New Delhi: In the midst of Deadlock and non-stop disorders in parliament, more than 14 opposition parties will meet tomorrow morning to decide on the option “Mock Parliament” outside.
A breakfast meeting at around 9:30 a.m. was planning at a Constitutional Club in Delhi, according to Malikarjun Kharge Congress leader.
The parties accused their voices in no parliament.
“All the leaders of the floor and other parliamentarians will join the meeting,” Kharge said.
This will be the second opposition meeting since last week, when leaders from various parties discussed coordinated strategies to install pressure on the government.
Since the Monsun session began on July 19, the parliament was barely functioning due to opposition protests and the demands of the discussion of the Pegasus scandal lurking and protesting farmers among other conflict points.
The government’s sources said more than ₹ 133 in taxpayers were lost due to interference.
The opposition wants an independent discussion and investigation led by the Supreme Court Judge – serving or retirees – into the report that Israeli spyware which is only sold to the government is used to target opposition leaders, judges, activists, and ministers.
The government has rejected this demand, saying the statement was read in parliament by IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnav – one of the potential targets of hacking – it was enough. BJP calls Pegasus’s accusations as “non-problems”.
The opposition has accused the government to rush into chaos.
Trinamool MP Derek O’Brien, noted that the bill was authorized “at an average of under seven minutes per bill”, cynically asked if the government “made a papri chaat”.
“In the first 10 days, Modi-Shah rushed past and passed 12 bills at an average of under seven minutes per bill … passing legislation or making papri chaat!” – Mr. O’Brien tweeted.