President Address to Parliament

 

Context: Ahead of the Union Budget President Droupadi Murmu addressed the joint sitting of Parliament for the first time after assuming the position in July 2022.

 

History of Presidential Address

 

  • In the United Kingdom, the tradition of the monarch addressing the Parliament began in the 16th century.
  • In the United States, President Gorge Washington addressed Congress for the first time in 1790.
  • In India, the practice of the President addressing Parliament was established after the promulgation of the Government of India Act in 1919.
  • This law gave the Governor-General the right of addressing the Legislative Assembly and the Council of State.
  • The law did not have a provision for a joint address but the Governor-General did address the Assembly and the Council together on multiple occasions.
  • Between 1947 and 1950, there was no address to the Constituent Assembly (Legislative).

Provisions in the constitution

After the Constitution came into force, President Rajendra Prasad addressed members of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha for the first time on January 31, 1950.

  • The Constitution gives the President and the Governor the power to address a sitting of the legislature.
  • Article 87 provides two special occasions on which the President addresses a joint sitting.
    • The first is to address the opening session of a new legislature after a general election.
    • The second is to address the first sitting of Parliament each year.

 

  • When the Constitution came into force, the President was required to address each session of Parliament.
  • So during the provisional Parliament in 1950, President Prasad gave an address before every session.
  • In 1951, the First Amendment to the Constitution changed this provision and made the President’s address an annual affair.

 

 

What does Presidential address consist of?

 

  • The address of the President follows a general structure in which it highlights the government’s accomplishments from the previous year and sets the broad governance agenda for the coming year.
  • The President’s speech is essentially the viewpoint of the government and is also written by it.
  • In December, the Prime Minister’s Office asked the various ministries to start sending in their inputs for the speech.
  • The Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs sends a message, asking ministries to give information about any legislative proposals that need to be included in the President’s address.
  • All this information is collated and shaped into a speech, which is then delivered to the President.
  • The President’s address serves as a platform for the government to make policy and legislative announcements.

 

 

What if the President disagrees with the text of the speech?

The President or Governor cannot refuse to perform the constitutional duty of delivering an address to the legislature.

  • But there can be situations when they deviate from the text of the speech prepared by the government. So far, there have been no instances of a President doing so.
  • But there have been occasions when a Governor skipped or changed a portion of the address to the Assembly.
  • Most recently, Tamil Nadu’s Governor R N Ravi made changes to the prepared speech he read out in the Assembly.

 

Motion of Thanks

After the President’s address, the two Houses move a motion to thank the President for her speech.

  • This is an occasion for MPs in the two Houses to have a broad debate on governance in the country.
  • The issues raised by MPs are then addressed by the Prime Minister, who also replies to the motion of thanks.
  • The motion is then put to vote and MPs can express their disagreement by moving amendments to the motion.
  • Opposition MPs have been successful in getting amendments passed to the motion of thanks in Rajya Sabha on five occasions, including in 1980, 1989, 2001, 2015 and 2016.

 

 

The President’s address is seen as one of the most solemn occasions in the Parliamentary calendar. It is the only time in the year when the whole Parliament comes together. The address is an event, associated with ceremony and protocol, and the Lok Sabha Secretariat makes extensive arrangements for it.

 

 

Practice Question

 

1.Instances of the President’s delay in commuting death sentences has come under public debate as denial of justice. Should there be a time specified for the President to accept/reject such petitions? Analyse (UPSC 2014)