<p class="title">Tamil Nadu Assembly will take up on July 1 the no-confidence motion moved against its Speaker P Dhanapal by Opposition DMK for his action of issuing show-cause notices to three ruling AIADMK MLAs for alleged “indiscipline.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">Winning the no-confidence motion is crucial for the AIADMK as the party still survives on a wafer-thin majority in the 234-member Assembly whose current strength is 232. For the no-confidence motion to be accepted, the DMK needs to ensure that it gets 117 votes, but the combined strength of the party-led alliance is 108 and even if it gets the vote of independent MLA T T V Dhinakaran, it could only reach 109.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As of now, the AIADMK’s strength in the Assembly is 123 including Speaker Dhanapal. For the DMK to win the motion, it needs to engineer a split in the AIADMK and ensure that they vote in favour of the motion. DMK President M K Stalin’s statement on Monday that a change of government was possible even without an election has added fuel to fire on whether the Opposition party was trying to create confusion in the AIADMK rank.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Referring to the resolution in the Assembly, Stalin said, “Because, on June 28, the Assembly would meet and there is no need to wait for elections for a change of government. There is a possibility even before that.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">DMK had moved the resolution on April 30 against the Speaker, after he served notices to three pro-Dhinakaran AIADMK MLAs for alleged anti-party activities earlier that day. This is the second time that the DMK has moved a no-confidence motion against Dhanapal in the past three years – its resolution moved in 2017 was defeated.</p>.<p class="bodytext">However, the notices were struck down by the Supreme Court.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Though the session will start on June 28, the House is expected to adjourn after paying obituary reference to DMK MLA K Radhamani of Vikiravandi Assembly constituency, who died a fortnight ago. The session that begins on June 28 will go on till July 30.</p>
<p class="title">Tamil Nadu Assembly will take up on July 1 the no-confidence motion moved against its Speaker P Dhanapal by Opposition DMK for his action of issuing show-cause notices to three ruling AIADMK MLAs for alleged “indiscipline.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">Winning the no-confidence motion is crucial for the AIADMK as the party still survives on a wafer-thin majority in the 234-member Assembly whose current strength is 232. For the no-confidence motion to be accepted, the DMK needs to ensure that it gets 117 votes, but the combined strength of the party-led alliance is 108 and even if it gets the vote of independent MLA T T V Dhinakaran, it could only reach 109.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As of now, the AIADMK’s strength in the Assembly is 123 including Speaker Dhanapal. For the DMK to win the motion, it needs to engineer a split in the AIADMK and ensure that they vote in favour of the motion. DMK President M K Stalin’s statement on Monday that a change of government was possible even without an election has added fuel to fire on whether the Opposition party was trying to create confusion in the AIADMK rank.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Referring to the resolution in the Assembly, Stalin said, “Because, on June 28, the Assembly would meet and there is no need to wait for elections for a change of government. There is a possibility even before that.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">DMK had moved the resolution on April 30 against the Speaker, after he served notices to three pro-Dhinakaran AIADMK MLAs for alleged anti-party activities earlier that day. This is the second time that the DMK has moved a no-confidence motion against Dhanapal in the past three years – its resolution moved in 2017 was defeated.</p>.<p class="bodytext">However, the notices were struck down by the Supreme Court.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Though the session will start on June 28, the House is expected to adjourn after paying obituary reference to DMK MLA K Radhamani of Vikiravandi Assembly constituency, who died a fortnight ago. The session that begins on June 28 will go on till July 30.</p>