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Parliament Winter Session 2025 Day 9

On the ninth day of the Winter Session, Parliament delivered yet another reminder of how layered, charged and unpredictable legislative days in India can be. Both Houses convened with packed agendas, shifting seamlessly between governance, ideology, cultural identity, and political confrontation before finally adjourning for the day.

Lok Sabha: Policy, Pollution and Pointed Exchanges

The Lok Sabha opened with Question Hour and quickly moved into dense legislative business. Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman introduced the Appropriation (No. 4) Bill, 2025—an essential step to authorise additional expenditure for the current financial year. This was followed by a key procedural development: the extension of the joint committee scrutinising the One Nation–One Election proposal until the Budget Session of 2026, signalling that the government intends to take its time shaping one of its most ambitious election reform ideas.

Beyond budgetary matters, the House wrestled with issues that hit much closer to the ground. Delhi’s worsening air pollution resurfaced as a major concern, with MPs demanding a comprehensive clean-air blueprint inspired by global models like Beijing’s aggressive anti-smog strategy. Environmental debates deepened further when several members objected to proposed oil and gas exploration in the fragile Gulf of Mannar ecosystem.

The session took an unexpected turn when BJP MP Anurag Thakur alleged that a Trinamool Congress MP had used a banned e-cigarette inside the chamber—prompting Speaker Om Birla to firmly remind the House that such conduct is not permissible. The accusation triggered murmurs, counterpoints and heated interventions across party benches.

Political temperatures rose further when Rahul Gandhi launched a sharp critique of Union Home Minister Amit Shah’s earlier remarks during the electoral reforms debate. Gandhi described Shah as “very nervous” and under pressure, adding yet another chapter to the ongoing tug-of-war between the opposition and the treasury benches.

Rajya Sabha: Vande Mataram, Electoral Reforms and Spirited Interruptions

The Rajya Sabha carried its own brand of spirited debates. The discussion on the 150th anniversary of Vande Mataram continued, a session that was expected to be ceremonial but instead evolved into a clash of political philosophies.

BJP president J.P. Nadda defended the government’s cultural position, accusing Congress of inconsistency and disregard for national symbols. Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge promptly interrupted, arguing that the conversation had drifted from celebrating Vande Mataram to attacking historical figures like Jawaharlal Nehru. The exchange underscored how cultural topics in Parliament often become battlegrounds for broader political narratives.

Parallel to the cultural debate, the Upper House continued its engagement with electoral reforms. Several BJP speakers were lined up to present their arguments on proposed changes to the electoral framework, emphasising transparency and modernisation—an ongoing theme across both chambers this session.

A Day of Unfinished Arguments and Unresolved Questions

After hours of debate, disruptions and crossfire on issues ranging from national symbols to financial authorisations, both Houses were adjourned with plans to reconvene at 11 am on Friday. The day offered a vivid snapshot of India’s democratic machinery—messy, loud, ideological, but undeniably active.

With the Winter Session entering a critical phase, these debates are shaping narratives on governance, transparency, national identity and electoral change—setting the tone for the political months ahead.

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Parliament Winter Session 2025 Day 4

In a significant policy development, Parliament has officially passed the Central Excise (Amendment) Bill, 2025, after the Rajya Sabha approved and returned it to the Lok Sabha. The bill marks one of the most sweeping revisions to tobacco taxation in recent years, focusing not only on revenue but also on public health and long-standing concerns around affordability of harmful products.

Why the Amendment Was Needed

The amendment updates the Central Excise Act, 1944 to allow the government to raise duties on cigarettes, cigars, hookah tobacco, chewing tobacco, zarda, scented tobacco and tobacco substitutes.
One of the key motivations behind the bill is ensuring that taxation remains effective after the sunset of the previous cess structure. Without a revision, the government would lack fiscal room to maintain the overall tax burden necessary to discourage consumption.

Massive Revision of Tobacco Duty Structure

The updated duty slabs reflect a dramatic shift compared to the older system. Previously, the excise duty on cigarettes ranged from 200 to 735 rupees per thousand sticks. The new structure pushes this range to between 2,700 and 11,000 rupees per thousand cigarettes.
Other product categories also see steep increases:

  • Chewing tobacco duty rising from 25 percent to 100 percent
  • Hookah tobacco duty increasing from 25 percent to 40 percent
  • Pipe and cigarette smoking mixture duty jumping from 60 percent to 325 percent

The government’s stated objective is clear: tobacco should not remain an easily affordable product in the market, particularly when its health impact is well-documented.

Government’s Stand: Public Health First, Revenue Sharing Intact

Responding to concerns in the Rajya Sabha, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman clarified that the revised taxes will be shared with states, emphasizing that this is excise duty and not a new cess.
She also addressed apprehensions regarding farmers and beedi workers. According to the Minister, multiple schemes — especially those targeting crop diversification — are already in place to support farmers interested in shifting out of tobacco cultivation. Between 2017-18 and 2021-22, more than 1.12 lakh acres have been moved away from tobacco farming.

Additionally, nearly 50 lakh beedi workers are registered across the country, and several welfare programmes continue to operate through national labour organisations.

Aligning India With Global Standards

India’s current tax incidence on cigarettes stands at nearly 53 percent of the retail price, significantly lower than the World Health Organization’s recommended benchmark of 75 percent.
The Minister noted that even after the introduction of GST, India’s combined tax burden on tobacco products did not consistently meet global standards, making many products remain relatively affordable. This bill seeks to correct that gap and push tobacco consumption farther out of reach.

Debate in Parliament: Concern, Support and Calls for Review

The discussion saw a wide range of viewpoints:

  • Congress MP Pramod Tiwari raised worries about the effect on tobacco farmers and argued for sending the bill to a parliamentary committee.
  • TMC’s Sagarika Ghose stated that taxation alone will not reduce consumption unless accompanied by strong health awareness campaigns and tighter regulation on pan masala advertising.
  • AAP MP Sandeep Kumar Pathak questioned whether excessive taxes are the right tool to curb addiction.
  • AIADMK’s M Thambidurai supported the bill, calling it a timely reform that protects public health.

The debate also saw political exchanges, with the Finance Minister pushing back against claims from Trinamool Congress members on issues unrelated to the bill.

A Policy Shift with Far-Reaching Impact

The passage of the Central Excise (Amendment) Bill, 2025 signals a deliberate move towards stronger public health regulation backed by fiscal policy. Whether it significantly impacts tobacco consumption patterns will be seen over time, but the government has made its stance unmistakably clear: affordability should not enable addiction.

After the detailed discussion, the House adjourned, marking the close of a critical legislative day.

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Parliament Winter Session day 2

The second day of the 2025 Parliament Winter Session unfolded not as a routine legislative day, but as a sharp reminder of how fragile parliamentary functioning can become when political trust erodes. What began as a normal sitting quickly spiralled into disorder as opposition parties pressed aggressively for an immediate and structured debate on the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls.

In their view, the SIR process risked excluding legitimate voters; in the government’s assessment, the House needed to proceed with its planned business. The collision of these two priorities defined the entire day.

Lok Sabha Gridlocked as Protests Dominate

The Lok Sabha made barely any progress before breaking into full-blown chaos. Opposition MPs marched into the Well, raising slogans that drowned out the Speaker’s attempts to restore order. Their demand was consistent and unyielding: no legislative work until the SIR issue was taken up on priority.

The Speaker attempted to move the House forward, but with the noise escalating and no breakthrough in sight, he was forced to adjourn the session repeatedly. Even when the House reconvened, the disruptions resumed within minutes, leaving the day’s agenda untouched.

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