President Paudel to Unveil Policy, Program and Eight Ordinances at Opening of Nepal’s Budget Session
President Ram Chandra Paudel will address Nepal's Federal Parliament at 4 PM Monday, presenting the government's policy, program and eight key ordinances.

*TL;DR President Ram Chandra Paudel will present the government’s policy, program and eight ordinances to Nepal’s Federal Parliament at 4 PM on Monday, marking the start of the budget session.*
Context The Federal Parliament’s budget session opens Monday, triggering the constitutional requirement for the President to address a joint meeting of both houses. Article 95 of Nepal’s Constitution mandates this address after the election of the House of Representatives and at the start of each year’s first session.
Key Facts - The President’s speech is scheduled for 4:00 PM, following separate 2:00 PM meetings of the House of Representatives and the National Assembly. - Parliament Secretariat officials have asked members of both chambers to be in the joint hall by 3:45 PM to ensure a smooth start. - Alongside the policy and program presentation, eight government ordinances will be tabled in both houses. The list includes the Public Procurement (Second Amendment) Ordinance 2083, the Special Arrangement Ordinance on removal of public officials 2083, and the Constitutional Council (Work, Duties, Authority, Procedures) First Amendment Ordinance 2083. - The House of Representatives will first consider a letter from the President confirming the session’s convening, followed by a briefing on a possible cabinet reshuffle and procedural items such as the nomination of interim chairpersons and approval of rule‑based provisions.
What It Means The joint address will set the legislative agenda for the fiscal year, outlining priorities that the government expects Parliament to endorse. The eight ordinances target reforms in procurement, civil service discipline and the functioning of the Constitutional Council, indicating a focus on transparency and institutional efficiency. Their simultaneous presentation in both houses suggests an intent to fast‑track approval before the session’s regular business begins.
Watch for the Parliament’s vote on the ordinances and any signals from the President’s speech about budget allocations, policy shifts, or cabinet changes that could shape Nepal’s governance in the coming year.
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