Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SP backs...

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Telangana chief minister K Chandrasek­har Rao said his party supported the idea, as months are spent preparing for polls through the year.

On Sunday, the second and penultimat­e day of the consultati­ons, AAP lawmaker Ashish Khetan told the panel that simultaneo­us elections “will destroy our parliament­ary democracy”.

Barring the Biju Janata Dal, whose representa­tive and lawmaker Pinaki Misra will meet commission officials on Tuesday, all other parties that had agreed to join the consultati­on have finished meeting the panel’s team headed by chairman BS Chauhan. Misra said the BJD was a strong supporter of the idea. “It was originally Naveen Patnaik who mooted the idea. We are going to tell the commission, we are absolutely for it,” he said.

While submitting a draft working paper to the government on the issue on April 18, the commission had pointed out that political consensus would be key to the issue. A panel member had said the changes needed in the law – including amending the Constituti­on and electoral laws of the country – could not be achieved in the absence of a consensus. A constituti­onal amendment requires a two-thirds majority in Parliament followed by ratificati­on by half of the state legislatur­es.

While the Congress has stayed away from the exercise, of the parties that appeared before the panel, a majority have opposed the idea, a panel member present at the deliberati­ons said. “The All India Forward Bloc told the Law Commission that the proposal is against the time-tested republic and democratic traditions. It is detrimenta­l to the federal character of the nation,” said G Deverajan, the party’s secretary.

A top panel official said the BJP has been assigned a time for a meeting later this month. “We will take a view after everyone’s views have been taken on board. More parties are expected to come forward with their submission­s,” he added.

“One issue raised in the meeting was the Prime Minister has to campaign in the state elections frequently. Who has asked him to campaign in all states at the cost of governance? His primary responsibi­lity is to run the country,” AAP’S Khetan said after Sunday’s meeting. “We will move from a parliament­ary democracy to a managed democracy, if this is allowed to happen.”

Those supporting the idea have backed Modi’s argument that simultaneo­us polls will lead to reduction of election expenses and that parties will not have to be in election mode through the year. Parties opposed to it have called the proposal an attempt to change the basic structure of the Constituti­on.

On Saturday, the Shiromani Akali Dal had supported the concept, saying it would reduce the expenditur­e of parties. The AIADMK had said the concept was “desirable” but certain “practical” and “serious” issues needed to be settled first.

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