Mumbai, June 15 (IANS) The Business Advisory Committees of the Maharashtra Legislative Council and Assembly on Monday chalked out the schedule for the monsoon session of the state legislature, which will commence on June 22 and conclude on July 10. This was confirmed by the legislators from the ruling and opposition benches after the meetings took place in the Vidhan Bhavan.
The three-week session is expected to be a stormy affair, with a rejuvenated Opposition gearing up to corner the ruling alliance on a multitude of volatile issues, ranging from conditional farm loan waivers to alleged political engineering. A major political showdown is brewing over the state government’s recently announced Rs 2 lakh farm loan waiver scheme.
While the ruling dispensation has touted the decision as a major relief measure for the state’s distressed agrarian economy, the Opposition has flagged “hidden clauses” that could severely hurt farmers. Farmers whose outstanding loans exceed Rs 2 lakh must first clear the entire remaining surplus amount out of their own pockets. Only after making this prior payment will they become eligible to receive the benefit of the Rs 2 lakh state waiver.
Opposition leaders, including NCP SP veteran Jayant Patil, claimed that additional clauses, such as capping benefits for previous waiver recipients, will effectively leave millions of cultivators out of the scheme’s ambit. This policy triggered a massive political protest led by Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar) MLA Rohit Pawar.
The legislator launched an aggressive three-day hunger strike demanding the immediate removal of these “stringent and misleading” conditions. Though Rohit Pawar called off his fast on the third day following a written assurance from the government to hold high-level talks, the issue remains red-hot.
The Opposition is fully prepared to use this as a primary weapon to corner the government on the floor of both Houses.
However, several ministers, including Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, Girish Mahajan and Jayakumar Gore, defended the government’s crop loan scheme, saying that about 40 lakh farmers will benefit without applying any conditions.
Reacting sharply to the announcement of the session’s duration, Congress legislator Nana Patole slammed the government for keeping the session brief despite widespread public discontent across the state. “There is massive public unrest and anger in Maharashtra over various burning issues. Our explicit demand was that this session should last for at least one month. However, it will effectively run for only 14 working days,” he stated.
Launching a sarcastic dig at the treasury benches, he added, “The only real objective of this government in wrapping up the session quickly is to push through and approve their supplementary financial demands. They have absolutely no interest in addressing the core issues faced by the common citizens.”
–IANS
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