Chhattisgarh Assembly Budget Session Day 11: Governor-Returned Bill to Be Debated, CM's Grants on Table — LPG Row, Paddy Crisis and Pota Cabin Scandal Rock the House
Digital Desk
Day 11 of Chhattisgarh Assembly Budget Session 2026: Governor-returned bill tabled for debate, CM Sai's grants discussed, LPG uproar, paddy spoilage row and Pota Cabin scandal. Full report.
The Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly's Budget Session entered its 11th day on Monday with a packed and politically charged agenda — headlined by the tabling and debate of a bill previously returned by Governor Ramen Deka, discussion on Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai's departmental grant demands, and continuing turbulence from the opposition over the LPG crisis, rotting paddy stocks, and the explosive Pota Cabin pregnancy scandal. With the session scheduled to conclude on March 20 and the Appropriation Bill due for passage by March 18, the House is running out of time — and patience on both sides of the aisle.
The Governor's Returned Bill: What It Is and Why It Matters
The central legislative development of Day 11 is the debate on a bill that Governor Ramen Deka had earlier returned to the state government for reconsideration. Three important bills — including the Chhattisgarh Dharma Swatantraya Vidheyak (Religious Freedom Bill) 2026 and the Chhattisgarh Lok Suraksha (Upay) Pravartan Vidheyak (Public Safety Enforcement Bill) 2026 — were slated to be tabled during the budget session. TV9 Bharatvarsh The Governor's decision to return one or more of these contentious pieces of legislation has added a constitutional dimension to what was already a politically charged session.
Under Article 200 of the Constitution, the Governor may assent to a bill, withhold assent, return it for reconsideration — except in the case of money bills — or reserve it for the President's consideration, particularly if it endangers high court powers or contradicts central laws. Withheld assent can prevent a bill from becoming law, though recent Supreme Court rulings emphasise that timely action is required to avoid indefinite delays. Punch
The Dharma Swatantraya Vidheyak — a religious conversion regulation bill — is among the most politically sensitive pieces of legislation in the BJP's Chhattisgarh agenda, dealing with restrictions on conversions and requirements for prior government permission before changing one's religion. The opposition Congress has consistently challenged such bills as constitutionally questionable. The floor debate on Day 11 is therefore not just procedural: it is a direct test of the BJP government's legislative confidence and the constitutional limits of gubernatorial authority.
CM Sai's Grant Demands in Focus
Day 11 also sees discussion on Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai's departmental grant demands — a routine but politically significant exercise through which the opposition uses budgetary scrutiny to attack the government's performance record.
The ongoing budget session has already seen the Chhattisgarh Assembly approve demands for grants totalling more than ₹14,655.74 crore for 2026-27, covering key allocations for Public Health Engineering, Urban Administration, Public Works, and Sports and Youth Welfare. Lawfirm4immigrants These approvals, framed under the government's ambitious ₹1.72 lakh crore SANKALP Budget, form the backdrop against which the CM's own departmental performance will now be scrutinised.
The Food and Women & Child Development Ministers are also scheduled to answer questions during Day 11's Question Hour — a session likely to be dominated by the twin crises of LPG shortages and the Pota Cabin scandal.
LPG Row: Congress Pushes Back Despite Suspension
The LPG cylinder shortage has remained the dominant disruptive force in the current session. The Assembly witnessed a dramatic confrontation when opposition leader Charndas Mahant raised the LPG issue directly, stating that people and hotel operators across Chhattisgarh are struggling due to non-availability of cylinders. BJP MLA Ajay Chandrakar countered that the matter falls outside the House's jurisdiction, triggering fierce sloganeering from both sides — with the uproar escalating to the point where one Congress MLA was suspended from the session. TV9 Bharatvarsh
Congress MLAs who marched into the Well of the House over the domestic gas shortage were collectively suspended from proceedings Devdiscourse — a dramatic escalation that has become a recurring feature of this session. Despite the suspension, the Congress has vowed to continue raising the LPG issue on the floor and in the media, framing it as a governance failure that goes beyond geopolitical factors.
Paddy Spoilage Row: ₹30 Crore Loss Alleged
A separate agricultural crisis has also erupted inside the House. On Day 11, the issue of paddy not being lifted from procurement centres resonated in the House, with a Congress MLA alleging that paddy worth ₹30 crore had spoiled due to non-collection. Devdiscourse Chhattisgarh is one of India's largest paddy-producing states, and lapses in procurement logistics hit the farming community — the BJP's core rural vote bank — with particular force. The government has not yet responded officially to the ₹30 crore spoilage allegation, and the issue is expected to be pressed hard during Question Hour.
Pota Cabin Scandal: Zero Hour Erupts
One of the most socially explosive issues of the current session resurfaced during Zero Hour on Day 11. The matter of girls from Pota Cabin residential schools becoming pregnant echoed loudly during Zero Hour, with the opposition filing an adjournment motion and demanding discussion on the issue. Devdiscourse Pota Cabins are government-run residential facilities for tribal and underprivileged students — and reports of multiple minor girls from such facilities becoming pregnant have caused outrage across Chhattisgarh, raising questions about institutional accountability, staff oversight, and the safety of vulnerable children in state care.
The opposition's adjournment motion signals intent to force a full House debate on the matter, something the government has resisted, preferring to address it administratively rather than through a political floor fight.
The Bigger Picture: Four Days Left, Three Bills to Pass
The Chhattisgarh Appropriation Bill 2026 is scheduled to be tabled on March 17 and passed on March 18, with the entire Budget Session running until March 20. TV9 Bharatvarsh In the four remaining sitting days, the government must navigate the passage of the Appropriation Bill, the contentious Dharma Swatantraya and Lok Suraksha Bills, and the ongoing heat from the opposition on LPG, paddy, and Pota Cabin — all while managing a fractious House where suspensions and walkouts have become almost daily.
For Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai, the final stretch of the Budget Session is as much a test of floor management as it is of governance. The SANKALP Budget's ambitious ₹1.72 lakh crore vision means little if the government cannot hold the House together long enough to pass its own bills.
