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Trinamool Congress MP Abhishek Banerjee, Samajwadi Party MP Akhilesh Yadav, party MPs Dharmendra Yadav, Dimple Yadav and Anand Bhadauriya in the Lok Sabha during the Budget Session, in New Delhi on February 7, 2025.
| Photo Credit: ANI/Sansad TV
Before the discussion on the Budget started, Congress members objected to the absence of Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the House. âIt has been a convention that the Finance Minister is present at the time of the initiating the debate,â party leader K.C Venugopal pointed out.
Stating that there was no such parliamentary rule, the BJPâs Dilip Saikia, who was chairing the proceedings, pointed out that Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary was present in the House.
As the Congress MPs rose to their feet, Speaker Om Birla took over the House proceedings and assured the protesting members that he would âensureâ that whenever Budget discussions took place in future, Ms Sitharaman would be present.
Initiating the discussion on the Union Budget in the Lok Sabha, Congress member from Patiala, Dharamvira Gandhi, claimed the Budget failed to address farmersâ grievances. Expenditure towards health and education was stagnating, he said, adding that the government had tried to maintain fiscal deficit at the cost of social sector schemes.
He also called it âunitaryâ in nature as the States were ânot allowed to participate in the Budget-making processâ. âIt failed to address the grievances of the farmers,â Mr. Gandhi said, adding that the âmisplaced prioritiesâ of the government led to the closure of MSME units across the country.
âEconomic favouritismâ
Trinamool Congress MP Abhishek Banerjee alleged that the NDA government had mastered the art of taking away from the poor and giving to the wealthy elite, âthe reverse of Robin Hoodâ.
âFor instance, the waiving of corporate loans worth thousands of crores using taxpayersâ money, while poor farmers struggling with debts are left to suffer. The government claims to have no money to increase subsidies on essential commodities, yet it slashes corporate tax rates, giving billionaires an even bigger slice of the pie. This is not economic justice. This is economic favouritism at its worst,â he said.
Congress member from Assam, Pradyut Bordoloi, said the Budget failed to address key issues such as inflation and unemployment, and urged the government to take steps to increase disposable income of the people.
Stating that the tax sops would benefit only two crore taxpayers, he asked the government to expand and strengthen food security, increase allocation to public distribution system (PDS), and universalise free ration distribution for the next two years. âReduce GST on essentials like food, medicine and medical insurance,â he added
CPI (ML) Liberation MP Sudama Prasad said, âPro-rich budget has been presented by the government. There is nothing for the poor and youth in the budgetâ.
Raising the issue of farmer indebtedness, Rajeev Rai of the Samajwadi Party said the government should consider announcing a debt waiver scheme for farmers.
The BJP MP from Jaipur Rural, Rao Rajendra Singh, claimed individual taxpayers had been given benefits of about âš8.71 lakh crore in the last five years, while the corporate taxpayers got benefits worth about âš4.53 lakh crore.
Janata Dal (United) MP Alok Kumar Suman and Chandan Chauhan of the Rashtriya Lok Dal said the Budget would benefit all sections of society.
Published – February 07, 2025 10:20 pm IST
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