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PTI
Chennai
The ruling AIADMK proved its strength in the Tamil Nadu Assembly for the second time in a month as a motion by the DMK seeking removal of Speaker P Dhanapal was defeated in the House on Thursday.
The motion was defeated by 122 votes to 97 in the 234-member House. Rebel All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) camp leader O Panneerselvam and his 10 MLAs were not present during the voting.
Earlier, Deputy Speaker Pollachi V Jayaraman went for voice vote twice and declared that the motion had been defeated but the DMK insisted on a division which Jayaraman permitted.
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and its allies cast 97 votes in favour of the motion while 122 AIADMK MLAs, including Mylapore MLA R Natraj who had supported the rebels during the trust vote last month, voted against it.
Incidentally, the K Palaniswami-led AIADMK government had won the confidence vote by a margin of 122-11 after the DMK members were evicted from the house. One rebel AIADMK MLA had not attended the House proceedings then.
After the motion was defeated on Thursday, Dhanapal resumed his chair and asserted that he was always 'impartial'.
While Leader of the House K A Sengottaiyan hailed Dhanapal for 'giving more opportunity' to opposition members to speak, DMK Deputy Leader Duraimurugan said they moved the motion expecting him to win appreciation of the opposition as well.
Earlier, moving the motion, Leader of Opposition M K Stalin referred to various happenings in the House since the AIADMK assumed power last May and alleged that the Speaker had been favouring the ruling party.
He charged him with violating House norms and traditions, and alleged,"If Dhanapal is allowed to continue in office, it will infringe the members' freedom of speech."
The motion was seconded by Duraimurugan and supported by allies the Congress and the IUML.
Criticising Dhanapal for his conduct on February 18 when the trust vote was taken up, Stalin claimed the Speaker refused to realise that secret ballot was a"reasonable" demand.
Stalin said while the Supreme Court had directed secret ballot in states like Uttar Pradesh, Dhanapal"did not come forward to use his powers" to hold the trust vote in a"fair manner".
Referring to Dhanapal's February 18 remarks wondering whether he was targeted because he belonged to a Dalit community, Stalin, recalling the DMK's moorings in the Dravidian ideology, said it was a"politically motivated allegation"."We are unable to accept or bear it," he said and reeled out statistics claiming that Dhanapal had been favouring the ruling dispensation.
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24/03/2017
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