Mains: GS-II – Polity & Governance | Parliament and State Legislatures - structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges and issues arising out of these.
Why in News?
With MP Nishikant Dubey giving notice to move a substantive motion against the Leader of the Opposition (LoP) of the Lok Sabha for misleading the House, all eyes are on what the crucial instrument of a substantive motion means.
What is Substantive Motion?
Why do the Substantive motions matter?
Difference between Substantive Motion, Substitute Motion, and Subsidiary Motion?
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Motions |
Substantive |
Substitute |
Subsidiary |
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Definition |
An independent proposal, complete in itself, seeking a binding decision of the House. |
A motion was moved in substitution of the original motion.
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A motion that arises out of or depends on another motion.
|
| Moved by |
Notice required; normally moved only by the member who gave notice (exception: another Minister may move on behalf of the concerned Minister). |
Any member may move it, subject to the rules. |
Moved in relation to an existing motion.
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|
Purpose/Effect |
Represents the formal opinion or will of the House on a specific matter. |
If adopted, it replaces the original motion, offering an alternative formulation or decision. |
Shapes or influences the fate of the main motion (e.g., amendments, adjournment of debate, closure). |
|
Role of the Speaker |
Decides whether to accept, reject, or modify & may refer the motion to a committee. |
Decides if they are admissible, checks whether they are in order and properly framed before allowing debate. |
Decides if they are admissible, prevents frivolous use, and maintains order.
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What are the various motions in the Parliament?
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Motions/ Resolutions |
Purpose |
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Adjournment Motion
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Seeks to adjourn normal business to discuss a matter of urgent public importance; a sharp accountability tool. |
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Calling Attention Motion
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Allows a member to call the attention of a Minister to an urgent matter of public importance; Minister responds, no vote. |
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Privilege Motion
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Raised when a member feels parliamentary privilege has been breached; may be referred to the Committee of Privileges. |
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No-Confidence Motion
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Tests whether the Council of Ministers enjoys majority support; if passed, the government must resign. |
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Motion of Thanks
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Expresses gratitude for the President’s Address at the start of a session; debated and voted upon, a symbolic test of support. |
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Election of Speaker/Deputy Speaker |
Formal motion to elect presiding officers of the House; binding decision requiring majority support. |
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Discussion Motion (general public interest) |
Raises issues of broad concern for debate; no binding vote, purely deliberative. |
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Removal of Speaker/Deputy Speaker |
Resolution to remove presiding officers requires majority support, rare and serious. |
|
Vacancy Motion |
Declares the seat of a member vacant, Used when leave of absence is not agreed to by the House; declares the seat vacant. |
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Expulsion Motion |
To expel a member for misconduct or breach of trust has been used in past cases of corruption or misrepresentation. |
|
Impeachment Motion |
Used in cases like impeachment of judges under constitutional provisions, Requires special majority. |
What is the parliamentary system of governance in India?
References