- The Vice- President of India shall be ex officio Chairman of the
Council of States.
- The Council of States shall, as soon as may be, choose a member of the Council to
be Deputy Chairman thereof and, so often as the office of Deputy Chairman
becomes vacant, the Council shall
choose another member to be Deputy Chairman thereof
90. Vacation and resignation of, and removal from, the office of
Deputy Chairman.—
A member holding office as Deputy Chairman of the
Council of States— '
(a) shall vacate his office if he ceases to be a member of the
Council;
(b) may at any time, by writing under his hand addressed to the
Chairman, resign his office; and
(c) may be removed from his office by a resolution of the Council
passed by a majority of all the then members of the Council:
Provided that no resolution for the purpose of clause (c) shall be moved
unless at least fourteen days’ notice has been given of the intention to
move the resolution.
91. Power of the Deputy Chairman or other person to perform the
duties of the office of, or to act as, Chairman.—
(1)While the office of
Chairman is vacant, or during any period when the Vice-President is acting
as, or discharging the functions of, President, the duties of the office shall
be performed by the Deputy Chairman, or, if the office of Deputy
Chairman is also vacant, by such member of the Council of States as the
President may appoint for the purpose.
(2) During the absence of the Chairman from any sitting of the Council
of States the Deputy Chairman, or, if he is also absent, such person as may
be determined by the rules of procedure of the Council, or, if no such
person is present, such other person as may be determined by the Council,
shall act as Chairman.
92. The Chairman or the Deputy Chairman not to preside while a
resolution for his removal from office is under consideration.—
(1) At
any sitting of the Council of States, while any resolution for the removal
of the Vice-President from his office is under consideration, the Chairman,
or while any resolution for the removal of the Deputy Chairman from his
office is under consideration, the Deputy Chairman, shall not, though he is
present, preside, and the provisions of clause (2) of article 91 shall apply
in relation to every such sitting as they apply in relation to a sitting from
which the Chairman, or, as the case may be, the Deputy Chairman, is
absent.
(2) The Chairman shall have the right to speak in, and otherwise to take
part in the proceedings of, the Council of States while any resolution for
the removal of the Vice-President from his office is under consideration in
the Council, but, notwithstanding anything in article 100, shall not be entitled to vote at all on such resolution or on any other matter during such
proceedings.
93. The Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the House of the People.—
The House of the People shall, as soon as may be, choose two members of
the House to be respectively Speaker and Deputy Speaker thereof and, so
often as the office of Speaker or Deputy Speaker becomes vacant, the
House shall choose another member to be Speaker or Deputy Speaker, as
the case may be.
94. Vacation and resignation of, and removal from, the offices of
Speaker and Deputy Speaker.—
A member holding office as Speaker or
Deputy Speaker of the House of the People—
(a) shall vacate his office if he ceases to be a member of the House
of the People;
(b) may at any time, by writing under his hand addressed, if such
member is the Speaker, to the Deputy Speaker, and if such member is
the Deputy Speaker, to the Speaker, resign his office; and
(c) may be removed from his office by a resolution of the House of
the People passed by a majority of all the then members of the House:
Provided that no resolution for the purpose of clause (c) shall be moved
unless at least fourteen days’ notice has been given of the intention to
move the resolution:
Provided further that, whenever the House of the People is dissolved,
the Speaker shall not vacate his office until immediately before the first
meeting of the House of the People after the dissolution.
95. Power of the Deputy Speaker or other person to perform the
duties of the office of, or to act as, Speaker.—
(1) While the office of
Speaker is vacant, the duties of the office shall be performed by the
Deputy Speaker or, if the office of Deputy Speaker is also vacant, by such
member of the House of the People as the President may appoint for the
purpose.
(2) During the absence of the Speaker from any sitting of the House of
the People the Deputy Speaker or, if he is also absent, such person as may
be determined by the rules of procedure of the House, or, if no such person
is present, such other person as may be determined by the House, shall act
as Speaker.
96. The Speaker or the Deputy Speaker not to preside while a
resolution for his removal from office is under consideration.—
(1) At
any sitting of the House of the People, while any resolution for the
removal of the Speaker from his office is under consideration, the Speaker,
or while any resolution for the removal of the Deputy Speaker from his
office is under consideration, the Deputy Speaker, shall not, though he is
present, preside, and the provisions of clause (2) of article 95 shall apply in relation to every such sitting as they apply in relation to a sitting from
which the Speaker, or, as the case may be, the Deputy Speaker, is absent.
(2) The Speaker shall have the right to speak in, and otherwise to take
part in the proceedings of, the House of the People while any resolution for
his removal from office is under consideration in the House and shall,
notwithstanding anything in article 100, be entitled to vote only in the first
instance on such resolution or on any other matter during such proceedings
but not in the case of an equality of votes.
97. Salaries and allowances of the Chairman and Deputy Chairman
and the Speaker and Deputy Speaker.—
There shall be paid to the
Chairman and the Deputy Chairman of the Council of States, and to the
Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the House of the People, such salaries
and allowances as may be respectively fixed by Parliament by law and,
until provision in that behalf is so made, such salaries and allowances as
are specified in the Second Schedule.
98. Secretariat of Parliament.—
(1) Each House of Parliament shall
have a separate secretarial staff:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall be construed as preventing the
creation of posts common to both Houses of Parliament.
(2) Parliament may by law regulate the recruitment, and the conditions
of service of persons appointed, to the secretarial staff of either House of
Parliament.
(3) Until provision is made by Parliament under clause (2), the President
may, after consultation with the Speaker of the House of the People or the
Chairman of the Council of States, as the case may be, make rules
regulating the recruitment, and the conditions of service of persons
appointed, to the secretarial staff of the House of the People or the Council
of States, and any rules so made shall have effect subject to the provisions
of any law made under the said clause.
Conduct of Business
99. Oath or affirmation by members.—
Every member of either House
of Parliament shall, before taking his seat, make and subscribe before the
President, or some person appointed in that behalf by him, an oath or
affirmation according to the form set out for the purpose in the Third
Schedule.
100. Voting in Houses, power of Houses to act notwithstanding
vacancies and quorum.—
(1) Save as otherwise provided in this
Constitution, all questions at any sitting of either House or joint sitting of
the Houses shall be determined by a majority of votes of the members
present and voting, other than the Speaker or person acting as Chairman or
Speaker.The Chairman or Speaker, or person acting as such, shall not vote in the
first instance, but shall have and exercise a casting vote in the case of an
equality of votes.
(2) Either House of Parliament shall have power to act notwithstanding
any vacancy in the membership thereof, and any proceedings in Parliament
shall be valid notwithstanding that it is discovered subsequently that some
person who was not entitled so to do sat or voted or otherwise took part in
the proceedings.
(3) Until Parliament by law otherwise provides, the quorum to constitute
a meeting of either House of Parliament shall be one-tenth of the total
number of members of the House.
(4) If at any time during a meeting of a House there is no quorum, it
shall be the duty of the Chairman or Speaker, or person acting as such,
either to adjourn the House or to suspend the meeting until there is a
quorum.
101. Vacation of seats.—
(1) No person shall be a member of both
Houses of Parliament and provision shall be made by Parliament by law for
the vacation by a person who is chosen a member of both Houses of his
seat in one House or the other.
(2) No person shall be a member both of Parliament and of a House of
the Legislature of a State, and if a person is chosen a member both of
Parliament and of a House of the Legislature of a State, then, at the
expiration of such period as may be specified in rules made by the
President, that person’s seat in Parliament shall become vacant, unless he
has previously resigned his seat in the Legislature of the State.
(3) If a member of either House of Parliament—
- (a) becomes subject to any of the disqualifications mentioned in
clause (1) or clause (2) of article 102, or
- (b) resigns his seat by writing under his hand addressed to the
Chairman or the Speaker, as the case may be, and his resignation is
accepted by the Chairman or the Speaker, as the case may be,
his seat shall thereupon become vacant:
Provided that in the case of any resignation referred to in sub-clause (b),
if from information received or otherwise and after making such inquiry as
he thinks fit, the Chairman or the Speaker, as the case may be, is satisfied
that such resignation is not voluntary or genuine, he shall not accept such
resignation.
(4) If for a period of sixty days a member of either House of Parliament
is without permission of the House absent from all meetings thereof, the
House may declare his seat vacant:
Provided that in computing the said period of sixty days no account shall
be taken of any period during which the House is prorogued or is adjourned
for more than four consecutive days.
102. Disqualifications for membership.—
(1) A person shall be
disqualified for being chosen as, and for being, a member of either House
of Parliament—
(a) if he holds any office of profit under the Government of India
or the Government of any State, other than an office declared by
Parliament by law not to disqualify its holder;
(b) if he is of unsound mind and stands so declared by a competent
court;
(c) if he is an undischarged insolvent;
(d) if he is not a citizen of India, or has voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of a foreign State, or is under any acknowledgment of
allegiance or adherence to a foreign State;
(e) if he is so disqualified by or under any law made by Parliament.
Explanation.—
For the purposes of this clause a person shall not be
deemed to hold an office of profit under the Government of India or the
Government of any State by reason only that he is a Minister either for the
Union or for such State.
(2) A person shall be disqualified for being a member of either House of
Parliament if he is so disqualified under the Tenth Schedule.
103. Decision on questions as to disqualifications of members.—
(1) If any question arises as to whether a member of either House of
Parliament has become subject to any of the disqualifications mentioned in
clause (1) of article 102, the question shall be referred for the decision of
the President and his decision shall be final.
(2) Before giving any decision on any such question, the President
shall obtain the opinion of the Election Commission and shall act
according to such opinion
104. Penalty for sitting and voting before making oath or
affirmation under article 99 or when not qualified or when
disqualified.—
If a person sits or votes as a member of either House of
Parliament before he has complied with the requirements of article 99, or
when he knows that he is not qualified or that he is disqualified for
membership thereof, or that he is prohibited from so doing by the
provisions of any law made by Parliament, he shall be liable in respect of
each day on which he so sits or votes to a penalty of five hundred rupees to
be recovered as a debt due to the Union.
105. Powers, privileges, etc., of the Houses of Parliament and of the
members and committees thereof.—
(1) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution and to the rules and standing orders regulating the procedure
of Parliament, there shall be freedom of speech in Parliament.
(2) No member of Parliament shall be liable to any proceedings in any
court in respect of any thing said or any vote given by him in Parliament or
any committee thereof, and no person shall be so liable in respect of the
publication by or under the authority of either House of Parliament of any
report, paper, votes or proceedings.
(3) In other respects, the powers, privileges and immunities of each
House of Parliament, and of the members and the committees of each
House, shall be such as may from time to time be defined by Parliament by
law, and, until so defined, shall be those of that House and of its members
and committees immediately before the coming into force of section 15 of
the Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment) Act, 1978.
(4) The provisions of clauses (1), (2) and (3) shall apply in relation to
persons who by virtue of this Constitution have the right to speak in, and
otherwise to take part in the proceedings of, a House of Parliament or any
committee thereof as they apply in relation to members of Parliament.
106. Salaries and allowances of members.—
Members of either House
of Parliament shall be entitled to receive such salaries and allowances as
may from time to time be determined by Parliament by law and, until
provision in that respect is so made, allowances at such rates and upon
such conditions as were immediately before the commencement of this
Constitution applicable in the case of members of the Constituent
Assembly of the Dominion of India.
107. Provisions as to introduction and passing of Bills.—
(1) Subject
to the provisions of articles 109 and 117 with respect to Money Bills and
other financial Bills, a Bill may originate in either House of Parliament.
(2) Subject to the provisions of articles 108 and 109, a Bill shall not be
deemed to have been passed by the Houses of Parliament unless it has been
agreed to by both Houses, either without amendment or with such
amendments only as are agreed to by both Houses.
(3) A Bill pending in Parliament shall not lapse by reason of the
prorogation of the Houses.
(4) A Bill pending in the Council of States which has not been passed by
the House of the People shall not lapse on a dissolution of the House of the
People.
(5) A Bill which is pending in the House of the People, or which having
been passed by the House of the People is pending in the Council of States,
shall, subject to the provisions of article 108, lapse on a dissolution of the
House of the People.
108. Joint sitting of both Houses in certain cases.—
(1) If after a Bill
has been passed by one House and transmitted to the other House—
- (a) the Bill is rejected by the other House; or
- (b) the Houses have finally disagreed as to the amendments to be
made in the Bill; or
- (c) more than six months elapse from the date of the reception of the
Bill by the other House without the Bill being passed by it,
the President may, unless the Bill has elapsed by reason of a dissolution of
the House of the People, notify to the Houses by message if they are sitting
or by public notification if they are not sitting, his intention to summon
them to meet in a joint sitting for the purpose of deliberating and voting on
the Bill:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall apply to a Money Bill.
(2) In reckoning any such period of six months as is referred to in clause
(1), no account shall be taken of any period during which the House
referred to in sub-clause (c) of that clause is prorogued or adjourned for
more than four consecutive days.
(3) Where the President has under clause (1) notified his intention of
summoning the Houses to meet in a joint sitting, neither House shall
proceed further with the Bill, but the President may at any time after the
date of his notification summon the Houses to meet in a joint sitting for
the purpose specified in the notification and, if he does so, the Houses
shall meet accordingly.
(4) If at the joint sitting of the two Houses the Bill, with such
amendments, if any, as are agreed to in joint sitting, is passed by a
majority of the total number of members of both Houses present and
voting, it shall be deemed for the purposes of this Constitution to have
been passed by both Houses:
Provided that at a joint sitting—
(a) if the Bill, having been passed by one House, has not been
passed by the other House with amendments and returned to the House
in which it originated, no amendment shall be proposed to the Bill other
than such amendments (if any) as are made necessary by the delay in the
passage of the Bill;
(b) if the Bill has been so passed and returned, only such
amendments as aforesaid shall be proposed to the Bill and such other
amendments as are relevant to the matters with respect to which the
Houses have not agreed;
and the decision of the person presiding as to the amendments which are
admissible under this clause shall be final.
(5) A joint sitting may be held under this article and a Bill passed
thereat, notwithstanding that a dissolution of the House of the People has
intervened since the President notified his intention to summon the Houses
to meet therein.
109. Special procedure in respect of Money Bills.—
(1) A Money Bill
shall not be introduced in the Council of States.
(2) After a Money Bill has been passed by the House of the People it
shall be transmitted to the Council of States for its recommendations and
the Council of States shall within a period of fourteen days from the date
of its receipt of the Bill return the Bill to the House of the People with its
recommendations and the House of the People may thereupon either accept
or reject all or any of the recommendations of the Council of States.
(3) If the House of the People accepts any of the recommendations of the
Council of States, the Money Bill shall be deemed to have been passed by
both Houses with the amendments recommended by the Council of States
and accepted by the House of the People.
(4) If the House of the People does not accept any of the
recommendations of the Council of States, the Money Bill shall be deemed
to have been passed by both Houses in the form in which it was passed by
the House of the People without any of the amendments recommended by
the Council of States.
(5) If a Money Bill passed by the House of the People and transmitted to
the Council of States for its recommendations is not returned to the House
of the People within the said period of fourteen days, it shall be deemed to
have been passed by both Houses at the expiration of the said period in the
form in which it was passed by the House of the People.
110. Definition of "Money Bills''.—
(1) For the purposes of this
Chapter, a Bill shall be deemed to be a Money Bill if it contains only
provisions dealing with all or any of the following matters, namely:—
(a) the imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of
any tax;
(b) the regulation of the borrowing of money or the giving of any
guarantee by the Government of India, or the amendment of the law with
respect to any financial obligations undertaken or to be undertaken by
the Government of India;
(c) the custody of the Consolidated Fund or the Contingency Fund of
India, the payment of moneys into or the withdrawal of moneys from
any such Fund;
(d) the appropriation of moneys out of the Consolidated Fund of
India;
(e) the declaring of any expenditure to be expenditure charged on
the Consolidated Fund of India or the increasing of the amount of any
such expenditure;
(f) the receipt of money on account of the Consolidated Fund of
India or the public account of India or the custody or issue of such
money or the audit of the accounts of the Union or of a State; or
(g) any matter incidental to any of the matters specified in subclauses (a) to (f)
(2) A Bill shall not be deemed to be a Money Bill by reason only that it
provides for the imposition of fines or other pecuniary penalties, or for the
demand or payment of fees for licences or fees for services rendered, or by
reason that it provides for the imposition, abolition, remission, alteration
or regulation of any tax by any local authority or body for local purposes.
(3) If any question arises whether a Bill is a Money Bill or not, the
decision of the Speaker of the House of the People thereon shall be final.
(4) There shall be endorsed on every Money Bill when it is transmitted
to the Council of States under article 109, and when it is presented to the
President for assent under article 111, the certificate of the Speaker of the
House of the People signed by him that it is a Money Bill.
111. Assent to Bills.—
When a Bill has been passed by the Houses of
Parliament, it shall be presented to the President, and the President shall
declare either that he assents to the Bill, or that he withholds assent
therefrom:
Provided that the President may, as soon as possible after the
presentation to him of a Bill for assent, return the Bill if it is not a Money
Bill to the Houses with a message requesting that they will reconsider the
Bill or any specified provisions thereof and, in particular, will consider the
desirability of introducing any such amendments as he may recommend in
his message, and when a Bill is so returned, the Houses shall reconsider
the Bill accordingly, and if the Bill is passed again by the Houses with or
without amendment and presented to the President for assent, the President
shall not withhold assent therefrom.\
Procedure in Financial Matters
112. Annual financial statement.—
(1) The President shall in respect of
every financial year cause to be laid before both the Houses of Parliament
a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the Government of
India for that year, in this Part referred to as the "annual financial
statement''.
(2) The estimates of expenditure embodied in the annual financial
statement shall show separately—
- (a) the sums required to meet expenditure described by this
Constitution as expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund of
India; and
- (b) the sums required to meet other expenditure proposed to be made
from the Consolidated Fund of India,
and shall distinguish expenditure on revenue account from other
expenditure.
(3) The following expenditure shall be expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund of
India—
- (a) the emoluments and allowances of the President and other expenditure relating to
his office;
- (b) the salaries and allowances of the Chairman and the Deputy Chairman of the
Council of States and the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the House of the People;
- (c) debt charges for which the Government of India is liable including interest,
sinking fund charges and redemption charges, and other expenditure relating to the raising
of loans and the service and redemption of debt;
- (d) (i) the salaries, allowances and pensions payable to or in respect of Judges of the
Supreme Court;
(ii) the pensions payable to or in respect of Judges of the Federal Court;
(iii) the pensions payable to or in respect of Judges of any High Court which
exercises jurisdiction in relation to any area included in the territory of India or which at
any time before the commencement of this Constitution exercised jurisdiction in relation
to any area included in a Governor's Province of the Dominion of India;
- (e) the salary, allowances and pension payable to or in respect of the Comptroller and
Auditor-General of India;
- (f) any sums required to satisfy any judgment, decree or award of any court or arbitral
tribunal;
- (g) any other expenditure declared by this Constitution or by Parliament by law to be
so charged.
113. Procedure in Parliament with respect to estimates.—
(1) So much of the estimates
as relates to expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund of India shall not be submitted
to the vote of Parliament, but nothing in this clause shall be construed as preventing the
discussion in either House of Parliament of any of those estimates.
(2) So much of the said estimates as relates to other expenditure shall be submitted in the
form of demands for grants to the House of the People, and the House of the People shall
have power to assent, or to refuse to assent, to any demand, or to assent to any demand
subject to a reduction of the amount specified therein.
(3) No demand for a grant shall be made except on the recommendation of the President.
114. Appropriation Bills.—
(1) As soon as may be after the grants under article 113 have
been made by the House of the People, there shall be introduced a Bill to provide for the
appropriation out of the Consolidated Fund of India of all moneys required to meet—
(a) the grants so made by the House of the People; and
(b) the expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund of India but not exceeding in
any case the amount shown in the statement previously laid before Parliament.
(2) No amendment shall be proposed to any such Bill in either House of Parliament which
will have the effect of varying the amount or altering the destination of any grant so made or
of varying the amount of any expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund of India, and the
decision of the person presiding as to whether an amendment is inadmissible under this clause
shall be final.
(3) Subject to the provisions of articles 115 and 116, no money shall be withdrawn from
the Consolidated Fund of India except under appropriation made by law passed in accordance
with the provisions of this article.
115. Supplementary, additional or excess grants.—
(1) The President shall—
(a) if the amount authorised by any law made in accordance with the provisions of
article 114 to be expended for a particular service for the current financial year is found to
be insufficient for the purposes of that year or when a need has arisen during the current
financial year for supplementary or additional expenditure upon some new service not
contemplated in the annual financial statement for that year, or
(b) if any money has been spent on any service during a financial year in excess of
the amount granted for that service and for that year,
cause to be laid before both the Houses of Parliament another statement showing the
estimated amount of that expenditure or cause to be presented to the House of the People a
demand for such excess, as the case may be.
(2) The provisions of articles 112, 113 and 114 shall have effect in relation to any such
statement and expenditure or demand and also to any law to be made authorising the
appropriation of moneys out of the Consolidated Fund of India to meet such expenditure or
the grant in respect of such demand as they have effect in relation to the annual financial
statement and the expenditure mentioned therein or to a demand for a grant and the law to be
made for the authorisation of appropriation of moneys out of the Consolidated Fund of India
to meet such expenditure or grant.
116. Votes on account, votes of credit and exceptional grants.—
(1) Notwithstanding
anything in the foregoing provisions of this Chapter, the House of the People shall have
power—
(a) to make any grant in advance in respect of the estimated expenditure for
a part of any financial year pending the completion of the procedure
prescribed in article 113 for the voting of such grant and the passing of
the law in accordance with the provisions of article 114 in relation to
that expenditure;
(b) to make a grant for meeting an unexpected demand upon the
resources of India when on account of the magnitude or the indefinite
character of the service the demand cannot be stated with the details
ordinarily given in an annual financial statement;
(c) to make an exceptional grant which forms no part of the current
service of any financial year; and Parliament shall have power to authorise by law the withdrawal of
moneys from the Consolidated Fund of India for the purposes for which the
said grants are made.
(2) The provisions of articles 113 and 114 shall have effect in relation to
the making of any grant under clause (1) and to any law to be made under
that clause as they have effect in relation to the making of a grant with
regard to any expenditure mentioned in the annual financial statement and
the law to be made for the authorisation of appropriation of moneys out of
the Consolidated Fund of India to meet such expenditure.
117. Special provisions as to financial Bills.—
(1) A Bill or amendment
making provision for any of the matters specified in sub-clauses (a) to (f)
of clause (1) of article 110 shall not be introduced or moved except on the
recommendation of the President and a Bill making such provision shall
not be introduced in the Council of States:
Provided that no recommendation shall be required under this clause for
the moving of an amendment making provision for the reduction or
abolition of any tax.
(2) A Bill or amendment shall not be deemed to make provision for any
of the matters aforesaid by reason only that it provides for the imposition
of fines or other pecuniary penalties, or for the demand or payment of fees
for licences or fees for services rendered, or by reason that it provides for
the imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of any tax by
any local authority or body for local purposes.
(3) A Bill which, if enacted and brought into operation, would involve
expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of India shall not be passed by
either House of Parliament unless the President has recommended to that
House the consideration of the Bill.
118. Rules of procedure.—
(1) Each House of Parliament may make
rules for regulating, subject to the provisions of this Constitution, its
procedure and the conduct of its business.
(2) Until rules are made under clause (1), the rules of procedure and
standing orders in force immediately before the commencement of this
Constitution with respect to the Legislature of the Dominion of India shall
have effect in relation to Parliament subject to such modifications and
adaptations as may be made therein by the Chairman of the Council of
States or the Speaker of the House of the People, as the case may be.
(3) The President, after consultation with the Chairman of the Council of
States and the Speaker of the House of the People, may make rules as to
the procedure with respect to joint sittings of, and communications
between, the two Houses.
(4) At a joint sitting of the two Houses the Speaker of the House of the
People, or in his absence such person as may be determined by rules of
procedure made under clause (3), shall preside.
119. Regulation by law of procedure in Parliament in relation to financial business.—
Parliament may, for the purpose of the timely completion of financial business, regulate by
law the procedure of, and the conduct of business in, each House of Parliament in relation to
any financial matter or to any Bill for the appropriation of moneys out of the Consolidated
Fund of India, and, if and so far as any provision of any law so made is inconsistent with any
rule made by a House of Parliament under clause (1) of article 118 or with any rule or
standing order having effect in relation to Parliament under clause (2) of that article, such
provision shall prevail.
120. Language to be used in Parliament.—
(1) Notwithstanding anything in Part XVII,
but subject to the provisions of article 348, business in Parliament shall be transacted in Hindi
or in English:
Provided that the Chairman of the Council of States or Speaker of the House of the People,
or person acting as such, as the case may be, may permit any member who cannot adequately
express himself in Hindi or in English to address the House in his mother-tongue.
(2) Unless Parliament by law otherwise provides, this article shall, after the expiration of a
period of fifteen years from the commencement of this Constitution, have effect as if the
words “or in English” were omitted therefrom.
121. Restriction on discussion in Parliament.—
No discussion shall take place in
Parliament with respect to the conduct of any Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High Court
in the discharge of his duties except upon a motion for presenting an address to the President
praying for the removal of the Judge as hereinafter provided.
122. Courts not to inquire into proceedings of Parliament.—
(1) The validity of any
proceedings in Parliament shall not be called in question on the ground of any alleged
irregularity of procedure.
(2) No officer or member of Parliament in whom powers are vested by or under this
Constitution for regulating procedure or the conduct of business, or for maintaining order, in
Parliament shall be subject to the jurisdiction of any court in respect of the exercise by him of
those powers.
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