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Saturday June 29, 2024

Modi, Rahul shake hands after Lok Sabha Speaker election

By Agencies
June 27, 2024
Indian PM Narendra Modi and Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi shake hand as they escort Om Birla to the chair after the latter was elected as the Speaker of the House during the first session of the 18th Lok Sabha. — Press Trust of India/File
Indian PM Narendra Modi and Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi shake hand as they escort Om Birla to the chair after the latter was elected as the Speaker of the House during the first session of the 18th Lok Sabha. — Press Trust of India/File 

NEW DELHI: Om Birla was elected as Speaker of the lower house of the Parliament by a voice vote, the first in decades owing to a lack of consensus between NDA and INDIA.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi shook hands in the Parliament on Wednesday, soon after the NDA candidate Om Birla was elected as the Speaker of the 18th Lok Sabha.

In a video shared by news agency ANI, the two leaders can be seen congratulating Birla and then proceeded to smile at each other and shake hands. Following this, Gandhi, along with Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju and PM Modi, accompanied Birla to the chair.

Birla was elected as the Speaker of the lower house of the Parliament by a voice vote - the first in decades owing to a lack of consensus between the BJP-led NDA government and the Congress-led INDIA bloc opposition. Such an election for the post has been held only three times in history—1952, 1967, and 1976.

The Congress had fielded Kodikunnil Suresh as its Lok Sabha Speaker candidate against BJP’s Om Birla.

Congratulating Birla, Modi said that he looks forward to the Speaker’s guidance for the next five years.

Meanwhile, India´s new leader of the opposition Rahul Gandhi said on Wednesday that his lawmakers would not be silenced, in his first speech since formally taking up a post vacant for a decade.

Gandhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi´s chief rival, was appointed by fellow opposition lawmakers to the post in a signal of a reinvigorated challenge to the government.

“The government has political power, but the opposition also represents the voice of India´s people,” Gandhi said in a speech in the lower house of parliament, accompanied by supportive thumps by his party´s lawmakers on their desks.

“This time, the opposition represents significantly more voice of the Indian people.”

In the past two parliaments, Gandhi´s once-mighty Congress party did not have enough seats in the legislature to qualify him for the post.

Modi´s first two terms in office followed landslide wins for his right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), allowing his government to drive laws through parliament with only cursory debate.

However, the BJP won only 240 seats in this year´s poll, its worst showing in a decade, and 32 seats below a majority.

That forced it to rely on coalition allies to build a 293-seat majority in the 543-seat lower house.

Modi, 73, on Monday appealed to an emboldened opposition for “consensus” following his election setback.

Gandhi, 54, defied analysts´ expectations and exit polls to help his Congress party nearly double its parliamentary numbers.

It was its best result since Modi swept to power in 2014, and rescued it from the political wilderness.

“We would like the house to function often and well,” Gandhi told veteran BJP lawmaker Om Birla, the speaker in the previous parliament, who was reelected on Wednesday to the post.

“It is very important that cooperation happens on the basis of trust,” he added.

“It is very important that the voice of the opposition is allowed to be represented in this house.”

Modi´s BJP remains in control of all key cabinet posts, but analysts say he will be forced to seek consensus within his coalition to push more contentious legislation through parliament.

Gandhi told Birla that the speaker´s role was not only to facilitate the passing of laws, but also to ensure democratic debate flourished.

“The question is not: How efficiently the house is run? The question is: How much of India´s voice is being allowed to be heard in this house?” Gandhi said.

“The idea that you can run the house efficiently by silencing the voice of the opposition is a non-democratic idea,” he added. “This election has shown that the people of India expect the opposition to defend the constitution of this country.”