"A very wrong precedent is being set... The NRIs can delegate their voting right to the proxy and this will have a serious consequence on free and fair polls," party general secretary Sitaram Yechury told a press conference here.
Instead of proxy voting, he said polling booths could be set up at Indian embassies and consulates across the world to enable NRIs to cast their vote.
Giving the example of a large number of non-resident Indians (NRIs) living and working in the Gulf, he said in most cases, they are sent by agents and their passports are confiscated.
The Union Cabinet had yesterday cleared a proposal to extend proxy voting to overseas Indians by amending electoral laws.
"We would like the government to reconsider and withdraw this decision," Yechury said, adding it is "the result of active work by the Overseas BJP".
Instead of allowing proxy voting, he said the government could set up polling booths in its embassies and consulates across the world to enable NRIs to vote, as is done by the governments of the US, the UK, France or Australia.
Taking on the government for "rushing" into implementing the Goods and Services Tax (GST), Yechury said it "suffers from serious anomalies".
He alleged that the informal sector, which contributed 60 per cent to the GDP and accounted for three-fourths of the economy, "stands shattered" due to demonetisation.
Lack of demand has been forcing industries to shut down or lower production and "on top of this, we have the impact of GST", he said.
"While the Tirupati laddoo is GST-free, tax is imposed on the 'langar' (free food) in the Golden Temple in Amritsar," Yechury said, adding that almost all items used by the handicapped are taxed at five per cent, instead of zero per cent earlier.
"Not a single paisa can be appropriated or spent by the government without the budget being approved by Parliament but not the GST," the CPI(M) leader said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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