When members of the house (legislative or parliament) loses confidence upon persons holding certain post, to decide whether they can continue in the post a no-confidence motion is held.
Constitutional Provisions
- Article 75(3) states that the Council of Ministers are collectively responsible to Lok Sabha.
- Any Lok Sabha MP with the support of 50 MP’s can introduce no-confidence motion.
- A motion expressing want of confidence in the Council of Ministers can be made only with the consent of the Speaker.
- A no-confidence motion can be moved against the Council of Ministers and not against an individual Minister.
- Lok Sabha’s Rule 198 mentions the procedure for a motion of no-confidence.
Do You Know?
- The first no-confidence motion in Lok Sabha was moved by Acharya J B Kripalani in 1963. The motion did not pass.
- The first no-confidence motion, which led to the resignation of the Union government, was moved by Y B Chavan in 1979, which led to the fall of the Morarji Desai government.
Fact Source
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Source: The Indian Express