Monday, May 11th, 2026

Opposition may move to invalidate government ordinances as Parliament session begins



KATHMANDU: Opposition parties may seek to invalidate the eight ordinances introduced by the government as the federal Parliament convenes from Monday.

Under constitutional provisions, the ordinances could become inactive if both houses of the federal Parliament reject them.

The meetings of both houses of the Federal Parliament of Nepal are set to begin today following a summons issued by President Ram Chandra Poudel on the recommendation of the government.

The agenda includes the presentation of eight ordinances issued by the government. Political observers note that the ordinances face particular risk in the National Assembly of Nepal, where the ruling side does not hold representation.

According to Article 114 of the Constitution of Nepal, ordinances issued by the government must be tabled in both houses of Parliament after the session begins.

Clause 2(a) of Article 114 states that an ordinance automatically becomes inactive if both houses fail to endorse it.

“The ordinance shall be presented in both houses of the Federal Parliament after its issuance and shall automatically become inactive if both houses do not approve it,” the constitutional provision states.

Publish Date : 11 May 2026 13:22 PM

Nepali Congress boycotts parliamentary committee meeting over PM Shah’s absence

KATHMANDU: The main opposition party, Nepali Congress, boycotted Monday’s meeting

SEE results likely to be published Tuesday, says Examination Board

KATHMANDU: The National Examination Board (NEB) is preparing to publish

National Assembly leaders to address today’s meeting on party basis

KATHMANDU: Leaders in the National Assembly are scheduled to address

Two-day international festival blends music, science, and spirituality

KATHMANDU: The international music festival “Sacred Himalayas 2026” concluded in

Opposition parties preparing to question govt in first House meeting of budget session

KATHMANDU: Opposition parties are preparing to challenge the government during