This Article is From Feb 21, 2017

DMK To Move No-Confidence Motion Against Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker

DMK To Move No-Confidence Motion Against Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker

DMK legislators have accused Tamil Nadu Speaker P Dhanapal of failing to conduct a fair trust vote.

Chennai: DMK on Monday said it would soon move a no-confidence motion against Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker P Dhanapal, accusing him of "deliberately harping on his community to malign" the party. DMK working president and leader of opposition in the Assembly MK Stalin announced this at a press conference in Chennai, indicating a possible trial of strength for the AIADMK government, which only on Saturday won the Trust Vote by 122-11 margin.

Mr Stalin was responding to Mr Dhanapal's charge on Saturday after the confidence vote faced by Chief Minister E K Palaniswami, that he was perhaps targeted by the DMK during the ruckus for hailing from a particular community.

"When we see that the Speaker is deliberately harping on his community to maligns us, it is very regrettable. It is a matter of shame according to us, for Tamil Nadu," Mr Stalin said.

"Therefore we will move a no confidence motion (against Mr Dhanapal). Signatures of 34 of our MLAs is enough for that and the (Assembly) rules mandate that it (motion) should be taken up within 15 days. On that basis, we will be soon giving it," he added.

DMK has 89 MLAs in the 234-member Tamil Nadu Assembly. On Saturday, amidst chaotic scenes involving DMK which eventually led to eviction of its members enmasse, the Palaniswami government won the trust vote by the huge margin.

The 11 votes were cast by rebel AIADMK leader and former Chief Minister O Panneerselvam and his supporters.

DMK and Panneerselvam camp had pressed for a secret ballot on the motion of confidence, but it was rejected by the Speaker.

Mr Stalin repeatedly claimed Mr Palaniswami would have lost the trust vote if secret voting was held or if the floor test was conducted a week later, the two demands put forth by the opposition party and rejected outright by the Speaker.

He also denied any wrongdoing by his party MLAs as alleged by Mr Dhanapal and said while he had expressed regret with the Speaker in person at his chamber, he was even ready to apologise if there was any mistake on the part of his colleagues.

Asked about the visuals purportedly showing his MLAs creating ruckus, Mr Stalin shot back saying "the video is in government control and so they can edit accordingly." "That's why we have been stressing for live broadcast of the Assembly proceedings," he said, refuting the charge of violence by his party legislators.
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