يحاول ذهب - حر
ONCE YOU DEFECT, YOU MUST RESIGN
October 06, 2024
|THE WEEK India
M. VENKAIAH NAIDU sits relaxed on an off-white wing chair in the drawing room of his Jubilee Hills residence in Hyderabad.
INTERVIEW M. VENKAIAH NAIDU former vice president of India
He is dressed in a white dhoti and a shirt, over which he is wearing a loose-fitting, dark-coloured sweater. It is nippy in the Telangana capital because of incessant rains. There is a line-up of sketches of Naidu from various stages of his life adorning the walls; he proudly says his granddaughter got them made based on old photographs. The drawings encapsulate the 75-year-old’s political career— from a student leader to the vice president of India.
Naidu told THE WEEK that he always stayed true to his party and that he is aggrieved at the ease and frequency with which legislators now switch sides. He is of the firm view that the anti-defection law needs amendment. A major flaw, he says, is that the law allows large-scale defections.
The veteran leader says the power to decide under the Tenth Schedule must remain with the speaker, but a time frame of three to four months should be fixed.
Excerpts:
Q/ Why do you feel the anti-defection law must be amended?
A/ Politics, once upon a time, used to be based on ideology. There used to be commitment, conviction. But of late, politics has undergone a change. Politicians frequently change parties, with the result that people are losing confidence in the system.
The other day, I said at a public function, jokingly, that like the railway or flight timetable, you have to put a signboard in every town stating which man is in which party on that day.
So the anti-defection law needs to be amended. This is my firm view, having been in politics and in an ideology-based party throughout my life.
Q/ The law was brought in 1985. What are your recollections of that time?
هذه القصة من طبعة October 06, 2024 من THE WEEK India.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من THE WEEK India
THE WEEK India
Fire, smoke and soaring worries
The PSLV C-62 fiasco is a stress test of ISRO's technical systems, organisational processes and market credibility
7 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
The dinosaur and the dictator
Dictators have a few things in common with T. rex, the king of dinosaurs. Both dominate their sphere of influence through brute force.
2 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
We are developing master plans for tourism destinations
Across the world, the tourism development is more about providing seamless connection and basic infra like transportation, lodging and boarding.
2 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
A TIGHTROPE WALK
As small-caps are yet to find valuation comfort, 2026 would be a challenging year for them
4 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
ON THIN ICE
With the intensification of great-power rivalries in the region, Greenland's strategic and resource potential has become salient
5 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
Elgin, Ephesus and Erdogan
Lord Elgin was wrong. Not the eighth earl whom we know as a viceroy of India, but his more famous father, the seventh who had carted away the Parthenon Marbles from Athens during 1802-1812. Elgin feared the Ottoman Turks, who had occupied Greece, might vandalise them.
2 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
Art at the heart
The sixth edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale reclaims its legacy
6 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERPLASIA (BPH): Understanding Symptoms, Diagnosis & Modern Treatment Options
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) is a very common medical condition affecting aging men, particularly those above 50 years.
2 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
ERA OF THE NEW NORMAL
The confrontations with China and Pakistan have added another dimension to the ever-evolving nature of the Indian military
5 mins
January 25, 2026
THE WEEK India
Affordable CAR-T Therapy Brings New Hope for Blood Cancer Patients in India
For thousands of Indians battling blood cancers, a once-unimaginable dream is fast becoming reality. Cutting-edge CART cell therapy a breakthrough treatment that uses a patient's own immune system to fight cancer is now available in India at a fraction of global costs, offering renewed hope to patients with advanced disease.
1 mins
January 25, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

