADMK, C.T. Ravi, national general secretary of the BJP in-charge of Tamil Nadu, and L. Murugan, BJP Tamil Nadu president. “It has been decided that the AIADMK and the BJP will be part of an alliance to face the Assembly poll on April 6. Based on an agreement reached between the AIADMK and the BJP today [Friday], it has been decided to allot 20 seats to the BJP under the alliance led by the AIADMK,” the statement said.

The announcement comes after multiple rounds of talks between the two parties, with Home Minister Amit Shah himself holding talks with the top two leaders of the AIADMK after his visit to Puducherry on Sunday.

In another development, Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami, his deputy O. Panneerselvam and four others figured in the AIADMK’s first list of candidates for the Assembly election released on Friday.

Mr. Palaniswami will be trying his luck again from Edappadi, his home constituency. He was elected from the seat in 1989, 1991, 2011 and 2016. Mr. Panneerselvam has been nominated from Bodinayakanur, from where he was elected in 2011 and 2016. On two other occasions, he represented Periyakulam.

Ministers D. Jayakumar and C.Ve. Shanmugam have been chosen for their respective constituencies of Royapuram in Chennai and Villupuram. This will be the seventh time that Mr. Jayakumar is being fielded from Royapuram. He lost only in 1996. Two others — S.P. Shanmuganathan and S. Thenmozhi — have been fielded from their constituencies of Srivaikuntam and Nilakkottai (reserved).

A senior office-bearer said the six nominees represented a good mix of communities — Vellala Gounder, Mukkulathor, Meenavar, Vanniyar, Nadar and the Scheduled Caste. Another functionary said the remaining candidates would be announced by Tuesday.

At Anna Arivayalam, DMK president M.K. Stalin and CPI State secretary R. Mutharasan signed the agreement. “We held talks in a cordial manner to ensure the victory of the Secular Progressive Alliance, led by the DMK,” Mr. Mutharasan said. Between the number of seats and idealism, the latter was important in this election as the objective was to prevent sectarian forces from entering Tamil Nadu.

The DMK is yet to finalise seat-sharing with the CPI(M) and the MDMK, while talks with the Congress have remained inconclusive. The CPI(M) has convened its secretariat meeting for Saturday. The issue of seat-sharing will be discussed at the meeting, to be attended by general secretary Sitaram Yechury. Likewise, the MDMK’s high-level committee will meet to decide on the offer of seats made by the DMK.

You have reached your limit for free articles this month.

Subscription Benefits Include

Today’s Paper

Find mobile-friendly version of articles from the day’s newspaper in one easy-to-read list.

Unlimited Access

Enjoy reading as many articles as you wish without any limitations.

Personalised recommendations

A select list of articles that match your interests and tastes.

Faster pages

Move smoothly between articles as our pages load instantly.

Dashboard

A one-stop-shop for seeing the latest updates, and managing your preferences.

Briefing

We brief you on the latest and most important developments, three times a day.

Support Quality Journalism.

*Our Digital Subscription plans do not currently include the e-paper, crossword and print.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

‘Was Never After Power or Prestige’: In U-turn Ahead of Tamil Nadu Elections, Sasikala Quits Politics

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


VK Sasikala, the sacked chief of the ruling AIADMK who was released from jail recently, in a letter on Wednesday said that she is quitting politics. This comes days after her nephew TTV Dhinakaran had told reporters in Tenkasi that Sasikala will certainly contest upcoming Tamil Nadu assembly elections.

“Our target is to defeat common enemy DMK. I have never gone after power or prestige. I thank all followers and supporters of ‘Amma’ (Jayalalithaa),” she wrote, urging AIADMK to stay united and fight the DMK.

Appalled by her decision, Dhinakaran said, “I came to know a while ago. Chinamma had called me. I tried to convince her to not take the decision. However, she had made up her mind. She said this is right. I don’t speak for her. Whatever she wanted to convey is there in the letter.”

Recently, on J Jayalalithaa’s birth anniversary, the sacked AIADMK chief had urged all followers of the late icon to unite and join forces against the common enemy, the DMK, in the forthcoming Assembly elections.

“Amma’s followers should unite and fight for victory. In the forthcoming elections, our target is victory. Very soon I will meet cadre and the public,” Sasikala had said.

Sasikala was released from prison after a four-year jail term in a disproportionate assets case that had primarily convicted Jayalalithaa among others. Sasikala’s exit from prison just ahead of elections had set fire to speculation that she might merge with the AIADMK.

It was widely rumoured that the BJP was engineering a merger between Sasikala and the top brass of the AIADMK, headed by Palaniswami and Panneerselvam.

In her statement, the sacked AIADMK leader said she would continue to remain loyal to the sentiments of Jayalalithaa, just like she had been, as a “sister” to the late icon.

Several AIADMK leaders, including KP Munusamy, gave out statements sympathising with Sasikala, although they were apprehensive of Dhinakaran’s move, who appears set on fomenting trouble for the ruling party.

The main opposition DMK, which is out of power for almost ten years is leaving no stone unturned to win polls in April. The AIADMK, which snatched the reins of power in 2011 from archrival DMK, emerged victorious again in 2016 under Jayalalithaa’s leadership.



[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE