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The free ride is ending

This will serve as a welcome precedent. The Supreme Court has asked six former chief ministers of UP to vacate the official bungalows they have been occupying after

Published on: Aug 03, 2016 10:43 AM IST
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This will serve as a welcome precedent. The Supreme Court has asked six former chief ministers of UP to vacate the official bungalows they have been occupying after leaving office. This will focus attention on similar cases in other states where former CMs have got themselves homes in tony areas either by executive order or after it was sanctioned by the assembly. This should also be an occasion for the government to look at the issue of former ministers and MPs holding on to bungalows in prime real estate in the Capital long after they have left office.

HT Image
HT Image

The NDA government has made strenuous efforts to evict former ministers and MPs from their spacious accommodations in Lutyens’ Delhi. As many as 37 were forced to leave over 2014-15, among them the sons of former PM Chandrashekhar, and RLD leader Ajit Singh. Mercifully, the practice of the relatives of deceased leaders demanding their homes as memorials has now ended after successive governments refused to give in to such requests. While our MPs and ministers are not paid as much as their counterparts in several countries, they get perks and privileges far in excess of anything given in other democracies. In Britain and the US, elected representatives are not entitled to perks like generous travel grants after they demit office as is the case here.

 
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