Forty-nine Opposition MPs, including Farooq Abdullah, Supriya Sule, Dimple Yadav and Shashi Tharoor, were on Tuesday suspended from Lok Sabha for the remainder of the Winter session, a day after 33 MPs were suspended from the House for “misconduct”.
The action came after the House faced adjournments, with Opposition members raising slogans and displaying placards over their demands. They have been demanding a statement from Home Minister Amit Shah over the Parliament security breach on December 13.
With 49 Lok Sabha MPs suspended, the number of Opposition Parliamentarians suspended from the two Houses has gone up to 141. With suspensions on Wednesday, the number of those who have been barred from entering Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha chambers till the conclusion of the Winter session stood at 92. The Winter session will conclude on December 22.
Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Arjun Ram Meghwal brought the motion to suspend the members.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi said that the members had been suspended for showing placards and that all MPs had agreed that they will not resort to this in the new Parliament building. He said the Opposition members had broken rules and disrespected the Chair.
Targeting Congress and other Opposition parties, he said they were frustrated over the results of recent assembly polls.
BJP MP Rajendra Agrawal, who was in the chair, asked the government to move the motion for suspension of MPs.
A total of 78 MPs — 33 from Lok Sabha and 45 from Rajya Sabha — were suspended for the remainder of Winter session on Monday, following a ruckus over the demand by the Opposition parties for a statement from Amit Shah on the Parliament security breach incident.

OPP I.N.D.I.A bloc flays MPs suspension
New Delhi: A crucial meeting of the opposition I.N.D.I.A bloc began in the national capital on Tuesday where top leaders were discussing the way forward, including seat-sharing, for taking on the BJP in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. The issue of suspension of 141 opposition MPs in both Houses of Parliament came up at the meeting with leaders cutting across party lines condemning the action against the members. “The leaders asserted that they will continue to fight against the tyranny of this government,” a source said.