March 4, 2025
Kathmandu – Prime Minister and CPN-uml Chairman KP Sharma Oli is not a patient person. If the coalition of rulings has a majority in the House of Lords, he may have pushed for an amended version of the Party Act. The law defines the criteria that if the dissident of a party can prove the support of a certain number of members of the Central Committee and/or legislators of the parent party, the dissident of a party can split and form new costumes. In August 2021, the then Sher Bahadur Deuba government issued a decree to ease the division of political parties. According to the 2021 regulations, 20% or 20% of the members of a party’s central committee may leave the establishment of a new party. Prior to that, a dissident group must provide support to 40% of the Central Committee members and 40% of the legislators to register a new party. The Deuba government has changed the law to help CPN-UML leader Madhav Kumar Nepal and Janata Samajbadi party Mahantha Thakur of Nepal start their own party. Deuba repaid the help of these leaders as he twice dissolved the Federal House of Commons as prime minister in early 2021.
The problem with Oli's current prime minister is that he cannot list the six regulations issued by the government a month and a half ago in the federal parliament. If the Ordinance cannot be filed within 60 days of its enactment, it will be presented as invalid and invalid. Even some of Ollie's alliance partners opposed one of six regulations: a land-related ordinance. Therefore, Ollie will strive to obtain approval of the ordinance in the House of Lords. That's why he wanted to push for an amendment to the Party Act so that dissidents could break into, or 40% of legislators, with the support of 40% of the party's central committee. Changing the earlier “and” or “” rules would make it easy for the new party of CPN (United Socialist) dissident Madhav Kumar Nepal to be disconnected. In this case, the ruling coalition could attract dissidents and earn a majority in the House of Lords.
In order to satisfy the vested interest in large-scale ruling clothing, the engineering business of such smaller parties must be stopped. Legally breaking the threshold of a political party should be based on debate in principle, rather than on the whims and fantasies of some leaders. This practice undermines the parliamentary system and increases public suspicion about the democratic process. The ordinance in its current form relate to land is not only related to the smaller Madesh parties that support the government, but even oppose civil society and the media. Instead of trying to change the controversial provisions of the decree through extensive consultations, the government is keen to pass the backdoor for it. Choosing a simple way out would further undermine their democratic certificates, while choosing two large ruling parties, namely Congress and UML.