This Article is From Mar 02, 2014

Ordinance route for Rahul Gandhi's pet bills: senior UPA ministers meet President Pranab Mukherjee

Ordinance route for Rahul Gandhi's pet bills: senior UPA ministers meet President Pranab Mukherjee

The anti-graft bills are being seen as the Congress's last-ditch efforts to reclaim the anti-corruption plank.

New Delhi: A day after deciding to drop the ordinance route for key anti-corruption bills backed by Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, the UPA government today continued with its consultations with Union ministers Sushil Kumar Shinde and Kapil Sibal meeting President Pranab Mukherjee over the pending legislations.

Senior Congress leaders, including Ahmed Patel, A K Antony, Jairam Ramesh and Mr Shinde were summoned by party president Sonia Gandhi today to chalk out the UPA government's plan, sources said.

According to top sources, the government is unsure whether the President would give his nod to the ordinances just days ahead of the announcement of the general elections, due by May.

The anti-graft bills are being seen as the Congress's last-ditch efforts to reclaim the anti-corruption plank, seen to be appropriated by Arvind Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party and Narendra Modi's BJP in the run-up to national elections.

The Congress Core Group, which met on Friday evening and decided to drop the ordinance plan, is likely to meet again on Sunday to discuss the pending bills. That meeting is expected to be followed by a meeting of the Union Cabinet though there has been no official confirmation of the agenda of the Cabinet meeting.

The UPA government had failed to rush the bills through in the last session of Parliament. Two of them - the Prevention of Corruption (Amendment) Bill and the Rights of Citizens to Time-bound Delivery of Goods and Services and Redressal of Grievances Bill - are seen as Rahul Gandhi's pet bills.

A massive political backlash is expected if the bills are pushed through ordinances, as a government, which has entered its last lap, conventionally leaves the fate of such bills to be decided by the next government.
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