House of Reps admits rejection of power devolution a mistake
It, however, said it would be corrected upon its resumption from summer vacation in September.
The bill suffered a massive defeat in the Senate with 46 senators in support and 48 against, falling far short of the 74 votes required to pass.
Although it fared better in the House, scoring 210 against 71 votes, it was still struck down having fallen below the 240 vote-threshold required.
It led to public criticisms. Many aggrieved groups had registered their grievances against the rejection of the bill, which was seen as shortcut to achieving restructuring of the country.
He explained: “There were about nine items, including railways, pensions, arbitration, stamp duties, parks and others under the subhead and members should have voted on each rather than vote in one fell swoop.
“A member may have agreed to certain items for devolution to states and not to others. The way we voted one would never know how to pass judgment on each item,” he recounted.
He added: “I believe each item should stand or fall on its own merit. It is important to note that devolution of powers is baby steps and the simplest form of reconstruction not a surgical dismemberment of our country. We must feel the pulse of the nation in moments like this.”
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