This Article is From Jul 18, 2018

First No-Trust Motion To Be Accepted In Parliament Since 2003

Parliament Monsoon Session: The no-trust motion is aimed mainly at scoring political points at a time all parties are preparing for state and national elections.

The government is in no real threat as the BJP-led coalition enjoys a comfortable majority.

New Delhi:

A no-confidence motion was moved and accepted today in parliament for the first time since 2003.

The single-line motion was moved by the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) of Andhra Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu in the Lok Sabha. Speaker Sumitra Mahajan accepted it. The Congress had also put in notice for a no-trust motion.

A notice for a no-trust motion needs the support of at least 50 MPs.

"The BJP and the NDA will face the no-confidence motion," said Ananth Kumar, parliamentary affairs minister on Tuesday.

The government is in no real threat as the BJP-led coalition enjoys a comfortable majority. The no-trust motion is aimed mainly at scoring political points at a time all parties are preparing for state and national elections.

In 2003, then leader of opposition Sonia Gandhi had moved a no-confidence motion against the BJP government of Atal Behari Vajpayee. The motion, moved ahead of elections in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Delhi, was defeated by a mile.

In 2008, the Congress-led coalition faced a confidence vote - in which the government tests whether it still has enough numbers in parliament - after the Left pulled out support over the India-US nuclear deal.

To ensure numbers, both the ruling coalition and the opposition summoned MPs who were unwell or even in prison. The government won by 19 votes.

The BJP-led coalition faced a no-confidence vote in 1999 after J Jayalalithaa's AIADMK withdrew support. The Vajpayee government lost by one vote, the narrowest margin ever in the history of parliament.

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