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Former finance minister Yashwant Sinha Monday said it would be "entirely improper and unconstitutional" if the Modi government presents a full budget ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, as he asked it to stick to the convention of outgoing dispensations presenting an interim budget.
Interacting with reporters at an event in Indian Women's Press Corps, he said Priyanka Gandhi's entry into active politics will have a positive impact and strengthen the Congress.
Taking a swipe at the government over present economic conditions, he said it would now claim by "tweaking" figures ahead of the general election that "river of milk" is flowing in the country and people were never happier.
Amid speculation that the government may present a full budget on 1 February, Sinha said there is no precedence of an outgoing government doing so.
"It would be entirely improper and unconstitutional on the part of this government to present a full budget," he said, adding that it should neither table the economy survey, which is generally presented a day before the budget is tabled, not present the Finance Bill.
The Budget session is scheduled to begin on 31 January.
The government is likely to claim that the Constitution does not bar it from presenting a full budget but convention is equally important, he said and asserted that the Article 116 makes provisions for presenting interim budget because this is what an outgoing dispensation should do.
This question like "who after Nehru, who after Shastri, who after Indira" is asked all the time but it has often happened that opposition parties have elected their leader after defeating the ruling alliance, he said.
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