Tag: Cabinet

  • Stalin likely to reshuffle TN cabinet soon

    Stalin likely to reshuffle TN cabinet soon

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    Chennai: Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin is aiming for an imminent cabinet reshuffle in the state, sources said on Sunday.

    The cabinet meeting of May 2 will be crucial and sources in the DMK told IANS that the Chief Minister was not happy with some ministers whose performance was below par. The shuffle is likely to take place after the cabinet meeting.

    Sources told IANS that there would be a major revamp in the bureaucracy also as the Chief Secretary V. Irai Anbu and the Director General of Police, C. Sylendrababu are to retire soon.

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    The secretaries to the government will also be reshuffled during the cabinet reshuffle, according to DMK insiders.

    The Chief Minister has recently in a meeting told the party ministers, that there won’t be any leniency on anyone who does not perform and that the motto of the government was to work hard and do good work for the people.

    Stalin, according to DMK sources, was reportedly unhappy at the performance of some of the senior ministers and in the ensuing cabinet reshuffle several heads will roll.

    The party leader is also worried at the recent controversies against the government and the allegations raised by the BJP state president, K. Annamalai.

    Stalin, according to DMK sources, was worried that if the party minister’s don’t put in their best performance, there would be resentment in the public.

    The reshuffle, according to party insiders, was planned after a recent meeting the Chief Minister had with the district secretaries of the DMK who had reported the feelings of the public from the grassroots level.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cabinet approves setting up of 157 new nursing colleges

    Cabinet approves setting up of 157 new nursing colleges

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    New Delhi: The Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved setting up of 157 new nursing colleges in co-location with the existing medical colleges, established since 2014.

    This will add approximately 15,700 nursing graduates every year, Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya told media persons after the cabinet meeting.

    It will further ensure quality, affordable, and equitable nursing education in India, particularly in underserved districts and states, he added.

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    The total financial implication of the project will be Rs 1,570 crore.

    The Central government will give Rs 10 crore for setting up of these colleges, while the states can invest the remaining amount, which will depend as per the project report to be prepared for each college, Mandaviya said.

    Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh are among the major states, which will get 20-odd nursing colleges under the initiative, he added.

    The initiative aims to address the geographical and rural-urban imbalances in the healthcare sector, which have led to the skewed availability of nursing professionals and impacted healthcare services in underserved areas, the minister said.

    The establishment of these nursing colleges will provide a significant boost to the availability of qualified human resources in healthcare.

    Co-location of these nursing colleges with existing medical colleges will allow optimal utilisation of the existing infrastructure, skill labs, clinical facilities, and faculty.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • McCarthy builds a kitchen Cabinet ahead of debt showdown — without his No. 2, Scalise

    McCarthy builds a kitchen Cabinet ahead of debt showdown — without his No. 2, Scalise

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    Most House Republicans insist publicly that they’re paying no attention to the simmering mistrust between McCarthy and Scalise. But privately, many are watching the duo’s dynamic strain under the stress of the debt-limit fight. That’s true even as McCarthy mends fences with the budget chief he’d previously sidelined, Scalise ally Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas).

    GOP lawmakers and senior aides say McCarthy and Scalise are friendly in private, and that Scalise is happy at No. 2, where he’s focused on policy priorities like energy and education. Yet it’s no secret that Scalise, once seen as waiting in the wings if McCarthy stumbled, is now competing for the speaker’s ear with other confidants on several issues.

    The resulting tension is starting to simmer just as McCarthy, like his predecessors John Boehner and Paul Ryan, faces the ultimate test of House Republican loyalty — a debt standoff. And it shows that the rift that opened between McCarthy and some senior Republicans during his grueling bid for the job hasn’t faded in the months since.

    “People say there’s goldfish memory: 30 seconds, and everything’s forgotten,” said Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.), one of the 20 conservative holdouts who delayed McCarthy’s ascension to speaker. “But I’m not sure that’s always true.”

    It’s not uncommon for legislative leaders to lean on an unofficial circle of friendly colleagues. But any sign of daylight within McCarthy’s leadership team was bound to draw scrutiny after what he endured to secure the speakership — and his narrow margin for error to keep it.

    McCarthy’s relationship with Scalise isn’t the only one taxed by the debt drama. As he moved closer to releasing a bill designed to unite his members, the speaker put distance between himself and Arrington. Allies of McCarthy had seen Arrington as speaking out of turn about the conference’s approach to the high-stakes debt-limit talks.

    But since then, McCarthy has quietly worked to repair ties with Arrington — even putting the Budget Committee chair’s name on the GOP’s opening bid in the debt talks — in what members saw as an effort to show unity to the rank and file.

    Arrington said in an interview that McCarthy called him hours before releasing the House GOP’s debt plan and asked if he would add his name as lead sponsor.

    “I said, ‘If I can help the conference succeed in this endeavor, which I think is critical for our country’s future, I’m in’,” the Texan recalled.

    Still, some members are keeping a close eye on McCarthy and Scalise as the House hurtles toward a likely vote next week on the speaker’s debt plan. The two meet one-on-one at least weekly, but suspicion about a rift between them flared again heading into January’s speakership race, as McCarthy worked fiercely to win over his skeptics, while behind closed doors his allies fumed that Scalise wasn’t boosting him enough.

    “Steve could have said the simple thing in the press and refused to do so,” one House Republican allied with McCarthy said, insisting on anonymity to speak freely about Scalise’s handling of the speakership fight. “I think there’s a level of distrust between the two members that exists, sure. But the staffs are working well together and that’s all it really needs for this [debt ceiling] thing.”

    Scalise made several public statements supporting McCarthy for speaker in the runup to the balloting and nominated the Californian on the floor. And Scalise allies are defending his efforts on steering other high-profile GOP measures to passage in recent weeks, including a marquee energy bill and a “parents’ bill of rights.”

    Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), a member of the elected leadership team, said Scalise was instrumental in smoothing over hiccups on the parents’ bill as language in the text threatened to trigger a damaging jailbreak: “It went from a dead bill to something we were able to fix in 30 to 45 minutes.”

    In the first months of the new majority, however, McCarthy became increasingly reliant on his own sounding boards, like McHenry, Hill, Graves and others. They serve as McCarthy’s shadow Cabinet of sorts, offering perhaps the most precious commodity in Washington: loyalty.

    Graves and McHenry, in particular, seem to be involved in most of the GOP’s tactical decisions these days. Graves is running point on McCarthy’s debt conversations across the conference, after helping to shepherd a major energy bill and internal talks about earmark rules. McHenry has been pulled in on multiple issues that range beyond his financial expertise.

    Their fellow House Republicans note that McCarthy’s unelected lieutenants, in addition to being viewed as strong on policy, are also not as threatening as Scalise because they’re not seen as angling for his job.

    “It’s natural for folks to fall back with people they trust, and people who aren’t afraid to tell them ‘that’s a bad idea,’” Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio) said.

    It’s a practice that past speakers have also engaged in, as former Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.) pointed out.

    “Having close friends be trusted advisers outside of elected leadership is not uncommon,” said Davis, a close McCarthy ally. “Boehner had members like Tom Latham and Dave Joyce, among others. Paul Ryan had Jim Sensenbrenner and Sean Duffy, too. Kevin is doing the same thing with trusted folks that were essential in helping him win the speaker’s gavel.”

    But that practice has a way of chafing the members left on the outskirts of the conversation — such as those elected to leadership or committee chair positions. In Scalise’s case, he took pains to project alignment with McCarthy in the run-up to November’s midterms that became harder to maintain after the House GOP’s hopes of a commanding victory faded to a narrow, four-seat majority.

    That small margin of control, of course, made it much harder for McCarthy to win the speakership earlier this year. Throughout the 15 ballots he needed to win, McCarthy allies argue Scalise should’ve had more of a hands-on approach, rather than a hands off, which triggered old suspicions that the Louisianan was lying in wait for his opening to rise, feelings of which have percolated throughout the duo’s first 100 days in charge of the House.

    Allies in both camps note that the majority leader is keeping his head down and focused on policy — including putting out fires in another fraught intraparty debate: immigration policy. The Louisianan has helped broker conversations between holdouts like Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and his Lone Star State rival, GOP Rep. Chip Roy. But a New York Times report earlier this month that highlighted his frayed relationship with McCarthy only made things worse.

    “It was a little weird. I don’t think that was one of the best moments, but there have been many good moments,” Bishop acknowledged.

    Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), a purple-district incumbent and McCarthy ally, said he called the speaker’s office to raise concerns about the “undermining” that he perceived in the Times report. Bacon added that he’s “seen no evidence” of bad blood between the “very collegial” speaker and majority leader.

    In a potential win for McCarthy, some of his biggest skeptics during the speakership skirmish appear to be tuning out what’s happening at the top. About a half-dozen members of the House Freedom Caucus interviewed for this story largely shrugged off the leadership drama as separate from their world — though some were displeased and defensive about the sidelining of Arrington, a fellow conservative albeit not a member of the group.

    The Freedom Caucus’ bigger focus right now is eking all the wins they can get from the debt deal, which leadership needs the right flank on board for as much as possible.

    Arrington, for his part, appears back in the fray on the debt talks. He attended a closed-door meeting Thursday afternoon as a cross-section of the conference demanded changes to the leadership-crafted measure’s proposed Medicaid work requirements, while shrugging off any questions about discord.

    Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.), one of the conference’s more respected senior members, observed that Boehner once likened the speakership, during tough internal battles to corralling “jumping frogs in the wheelbarrow.”

    “Keeping all the jumping frogs together, at some snapshot in time when we’re voting, is going to be the test of leadership,” Womack said.

    Jennifer Scholtes, Jordain Carney and Caitlin Emma contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Union Cabinet gives nod to Indian Space Policy, 2023

    Union Cabinet gives nod to Indian Space Policy, 2023

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    New Delhi: The Union Cabinet on Thursday approved the Indian Space Policy, 2023 under which roles and responsibilities of organisations such as ISRO, NewSpace India Limited and private sector entities have been laid down.

    The government had earlier opened up the space sector for the private sector to help boost the development of the segment.

    “In brief, it will offer clarity in the role of the components set up (in the recent past),” Union Minister Jitendra Singh told reporters here.

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    He said the policy would aim to enhance the role of the Department of Space, boost activities of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) missions and give a larger participation of research, academia, startups and industry.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pakistan cabinet rejects top court’s verdict in election delay case

    Pakistan cabinet rejects top court’s verdict in election delay case

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    Islamabad: The Pakistan Federal Cabinet on Tuesday rejected the Supreme Court’s unanimous verdict on the case pertaining to the postponement of elections in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).

    The development came during the Cabinet’s meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, held after a three-member bench headed by Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial and comprising Justice Ijaz Ul Ahsan and Justice Munib Akhtar as members announced the apex court’s verdict on the matter which it had reserved a day earlier, Geo News reported.

    Announcing the verdict on a plea filed by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the top court declared the Election Commission of Pakistan’s (ECP) decision to postpone polls in Punjab and KP from April 30 to October 8 as “null and void”.

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    The Supreme Court, in its verdict, states that the ECP’s order dated March 22, 2023, is declared to be unconstitutional, without lawful authority or jurisdiction, void ab-initio, of no legal effect, and is hereby quashed, Geo News reported.

    “The Supreme Court’s decision is a minority verdict, which is why the cabinet rejects it,” the sources in the federal cabinet said.

    The top court’s decision, as per the sources, is not enforceable, Geo News reported.

    The government would raise its voice in parliament regarding the verdict, the sources added. It was also decided in the meeting that the ruling coalition’s parties will talk about the apex court’s decision in parliament, they added, Geo News reported.

    In the meeting, the cabinet decided to present its position on the verdict.

    On the SC decision, Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) Senior Vice-President and Chief Organiser Maryam Nawaz took to Twitter and wrote that today’s verdict is the last blow of the conspiracy which began by “rewriting the Constitution and presenting the Punjab government on a plate” to the bench’s blue-eyed boy, Imran Khan.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Israeli cabinet approves establishment of Ben-Gvir’s national guard plan

    Israeli cabinet approves establishment of Ben-Gvir’s national guard plan

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    Jerusalem: Israel’s cabinet has voted in favour of establishing a National Guard force controlled by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

    The National Guard will deal with “national emergency situations,” such as violent clashes between Jewish and Arab citizens of Israel, according to a statement released by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.

    A committee composed of all security agencies will draft guidelines for the operation of the National Guard within 90 days, the statement said on Sunday, adding that the committee will also discuss what would be the powers of the force.

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    Last week, Ben-Gvir told Army Radio that the force will be deployed “exclusively” in Arab communities, Xinhua news agency reported.

    “The police don’t deal exclusively with this, because they are too busy with other things,” he said.

    Israel’s state-owned Kan TV news reported that Israeli police chief, Inspector-General Yaacov Shabtai has expressed his concerns about the National Guard to Ben-Gvir in a private letter.

    In a tweet, Opposition leader Yair Lapid accused Ben-Gvir of seeking “to turn his thug militia into a national guard, that will bring terror and violence everywhere in the country”.

    Ben-Gvir is one the most extreme Ministers in Netanyahu’s far-right cabinet. Before entering politics, he was an ultranationalist activist who was convicted of supporting terrorism, incitement to racism and involvement in riots. The Minister is a resident of the hardline Jewish settlement in Hebron, located in the occupied West Bank.

    Last week, Netanyahu announced that the overhaul of the country’s judiciary would be suspended. To gain Ben-Gvir’s support for the move, Netanyahu accepted Ben-Gvir’s demand to set up a National Guard under the National Security Ministry.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Israeli #cabinet #approves #establishment #BenGvirs #national #guard #plan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • New Zealand: Stuart Nash dismissed from Cabinet

    New Zealand: Stuart Nash dismissed from Cabinet

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    Auckland: This evening New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has advised the Governor-General to dismiss Stuart Nash from all his ministerial portfolios.

    Late this afternoon Chris Hipkins was made aware by a news outlet of an email Stuart Nash sent in March 2020 to two contacts regarding a commercial rent relief package that Cabinet had considered.

    In the email, he sets out both his opposition to the decision Cabinet reached and the position that other Cabinet members took.

    This is a clear breach of collective responsibility and Cabinet confidentiality.

    Stuart Nash has fundamentally breached Chris Hipkins’ trust and the trust of his Cabinet colleagues and his conduct is inexcusable.

    In addition, the two recipients of the email were donors; Troy Bowker and Greg Loveridge, via GRL Holdings Ltd, have both donated to Stuart Nash.

    They are also commercial property owners who had an interest in the Cabinet decision.

    That crosses a line that is totally unacceptable to Chris Hipkins.

    Chris Hipkins expects Ministers to uphold the highest ethical standards and his actions raise perceptions of influence that cannot stand.

    In recent weeks Chris Hipkins has sought and been given assurances from Stuart that there were no other instances or allegations of misconduct that he should be aware of.

    While Stuart was on a final warning, Hipkins want to be clear that this incident would have resulted in his dismissal in its own right. Hipkins considers the matter to be a very serious one.

    Minister Megan Woods will be the Acting Minister for Economic Development and Acting Minister of Forestry, and Minister David Parker will be Acting Minister for Oceans and Fisheries.

    Meka Whaitiri will lead the Hawkes Bay Cyclone response on an acting basis.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cabinet approves targeted subsidy to Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana consumers

    Cabinet approves targeted subsidy to Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana consumers

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    New Delhi: In a relief to the beneficiaries of the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY), the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs on Friday approved a subsidy of Rs 200 per 14.2 kg cooking has cylinder for up to 12 refills per year to be provided to them.

    There are 9.59 crore PMUY beneficiaries as on March 1, 2023.

    Officials said that the total expenditure will be Rs 6,100 crore for financial year 2022-23 and Rs 7,680 crore for 2023-24. The subsidy is credited directly to bank accounts of the eligible beneficiaries.

    Public sector oil marketing companies, including Indian Oil Corporation Ltd (IOCL), Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL), and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) has already been providing this subsidy since May 22, 2022.

    Officials said that there has been a sharp increase in international prices of LPG due to various geopolitical reasons and it is important to shield PMUY beneficiaries from high LPG prices.

    They said that targeted support to PMUY consumers encourages them for continuous usage of LPG. It is important to ensure sustained LPG adoption and usage among PMUY consumers so that they can completely switch to cleaner cooking fuel. Average LPG consumption of PMUY consumers has increased by 20 per cent from 3.01 refills in 2019-20 to 3.68 in 2021-22.A All PMUY beneficiaries are eligible for this targeted subsidy.

    To make Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG), a clean cooking fuel, available to the rural and deprived poor households, the Government launched Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana in May 2016, to provide deposit free LPG connections to adult women of poor households.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cabinet clears dearness allowance hike by 4 pc

    Cabinet clears dearness allowance hike by 4 pc

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    New Delhi: In a bonanza for 48 lakh Central government employees and 70 lakh pensioners, the government on Friday hiked dearness allowance (DA) and dearness relief (DR) by 4 per cent with retrospective effect from January 1, 2023.

    The decision was taken in the Union Cabinet meeting on Friday evening.

    According to official sources, the additional instalment will represent an increase of 4 per cent over the existing rate of 38 per cent of the basic pay or pension, to compensate against price rise.

    The cabinet gave its approval to release an additional instalment of DA to Central government employees and DRA to pensioners with effect from January 1, 2023, they added.

    The combined impact on the exchequer on account of both DA and DR would be Rs 12,815.60 crore per annum, the sources added.

    This increase is in accordance with the accepted formula, which is based on the recommendations of the 7th Central Pay Commission.

    DA is calculated as per the latest consumer price index for industrial workers. It is revised periodically twice a year and was last revised in September 2022, and was effective retrospectively from July 1, 2022.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

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