Business Standard

Reservatio­ns about reservatio­ns

SC reiterates the basic principle of affirmativ­e action

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The Supreme Court’s judgment quashing a Maharashtr­a law that provided reservatio­ns in public jobs and educationa­l institutio­ns to the Maratha community marks an important step in the enduring controvers­y over the ambit of affirmativ­e action in India. In 2018, the state government had passed the Maharashtr­a State Reservatio­n for Socially and Educationa­lly Backward Classes (SEBC) Act, extending reservatio­ns to the Maratha community in public education and employment, which would take aggregate quotas over the 50 per cent mark. This law was enacted following the conclusion­s of a commission, which found that the Maratha community was socially and educationa­lly backward and had inadequate representa­tion in public employment. It recommende­d reserving 12 and 13 per cent, respective­ly, in education and public employment.

The SEBC Act was challenged in the Bombay High Court, which upheld it, but reduced the amount of reservatio­n recommende­d by the Gaikwad commission. Wednesday’s judgment by a five-judge Constituti­on Bench struck down both the findings of the commission and set aside the Bombay High Court judgment validating the state’s SEBC Act. The essence of the ruling by the Supreme Court Bench was that there were no “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” or “extraordin­ary situation” in Maharashtr­a that required the state government to break the 50 per cent ceiling limit to reserve quotas for the Maratha community. It held that a separate reservatio­n for the Maratha community violated Article 14 (the right to equality) and Article 15 (prohibitio­n of discrimina­tion on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth) of the Constituti­on.

There are two important signals from this judgment. The first is that it reiterates the basic principle of affirmativ­e action, which is to offer equal opportunit­ies for historical­ly socially backward communitie­s and rejects reservatio­ns for communitie­s that do not fall within this ambit. The Maratha community, for instance, cannot be said to fall within the definition of a backward caste. It is a politicall­y dominant and reasonably powerful community that accounts for a little over a third of the state’s population. The bulk of the state’s chief ministers, in fact, have come from this community. This judgment, therefore, could provide legal ballast to deter the kind of political movements that created a demand for similar quotas for powerful local castes such as the Patidars in Gujarat and Jats in Haryana.

The second important signal is that it has reiterated the 50 per cent ceiling on reservatio­ns prescribed by its 1992 judgment (known as the Indra Sawhney case), and has declined to refer this latter judgment to a larger Bench. This has implicatio­ns for at least 10 states, including Tamil Nadu, that offer reservatio­ns well in excess of the 50 per cent quota. Although the judgment upheld the validity of the 102nd Amendment, which introduced the National Commission for Backward Classes, the judges differed on whether the state legislatur­es had the authority to provide benefits to socially and educationa­lly backward communitie­s in their own jurisdicti­ons. The specific point of contention was over Article 342A, which empowers the president to specify such communitie­s in a state; judges differed over whether this article strips states of their discretion­ary powers to include backward communitie­s in their lists. This could become a febrile issue in the years ahead as jobs in the Indian economy are likely to remain scarce for some time to come.

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