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  India   PM won't quit, will confront Rahul today

PM won't quit, will confront Rahul today

Published : Oct 2, 2013, 9:30 am IST
Updated : Oct 2, 2013, 9:30 am IST

New Delhi: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who returned home from the United States on Tuesday evening, has ruled out his resignation over the ordinance to protect convicted legislators, and indicat

manmohan aboard plane.jpg
 manmohan aboard plane.jpg

New Delhi: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who returned home from the United States on Tuesday evening, has ruled out his resignation over the ordinance to protect convicted legislators, and indicated he would seek an explanation on the entire controversy. The Prime Minister, who seemed cornered and somewhat challenged after Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi described the ordinance as “complete nonsense” and said it "should be torn away", clearly signalled that he was not ready yet to throw in the towel. “There is no question of resigning. Rahul Gandhi asked me for a meeting. I will take my Cabinet colleagues into confidence," the Prime Minister said on board Air India One on his way home. He also tried to indicate that the last word on the ordinance might not have been said yet, as he remarked: “Let us see which way the wind blows.” On the timing of Gandhi’s outburst against the ordinance while he was out of the country, the PM quipped, “Well, I am not the master of what people say.” But despite the PM’s remarks, most leaders in the Congress feel that after Gandhi’s forceful comments, the “ordinance will be withdrawn by the government”. Dr Singh, who insisted he was “used to ups and downs, and don’t get easily upset”, then added: “These are all matters which are discussed before the highest body, the core group of the Congress. The Cabinet discussed this matter twice, not once.” But he also tried to maintain a balance, saying: “But it is always possible to change one’s mind, and I will consult my colleagues on all these issues.” At this juncture a Cabinet note prepared by the law ministry argued that “there has been a lot of public criticism that it was brought to protect convicted legislators, but that is not the case as questions on jurisprudence are also involved,” a source said. The law ministry argued: “What if a legislator convicted by the lower court is acquitted or exonerated by a higher court ”