Opposition Walks Out of All-Party Meet Over TMC MP Disqualification Row
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
TMC MP Mahua Moitra announced on Sunday, 19 July 2026 that all opposition parties staged a walkout from an all-party meeting to protest the Modi government's decision to invite the National Congress of Parliamentary India (NCPI) — a body she described as a 'parking place' for 20 TMC MPs whose disqualification petitions are still pending before the Lok Sabha Speaker.
Context
Moitra, posting on X, stated that opposition parties walked out 'for a few minutes as mark of protest' against what she characterised as the government's decision to seat legislators whose political status remains legally unresolved. The core grievance is that these 20 TMC MPs — whom she labelled 'traitors' — have been extended a platform through the NCPI even as a final ruling on their disqualification under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution has not been delivered by the Speaker.
The walkout was described as collective, involving all opposition parties present at the meeting, signalling coordinated displeasure rather than a unilateral TMC gesture.
Policy Backdrop
The Tenth Schedule, inserted into the Constitution in 1985, empowers the Lok Sabha Speaker to adjudicate disqualification petitions against members who are alleged to have defected from their original party. Until the Speaker delivers a verdict, the status of such members — and their right to participate in parliamentary forums — remains a contested grey area.
Opposition parties have historically used walkouts from all-party meetings to register procedural objections, with similar episodes recorded during the 15th and 16th Lok Sabha terms over questions of privilege and legislative scheduling. The current episode fits a recurring pattern in which the government and opposition clash over who controls access to parliamentary processes.
Stakeholders and Impact
The immediate stakeholders are the 20 TMC MPs whose disqualification petitions are pending, the broader INDIA bloc opposition parties, and the Lok Sabha Speaker's office, which holds the constitutional authority to resolve the disqualification question. For Trinamool Congress, the episode is particularly charged: the MPs in question are seen by the party as having crossed the floor, making their continued participation in any government-convened forum a point of acute political sensitivity.
The walkout also has implications for the functioning of all-party meetings as a consensus-building mechanism. If opposition parties refuse to participate when they believe the invited composition is illegitimate, the forum's utility as a pre-session dialogue platform is diminished.
What's Next
Attention will now focus on the Lok Sabha Speaker's timeline for delivering rulings on the pending disqualification petitions. A decision in favour of disqualification would vindicate the opposition's position; a delayed or adverse ruling would likely intensify calls for reform of the anti-defection adjudication process. The episode is expected to cast a shadow over the conduct of the upcoming parliamentary session and any further all-party consultations convened by the government.