Amaravati(AP), June 13 (PTI): Verbal volleys flew thick and fast in the Andhra Pradesh Assembly on Thursday as the issue of political defections and conduct of the previous Speaker dominated the discourse soon after the House elected the new Speaker Tammineni Sitaram.
Beginning with the Leader of the House, Y S Jaganmohan Reddy, members of the ruling YSR Congress recalled how the previous Speaker Kodela Sivaprasada Rao conducted the House in a "totally biased and arbitrary" manner, in utter disregard to laws and rules.
The House witnessed a heated debate when members were supposed to speak, congratulating the new Speaker.
At the end of it, the Speaker wanted the AP Assembly to become a trendsetter in effectively enforcing the Anti-Defection Law, but hoped he would not get to apply it in the current House.
"Do we need a legislature that cannot enforce the Anti-Defection Law ? Legislature should respect the constitutional principles, constitutional laws.
AP should be the trendsetter in effectively enforcing the Anti-Defection Law. Hope I will not get to apply the law in the current House," Sitaram said, in his thanks-giving address.
The Speaker said the people "elected us all" with a lot of faith and asked the members not to betray it.
Earlier, congratulating Sitaram on his election as Speaker, the Chief Minister made a mention of the defection of YSRC legislators into the TDP in the last House.
The previous TDP government turned the Assembly into a House, where the Constitution or laws did not matter, the Chief Minister alleged.
He then referred to the defection of 23 YSRC MLAs into the then ruling Telugu Desam Party and how four of them were even made ministers in the Chandrababu Naidu Cabinet.
In a mock observation, Jagan remarked that "God had written such a beautiful script" that the TDP was left with only 23 MLAs and three MPs now (the exact number of MPs it took away from YSRC in the last term).
Jagan also said someone suggested that he lure five or six TDP MLAs into the YSRC fold to deprive Naidu of his opposition status.
The YSRC president claimed that some of the newly-elected TDP MLAs were ready to jump the ship.
"I don't want to reveal how many TDP MLAs are in touch with me. If I start luring MLAs, the TDP will not even have opposition status. But I will not do that.
If someone wants to come and join us, they have to first resign from their post," Jagan maintained.
He requested the Speaker to disqualify such legislators even if they defect by mistake.
Leader of Opposition N Chandrababu Naidu, who initially refused to be drawn into the duel, later sought to hit back at Jagan, recalling that the latter's late father Y S Rajasekhara Reddy defected to Indira Congress in 1978, days after getting elected as the then Reddy Congress MLA.
Members on either side then continued the slanging match and at one point the House was caught in a din when YSRC MLA Chevireddy Bhaskar Reddy made a certain remark at the TDP MLAs.