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said that their members may get late to return to Delhi from their respective constituencies.
New Delhi: Government will call an all-party meeting on Monday in a bid to break the Parliament logjam as it accused Congress of "hurting" the country by blocking the passage of key reform bills like GST with its relentless protests.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Venkaiah Naidu insisted that the washout for the second consecutive week of the monsoon session was not due to government's fault and that it was unwilling to concede to Congress's demand that Union minister Sushma Swaraj and two BJP chief ministers resign over their alleged role in scams.
He claimed that in the 14 months of the BJP government, there has been no scam, scandal or political vendetta. "Congress wants a satisfactory proposal. You are in opposition and you will be satisfied only when you are in power.
We cannot help it. It may take 10, 20, 25 years," he told reporters and insisted it was the Opposition, mainly the Congress and Left, which was responsible for the washout of proceedings in both the Houses. Rejecting the opposition's charge the government had not reached out to them, Naidu said he had called a meeting of various parties today morning as well but Congress backed out at the last moment and added that he was looking to call a meeting on Monday.
"We have contacted several parties and are reaching others," he said. He, though, noted that some parties have said that their members may get late to return to Delhi from their respective constituencies.
Congress has already asserted that it would not attend such a meeting until the government comes with a tangible
proposal.
Taking a dig at the Opposition, Naidu said Congress may claim "victory" over the washout and feel "happy, very very happy" about it but it had to consider if it was not "harming" the country's development. "Congress party can claim victory over the washout. Nation has lost out badly.
It should introspect if it wants to participate in the nation's development. Congress is ending up hurting itself politically and hurting the country's development," he said.
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