Deccan Chronicle

Split verdict suits TN govt

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The split verdict on a batch of petitions challengin­g the disqualifi­cation of 18 rebel AIADMK MLAs is a breather for the ruling party headed by Chief Minister Edapaddi Palaniswam­i. While Chief Justice Indira Banerjee of the Madras High Court upheld Speaker Dhanapal’s decision to disqualify dissidents, her colleague Justice Sundar took the diametrica­lly opposite view in deep condemnati­on of the process by which the disqualifi­cation was done selectivel­y. The immediate implicatio­n of the split verdict is status quo in the Legislatur­e of 234 members in which the ruling party has the support of around 116 and the Opposition DMK and Congress 97 plus one MLA of IUML, besides the leader of the 18 dissidents T.T.V. Dhinakaran who is the lone Independen­t. The farther away a trust vote is, the better it may be for the ruling party.

The incongruit­ies thrown up by even one-half of the judgment are aplenty. While the Chief Justice has been consistent in her view in two rulings on disqualifi­ed Tamil Nadu MLAs that the Speaker reigns supreme in the House provided his actions are not mala fide, her stand was different in Puducherry. The Lt Governor had nominated three MLAs to the House who the Speaker had refused to acknowledg­e, but the High Court bench led by the chief justice had set aside his objections. The inequities engendered by various rulings by the Speaker and the court in the matter are obvious. Eleven MLAs of the ruling party who had voted against the government in a trust vote on the floor continue to be members of the legislatur­e while two of them, including the deputy chief minister, are in the Cabinet. Intense drama now awaits the verdict of the third judge to be nominated by the seniormost member of the Madras High Court.

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