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Will seek broader consensus on GST: Naidu

The Budget session of Parliament, which begins tomorrow, is expected to be very stormy. The government requires the opposition's support in the Rajya Sabha to pass key legislations

Venkaiah Naidu, P Chidambaram

Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu with former Finance Minister P Chidambaram at the 8th edition of Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards in New Delhi. Photo: PTI

Press Trust of India New Delhi
Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu defended the government over the JNU issue, asserting it has not erred anywhere, and said they would look to have "broader consensus" on important bills including GST and real estate.

Naidu said the Centre was keen to push key legislations like the GST Bill, the Real Estate Bill, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Bill, the Inland Waterways Bill, the Carriage by Air (amendment) Bill, Anti-Hijacking Bill and the one to grant voting rights to people post India-Bangladesh Land Boundary Agreement.

"We will discuss the government's agenda and the bills it wants to take up and also the issues the opposition intends to raise. This is a regular exercise I undertake ahead of Parliament session," the Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister said.
 

The Budget session of Parliament, which begins tomorrow, is expected to be very stormy. The government requires the opposition's support in the Rajya Sabha to pass key legislations.

"GST is our priority," he said. 

Asked about a possible stormy session with the opposition expected to raise the JNU and Rohith Vemula issue, Naidu said the government has not made mistake anywhere and willing to discuss all issues.

"The country is huge and there are bound to be issues and Parliament is a place to discuss them all. Either it is JNU, or Hyderabad University or any other issue, the government has no hesitation to discuss them. The government has no made mistake anywhere. Everyone has a chance to raise issue, but do it by rules," Naidu said.

"Debate, discuss and decide. Do not disrupt," he added. 

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First Published: Feb 22 2016 | 3:22 PM IST

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