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Govt unlikely to bring women's quota bill in Lok Sabha this session

Mulayam Singh (SP), Lalu Prasad (RJD) and Sharad Yadav (JD-U), staunch opponents to the Bill, are sticking to their demand for quota within quota,

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With political consensus missing and the government facing hard times on some fronts, the Women's Reservation Bill is unlikely to be brought in the Lok Sabha this session, which concludes on May 7.
    
"Are we short of problems that we add one more to it," said a senior Congress leader and Union minister when asked
whether the government was going ahead with the bill in the Lok Sabha in this session.     

He said there were no plans to bring the bill in the remaining part of this session, underlining the fact that the government's priority was to get the financial business passed and desist from any fresh controversy.
    
The government had so far been saying that the bill would be introduced in the Lok Sabha this session.
   
It has changed its opinion in view of differences among leaders at an all-party meeting held earlier this month to break the logjam over the bill and the Yadav trio declaring a virtual war on the issue.
    
Mulayam Singh (SP), Lalu Prasad (RJD) and Sharad Yadav (JD-U), staunch opponents to the Bill, are sticking to their demand for quota within quota and UPA ally Trinamool Congress has also joined the chorus.
    
The 21-member SP and four-member RJD are outside supporters of the government and have threatened to withdraw support if it went ahead with the bill.    

Not only did consensus elude the meeting, RJD and SP utilised the meeting of 13 parties to discuss price rise to garner support for their cause.
    
The bill has taken a back seat in the government's scheme of things in view of the BJP and the 13-party grouping brought
together by the Left parties planning to corner the government on the price rise issue.
   
Left parties were on the side of the Congress as also the BJP in the passage of the Constitutional amendment bill in the
Rajya Sabha.
    
The bill envisages 33 per cent quota for women in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies.

Now, a section in the BJP is also singing a different tune on the issue with senior leader Gopinath Munde saying that there should be quota for OBC women in assemblies and the Lok Sabha and he would press his party to take this view.
    
Though he described this as his "personal opinion", Munde had said "I will persevere to have my party take this view."

Opposition has also drawn up plans to give the Congress-led government a tough time with the BJP-led NDA making it clear that it would coordinate with other parties in bringing a cut motion to force rollback of the hike in prices of petroleum products and fertilisers.

BJP has 116 members while its allies JD(U) has 20, Shiv Sena 11 and Akali Dal four.

The 13 non-NDA and non-UPA parties, which have been brought together by the Left parties and account for 87 MPs, have also decided to bring a cut motion.

Congress-led UPA has a strength of around 265 members, including some independents and BSP's action of not attending the meeting of 13-party grouping has raised its comfort level in the event of a crisis in the 543-member House.
    
A cut motion puts to test the strength of the government in the Lok Sabha. If the motion is adopted, it amounts to defeat of the government on a money matter.

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