What Happened
- Lok Sabha is scheduled to consider a resolution seeking the removal of Speaker Om Birla, moved by the Congress-led opposition over allegations of partisan conduct in managing House proceedings.
- Both the ruling BJP and the opposition Congress issued three-line whips to their members, making attendance and voting in line with the party's direction mandatory.
- Speaker Om Birla will not preside over the proceedings during the debate on the motion; another senior member will chair the House in his absence.
- Under constitutional provisions, Birla will have the opportunity to participate in the debate and defend himself before the vote.
- Given the NDA's comfortable majority in Lok Sabha, the motion is expected to be defeated; its significance lies in the political statement it makes and the constitutional process it invokes.
- This is a rare parliamentary event: no Lok Sabha Speaker has ever been successfully removed through this mechanism.
Static Topic Bridges
Constitutional Provisions for Removal of the Speaker: Article 94(c)
The removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker is governed by Article 94(c) of the Constitution of India, which provides for the Speaker's removal from office by a resolution of the House of the People passed by a majority of all the then members of the House.
- The notice for such a resolution must be given at least 14 days before the motion is moved, in writing to the Secretary-General of Lok Sabha.
- At least 50 members must rise in the House to support the admission of the motion; if fewer rise, the motion is not admitted.
- For the removal to succeed, the resolution must be passed by an "effective majority" — a majority of all then-sitting members of the House (not merely those present and voting), making removal extremely difficult when the ruling coalition commands a strong majority.
- Under Article 96, the Speaker cannot preside over proceedings during which a resolution for their removal is under consideration, but may be present and vote in the first instance (though not in the case of equality of votes in the second instance).
Connection to this news: The current motion invokes precisely this Article 94(c) mechanism — the 14-day notice period has been served, 50+ members have supported admission, and the Speaker will step aside during the proceedings.
Role and Powers of the Lok Sabha Speaker
The Speaker of the Lok Sabha is the constitutional head of the lower house of Parliament, elected from among its members. The office combines legislative, administrative, and disciplinary functions that make the Speaker one of the most powerful constitutional functionaries in India.
- The Speaker is elected by members of Lok Sabha at its first sitting after a general election, under Rule 8 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha.
- Key powers: conducting House proceedings, certifying Money Bills (Article 110), deciding on disqualification of members under the anti-defection law (Tenth Schedule), recognising political parties and groups in the House, suspending members for disorderly conduct.
- The Speaker is expected to be impartial and convention dictates that the party to which the Speaker belongs does not field a candidate against the Speaker at the next election — a convention that has been observed inconsistently.
- The Speaker is the final authority on questions of order in the House; their decisions on procedure are not subject to judicial review except in narrow circumstances.
Connection to this news: The opposition's allegation of partisan conduct strikes at the core of what the Speaker's role should be — independent, impartial conduct of proceedings. The motion is as much a political message about institutional conduct as it is a procedural exercise.
Anti-Defection Law and Party Whip
A party whip is an official instruction issued by a political party to its elected members in Parliament or state legislatures, directing them how to vote or behave on a particular issue. Violation of a whip can attract penalties under the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law).
- The Tenth Schedule was added to the Constitution by the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985.
- A three-line whip is the strongest form of whip instruction, making compliance mandatory. Defiance can lead to disqualification from membership of the House.
- However, a no-confidence motion against the Speaker is a unique context: the Speaker is a constitutional office, and whipping members to vote on it has been contested as testing the boundary between parliamentary discipline and constitutional convention.
- The decision to disqualify a member for violating an anti-defection whip rests with the Speaker — creating a structural conflict of interest when the whip concerns the Speaker's own removal.
Connection to this news: Both BJP and Congress issued whips for the Speaker's removal vote, ensuring party unity on a politically charged motion. The whip mechanism underscores how the constitutional process is inseparable from party discipline in practice.
Historical Precedents: Motions Against the Speaker
Motions for the removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker have been attempted three times in India's parliamentary history — in 1954, 1966, and 1987 — and none succeeded.
- 1954: Motion against Speaker G.V. Mavalankar, the first Speaker of independent India's Lok Sabha. The motion was defeated.
- 1966: Motion against Speaker Hukam Singh. Defeated.
- 1987: Motion against Speaker Bal Ram Jakhar. Defeated.
- In all three cases, the ruling party's majority ensured the motion's defeat, underscoring that the constitutional removal mechanism functions more as a political pressure tool than as a realistic accountability mechanism.
Connection to this news: The current motion against Speaker Om Birla follows this historical pattern — it is the fourth such attempt in India's parliamentary history, and with the NDA holding a clear majority, the outcome is expected to mirror all previous instances.
Key Facts & Data
- Constitutional provision: Article 94(c) — removal by majority of all then-members
- Required notice period: minimum 14 days
- Members required to support admission of motion: 50
- Voting threshold for removal: effective majority (majority of all then-sitting members)
- Historical motions against Lok Sabha Speaker: 3 previous (1954, 1966, 1987) — all defeated
- Presiding officer during debate: a nominated senior member, not the Speaker
- Anti-defection law: 10th Schedule, added by 52nd Constitutional Amendment, 1985
- Speaker's term: co-terminus with the Lok Sabha (5 years or dissolution, whichever is earlier)