Hindustan Times (Delhi)

LG has primacy but can’t sit on files: SC

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 8

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court said on Thursday that the Constituti­on “prima facie” gives primacy to the lieutenant governor in the affairs of Delhi, but observed that the L-G cannot sit on files sent for approval by an elected government.

A five-judge Constituti­on bench is hearing a clutch of petitions by the Delhi government against a high court decision that declared the L-G, who reports to the Centre, the administra­tive head of the national capital.

The apex court seemed to agree with this view and said that “land, police, and public order” are not under the purview of the Delhi government.

Still, “the L-G cannot stultify an executive decision by sitting over a file. He must exercise his power in a reasonable time,” the bench headed by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra observed.

In case of difference­s with the ministers, he should refer the matter to the President and must spell out the reasons, it said.

The L-G’S office declined com- Mohalla clinics: AAP MLAS staged sit-in at L-G’S office on August 30, alleged he was sitting on the file for months. Soon after on September 4, L-G gave clearance

Teachers’ recruitmen­t: Delhi govt alleged files were not shown to education minister, L-G blamed his department for not following procedure ment, saying the matter was in court. At the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) national council meeting on Thursday afternoon, chief minister Arvind Kejriwal accused the Centre of trying to hamper the working of his gov- Slum rehabilita­tion: Cleared by cabinet on June 20, file with L-G after being sent on July 10 App-based premium buses: L-G struck down proposal, alleged it was aimed to benefit a certain company

Mohalla sabhas: Cabinet cleared project in June, files await L-G’S nod, 350-crore funds unutilised

ernment through the L-G.

“I can’t even get my peon appointed. But we will not give up. We will continue the fight,” the AAP leader said, adding the Centre had left his government powerless.

Routing of the files is one of the many flashpoint­s between the Kejriwal government and the Bjp-led Centre. Ever since the AAP came to power in 2015, the two sides have disagreed on almost everything — power tariffs, transfers, corruption probes and appointmen­ts.

The power struggle is rooted in Delhi’s unique position as a union territory functionin­g as the Capital, with the state government having no say in matters of police, public order and land, which are under the control of the L-G.

Leading a panel of lawyers representi­ng the Kejriwal government, senior advocate Gopal Subramaniu­m said the Centre — through L-G Anil Baijal — had paralysed its executive functions.

The L-G had created a situation where no bureaucrat was obeying directions of Kejriwal and his ministers, he said.

“Ministers have to literally fall on the feet of bureaucrat­s to get the work done. This is not what was intended under Article 239 (AA),” the former solicitor general said.

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